12-18-2017, 12:34 PM | #301 | |
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So I'd suggest that there are a couple of forms of censorship an ISP has to make (or make available to people) by its very position in the system. 1) Mass Blocking - Sites which can be considered actively malicious towards the internet ecosystem itself (DDoS attacks & other malicious use cases, etc) which is hopefully straightforward enough. The second are those sites which are performing illegal acts themselves. Now this is where precision matters. It is illegal to disseminate kiddie porn, it is not illegal to disseminate 2 dudes fighting in their backyard even though the content of both is illegal. This is where we are forced to rely on our government to make thoughtful & sober decisions on policy, because government is the only monopoly immune from the possibility of competition (if it chooses). 2) Individual Blocking - Most other forms of subjective censorship can be made by private citizens (you can do this already, and ISPs are making it easier to do). And to that end there can be outlets (including ISPs) offering block lists for people to (voluntarily) implement on their own home networks and/or devices. So porn sites, beheadings, and even political sites can be managed by people that don't want to run across them (or their kids). Is that method corruptible? Sure, everything is potentially corruptible. But to think that you can ever censor all content you'll find inappropriate, is misguided. No different than thinking you can prevent speech you don't like. Which is why I think its bad business for social media sites (and ISPs) to try to be content police, rather than provide tools for people to do it themselves if they wish to. Its certainly their businesses to run, and I don't disagree they have an interest in setting a base decorum (in the case of social media) for the type of clientele they are trying to attract, but I do think it would be miscalculating backlash that will probably occur at some point if/when they overstep what people can say & do when it comes to politics or unpopular opinions they believe to be divisive, or "hate speech". Bad ideas are best to be shown for what they are, not banning them from being said. This is more or less how it works today. And I wouldn't expect that to change. While it might sound conceivable, what real incentive would an ISP have to block what amounts to, constitutionally protected speech? If you watch Fox News rail on MSNBC in a segment, you'll notice Comcast doesn't block Fox News from viewers watching that. And the same goes for competition, they don't block Fox News & CNN because they own MSNBC. Its bad business, so they don't do it. But they could drop those networks if they wanted to be anti-competitive, and its on some level conceivable to benefit them. Not to mention the FCC going back to classifying them as Title II, but the actual legislative bodies may get involved at that point due to public backlash. Then things get real messy for ISPs. So no they do not have a vested interest in doing that when you take it out a vacuum. |
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12-18-2017, 01:14 PM | #302 |
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https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/a...general-report
My question would be if the net neutrality repeal was such a good thing for consumers then why so much disinformation from the FCC? |
12-18-2017, 02:46 PM | #303 | |
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FCC net neutrality process ‘corrupted’ by fake comments and vanishing consumer complaints, officials say - The Washington Post This also seems odd to happen for something that is such a good thing for consumers to repeal an "irrelevant" regulation. |
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12-30-2017, 03:13 PM | #304 |
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01-12-2018, 07:11 PM | #305 | |
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https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/a...-run-broadband
It just so happens Harvard conducted a study on community based internet. One interesting part of the article: Quote:
Last edited by Atocep : 01-12-2018 at 07:12 PM. |
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02-28-2018, 07:25 PM | #306 |
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I am not sure this is the appropriate thread but I marginally felt worth to mention that I finally took the plunge to subscribe to wsj.com. It had gotten to the point of being disgusted with cnn.com (which had been my regular 'news' source for a long time).
I did some digging and found this graph I wanted a relatively objective, unbiased news site since I had given up on cnn (and no way I would even touch foxnews or even the networks). There are some good options but WSJ really stood out as being more trusted by both ends of the political spectrum. That's cool. Looking at the articles, I like what I saw. I guess my point is that if it takes paying to get quality on the web, I will start doing so. |
02-28-2018, 08:19 PM | #307 |
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lol@buzzfeed
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05-16-2018, 04:45 PM | #308 |
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08-06-2018, 09:01 PM | #309 |
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The most shocking news of the day. Right before the OIG report on the FCC hack is due to be released, Pai admits they weren't actually hacked. His story about being 100% in the dark about the non-hack is less believable than Trump's claim he didn't know about the Trump Tower meeting.
https://techcrunch.com/2018/08/06/fc...tually-hacked/ |
08-06-2018, 09:53 PM | #310 |
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And blames Obama too. Amazing
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08-09-2018, 08:43 PM | #311 |
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Well, blames Obama for hiring Bray. Bray...well, he wasn’t my favorite (though he wasn’t a total fraud like the guy before him). Seemed more worried about getting his name out on social media and setting himself up for his next gig (which I’m not sure worked so well as he was there a lot longer than we expected he would be).
He also used our contract vehicle to hire a number of his peeps, some of whom were of questionable worth — while long-timers who were responsible for actual systems were jettisoned. So yeah, I’m good with Pai throwing him under the bus.
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01-26-2019, 03:06 PM | #312 | |
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It's almost like everything we were told by the FCC and Big Telecoms was bullshit.
FCC accused of colluding with Big Cable to game 5G legal challenge • The Register Quote:
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01-26-2019, 03:16 PM | #313 | |
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I missed this previously but all I can say is that I suspect some cherry picking went on. I've seen three of those "municipal" systems in action. All three were notoriously overpriced & undercapable. And 2 of the 3 still managed to lose taxpayer money in the process.
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01-26-2019, 03:38 PM | #314 |
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Also it appears all those good things that were supposed to happen after net neutrality was revoked didn't happen.
It's Now Clear None of the Supposed Benefits of Killing Net Neutrality Are Real - Motherboard |
05-06-2021, 08:52 PM | #315 | |
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Biggest ISPs paid for 8.5 million fake FCC comments opposing net neutrality | Ars Technica
In something that probably surprises no one here, yeah the vast majority of net neutrality comments on the FCC page were fake. Heck, that story came out a couple of years ago. Two things that aren't really surprising but are of note: 1) Known industry stooge Ajit Pai tried to block evidence collection about this 2) Industry paid for at least 8 million of the fake comments, including using real names Quote:
SI
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09-06-2022, 09:57 AM | #316 |
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So it's been 5 years, what has the result been?
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09-06-2022, 11:55 AM | #317 |
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The internet is now working perfectly. No problems!
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09-06-2022, 12:02 PM | #318 |
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Data caps, very little high speed internet growth, and lobbying to prevent increasing the definition of high speed internet. With Google fiber no threat to come down into my area my internet speeds haven't increased in these 5 years. We haven't seen paid tiers of internet or special packages offered by ISP's as was feared, but we also haven't seen any changes at all really. Just put some caps on people's data and call it a day. One thing that has changed is my bill. I'm now paying $135 a month just for internet. Last edited by Atocep : 09-06-2022 at 12:04 PM. |
09-06-2022, 01:15 PM | #319 | |
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Can agree. My bill has atleast doubled if not tripled. There have been zero new providers enter the area either with at least one pulling out (Verizon transferred all customer accounts to Frontier who just lost a lawsuit with the AG for not providing advertised speeds.) All that said I can't rally complain. My neighbors are cows and fields, yet I have access to Comcast internet at least. If they ever leave the area no one in the county would have access to high-speed internet though, which kind of seems like a problem.
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Last edited by dubb93 : 09-06-2022 at 01:18 PM. |
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09-06-2022, 01:21 PM | #320 |
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We had Comcast and switched to AT&T for flat monthly fee of $50.
Don't remember the speeds or GB allowed, but it's sufficient for our internet and streaming purposes. |
09-06-2022, 03:45 PM | #321 |
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Small town NW Iowa and nothing much has changed other than caps and price increases.
I may be lucky as a local company is bringing fiber to our town. Starting downtown with businesses and neighborhoods that branch off of that. I live in the area that can get it. They'll run fiber to the house at no charge even if you don't commit to using their service. If I switch to their service I will save about $20-25 per month, have no caps, speed will stay the same. For $10 more the speed will double. Along with that the price is guaranteed for life. Currently pay $104, new price ~$80. ~$90 if I want to double the speed. With the lifetime price I think I'll stay ahead of the game, pay the extra $10, and take the extra speed. Still about $14 cheaper than I pay now. |
09-06-2022, 03:50 PM | #322 |
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I would lose my shit if I had a data cap.
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09-06-2022, 03:54 PM | #323 | |
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I have to pay extra to not have one.
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09-06-2022, 04:05 PM | #324 |
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Me too. With 5 data consuming adults in the house. But I also pay a small fortune each month, despite Cincinnati Bell Fiber just going in in our neighborhood, and yeah, in the past 5 years, my bill has gone up probably 35%.
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09-06-2022, 04:22 PM | #325 |
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I do as well, which is why I pay $135 a month just for internet. The caps were made official 5 years ago and it started out as a 1TB cap. Despite 4K video, streaming, and work from home booming in those 5 years Comcast has only raised the cap to 1.2TB. |
09-06-2022, 04:30 PM | #326 |
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I now have a data cap. It's 1.2 TB which I haven't gone over, but I also have cable. If I were streaming constantly, it'd probably be real close. And if I had a big family, it would definitely be over.
Seems like the strategy is to punish cord cutters and make them pay an extra $30-$50/month. From a net neutrality standpoint, a lot of the damage is behind the scenes. It's made it near impossible to self-host your e-mail. Smaller streaming companies have been hampered by having to pay the ransom to large ISPs. It's mostly turned the internet into an oligopoly which sucks for innovation. |
09-06-2022, 04:36 PM | #327 |
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And this might not matter to some, but these changes have lowered the quality of streaming and made 4K HDR streaming quite pointless. Netflix is the biggest culprit here as they've lowered bitrate to some incredibly low levels. You're better off pirating something (if it exists in blu-ray) and watching it that way.
Some of that is to save money, but a big reason is that there are so many cord cutters with data caps that it was hurting their retention rates. Apple is the only streaming service I know of that has not made drastic cuts. But they're also a "quality over quantity" service and likely have less viewed hours per customer. |
09-19-2022, 08:57 AM | #328 |
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Data caps are so nakedly anti-consumer it's not even funny. There are two options for dealing with increased consumer usage:
1. Invest in infrastructure. 2. Put in a data cap. The first costs money, the second makes you money. I suppose one could argue that competition could give rise to offerings without caps, but I live in suburban Chicagoland and we just went from 3 providers to 2, so.... |
09-19-2022, 02:42 PM | #329 | |
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09-19-2022, 02:51 PM | #330 | |
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Covid proved it has nothing to do with managing their network. They were able to handle the surge of people staying and working from home just fine. |
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09-19-2022, 07:47 PM | #331 |
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Yeah, I was being generous there.
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09-20-2022, 06:51 PM | #332 |
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It has nothing to do with capacity. I think their CTO even stated during an interview that the data caps were not a capacity issue. It was to punish cord cutters.
I guess as long as this is the net neutrality thread, companies are going to set up special exceptions for political spam. Gmail will start spam-proofing political fundraising emails this week - The Verge |
01-05-2023, 11:01 PM | #333 |
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Comcast announced about a month ago that they were tripling our top speed to 1.2 Gbs
This week they announced they're raising their rates |
05-15-2023, 03:25 PM | #334 |
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I see the companies that were responsible for the fraudulent SEC comments back in 2017 got the tiniest fines ever. White collar crime FTW
New York AG fines companies that spammed FCC with fake anti-net neutrality comments | Engadget |
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