VectorVictor
Donor
Good find, and thank you. Everyone using Huskerboard.com should be signing this thing, if they know what's good for them.https://petitions.wh...states/9sxxdBgy
That's the White House petition for reopening the issue to retain true net neutrality.

True, but historically the 'superusers' that run torrents, businesses, etc. on residential accounts are less than 10% of the overall subscriptions, and the Telecom companies typically have an out in their contract that says (in essence) if you're using what we determine to be an excessive amount of data, you may be asked to justify that it is being used for residential needs--otherwise, you'll be asked to subscribe to a business plan.The problem is, the amount of money that can be gouged out of someone like Netflix is way, way over the top compared to how much extra load (and thus distributed cost) an ISP deals with. It's essentially the same as someone running a business out of their house where the average person comes over three times per month and pays $20 to do so. But for those that stop by more, maybe 10 times, they're charged $750 per month because they supposedly "create more wear and tear on the house." But the reality is, they may create enough wear and tear to justify charging $5 more per month.
So what one aspect of it boils down to is "cable" TV providers being pissed because they're losing some of their customers since they refuse to make their pricing competitive. In turn, they're trying to gouge the people taking their business away (Netflix, etc).
And another thing to keep in mind--the USA isn't even in the Top 20 in terms of average network speeds per household any longer. And Telecom companies routinely overestimate the costs of providing data service--one insider on Broadbandreports.com had indicated it's likely less than $.10/GB of transmission. Speeds could be significantly increased and data caps lifted (for those providers that have them), and they'll still turn a profit--just not as huge of one as they do now.
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