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Does Ted Cruz not understand Net Neutrality?

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  • Baba Ganoush
    replied
    Originally posted by jluv View Post
    Never heard of any of this shit.
    X2

    Now, if you want to discuss deregulation of the utility sector and how bad the local electric providers have been screwing over Texas residents for the past 20 years, I could definitely enlighten you.

    Leave a comment:


  • bcoop
    replied
    Originally posted by Broncojohnny View Post
    This is exactly what I am talking about. It should be a huge red flag when politicians start talking about a problem that none of us can really define clearly. In my experience that means you are talking about a problem that industry made up in an attempt to get favorable legislation out of congress.
    The first I heard of any of this is when Netflix was throwing down with ISPs. ISPs want to charge streaming services like Netflix more money. Or, what it really boils down to, is charge you more money to stream anything. And that's a load of shit.

    Leave a comment:


  • 8mpg
    replied
    Originally posted by BlackGT View Post
    All of those cities and countries combined are smaller than the U.S.... Below is in square miles...
    97.90 Mbps HONG KONG. 426
    91.26 Mbps SOUTH KOREA 38,691
    91.18 Mbps SINGAPORE. 276.5
    62.34 Mbps ROMANIA. 92,043
    47.20 Mbps REPUBLIC OF MOLDOVA. 13,068
    47.08 Mbps LITHUANIA. 25,174
    46.26 Mbps MACAU. 11.39
    45.92 Mbps SWITZERLAND. 15,940
    45.77 Mbps SWEDEN. 173,732
    44.32 Mbps NETHERLANDS. 16,033
    43.88 Mbps ICELAND. 39,769
    41.91 Mbps ANDORRA. 180.7
    40.76 Mbps TAIWAN. 13,974
    40.62 Mbps DENMARK. 16,639
    40.01 Mbps JERSEY. 46.14
    39.97 Mbps LATVIA. 24,938
    36.16 Mbps LUXEMBOURG. 998
    34.87 Mbps FRANCE. 247,367
    34.55 Mbps BELGIUM. 11,787
    34.47 Mbps ESTONIA. 17,462
    34.47 Mbps MONACO. 1
    33.76 Mbps BULGARIA. 42,855
    33.50 Mbps NORWAY. 148,718
    32.19 Mbps HUNGARY. 35,919
    31.82 Mbps FINLAND. 130,666
    31.78 Mbps UNITED STATES. 3,806,000
    x2

    THere are lots of homes out there with septic tanks....they probably dont have high speed internet.

    Leave a comment:


  • Baron Von Crowder
    replied
    Originally posted by Broncojohnny View Post
    This is exactly what I am talking about. It should be a huge red flag when politicians start talking about a problem that none of us can really define clearly. In my experience that means you are talking about a problem that industry made up in an attempt to get favorable legislation out of congress.
    but is it gluten free?

    Leave a comment:


  • Broncojohnny
    replied
    Originally posted by jluv View Post
    Never heard of any of this shit.
    This is exactly what I am talking about. It should be a huge red flag when politicians start talking about a problem that none of us can really define clearly. In my experience that means you are talking about a problem that industry made up in an attempt to get favorable legislation out of congress.

    Leave a comment:


  • jluv
    replied
    Never heard of any of this shit.

    Leave a comment:


  • Broncojohnny
    replied
    The whole thing just seems like a solution to a problem that doesn't exist. Another sales job by private industry to rig the system. I get this impression because I can go all over the internet and read about what "net neutrality" is and I get a different story in every place. In one place it has to do with speeds and infrastructure, in others it has to do with forced advertising and captive audiences. This seems like a load of crap that has been sold to the sheep, like when we needed all that deregulation in the utilities business here in Texas. That turned out to be a load of bullshit and was a ploy by the utility companies to double their rates.

    Leave a comment:


  • Gasser64
    replied
    Originally posted by Magnus View Post
    Can you show me why I continue to get raped by the "free businesses" for the quality of internet service I receive, when other countries make ours look like it's powered by hamsters in a wheel? Someone sure as fuck needs to step in and start improving the quality.


    ALL COUNTRIES


    97.90 Mbps HONG KONG
    91.26 Mbps SOUTH KOREA
    91.18 Mbps SINGAPORE
    62.34 Mbps ROMANIA
    47.20 Mbps REPUBLIC OF MOLDOVA
    47.08 Mbps LITHUANIA
    46.26 Mbps MACAU
    45.92 Mbps SWITZERLAND
    45.77 Mbps SWEDEN
    44.32 Mbps NETHERLANDS
    43.88 Mbps ICELAND
    41.91 Mbps ANDORRA
    40.76 Mbps TAIWAN
    40.62 Mbps DENMARK
    40.01 Mbps JERSEY
    39.97 Mbps LATVIA
    36.16 Mbps LUXEMBOURG
    34.87 Mbps FRANCE
    34.55 Mbps BELGIUM
    34.47 Mbps ESTONIA
    34.47 Mbps MONACO
    33.76 Mbps BULGARIA
    33.50 Mbps NORWAY
    32.19 Mbps HUNGARY
    31.82 Mbps FINLAND
    31.78 Mbps UNITED STATES
    the U.S would actually be no. 4, if that list is accurate. For me at least. Charter just bumped me up to 65mbps for free. Old speed was 31mbps. Bill remains the same at $34 per month

    if thats going to be the new standard then i dont really see a problem. No need for more of big brothers disingenuous intrusions

    Leave a comment:


  • Sean88gt
    replied
    Originally posted by YALE View Post
    Buggy whips.
    Thumbs up.

    Leave a comment:


  • J&T's 82
    replied
    Originally posted by YALE View Post
    Buggy whips.
    Lol....Sad but true.

    Leave a comment:


  • YALE
    replied
    Originally posted by J&T's 82 View Post
    Here is the deal. Intercarrier compensation between the Telco's for call origination and termination has been drying up for years. In addition, the wholesale Telco market AKA "carrier's carrier business" is drying up due to new regulations.

    The ISPs, which are mostly the old Telco's are doing to the internet what they have always done on the Telco side....charge for access. The only difference is that in the Telco world, all calls are broken down by origination and termination and access is billed back according to intercarrier agreements. This is infeasible for internet traffic, so the idea is to prioritize traffic and charge third party vendors such as Netflix and Vonage to create an "SLA" for their access.

    I don't agree with this approach, however the ISPs are not going to live off of monthly recurring charges alone.
    Buggy whips.

    Leave a comment:


  • Denny
    replied
    They can take my innerwebz, but they can't take my FREEDOM!!!

    Oh wait, they took that too.

    Leave a comment:


  • J&T's 82
    replied
    Here is the deal. Intercarrier compensation between the Telco's for call origination and termination has been drying up for years. In addition, the wholesale Telco market AKA "carrier's carrier business" is drying up due to new regulations.

    The ISPs, which are mostly the old Telco's are doing to the internet what they have always done on the Telco side....charge for access. The only difference is that in the Telco world, all calls are broken down by origination and termination and access is billed back according to intercarrier agreements. This is infeasible for internet traffic, so the idea is to prioritize traffic and charge third party vendors such as Netflix and Vonage to create an "SLA" for their access.

    I don't agree with this approach, however the ISPs are not going to live off of monthly recurring charges alone.

    Leave a comment:


  • CJ
    replied
    It seems eric hasnt been keeping up with the news.

    Leave a comment:


  • CexMashean
    replied
    muh freedoms! muh constitution! what does this mean?

    Leave a comment:

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