Last week, the FCC voted unanimously to begin consideration of proposed rules that would protect "net neutrality" on the internet. Over the next several months, an official rulemaking proceeding will take place, along with public workshops and technical advisory discussions, allowing everyone to provide feedback before the Commission adopts a final set of rules.
On the same day, a bill was introduced in the Senate called "Internet Freedom Act" that would prohibit the FCC from regulating net neutrality.
What's at stake for our forum? Maybe nothing, or maybe a lot.
Right now, we pay a fee to an ISP to gain access to the internet. Once on, we can go where we want, and we get the same speed performance no matter what sites we visit.
Without net neutrality, ISPs would be allowed to pick-and-chose where we can go, and adjust bandwidth to make some sites work fast, and others work slow.
Think about CableTV or DirecTV services. You buy a "basic" package, and add channels for an extra fee, or perhaps a bundle of channels called a "sports pack" or "movie pack" to get several channels for one added fee.
Now, imagine buying internet access with the same formula. Basic access for 29 dollars. That gets you high speed access to certain websites owned or tied financially to your ISP. For an extra few bucks, you can have high-speed access to the major news sites. For a few bucks more, you get high-speed access to all the social networking sites. Or, just pony up a hundred bucks a month, and get universal high-speed access (except to sites owned or tied to competitors).
That is a possible scenario if net neutrality fails. We may have to buy the expensive "universal" plan to get high-speed access to the TD&TTT forum.
Or, what if providers go to people like Mike, and tell him he needs to pay them for TD&TTT to be accessible at high speed on their networks. Or, what if TimeWarner (for example) tells Mike that TD&TTT will be blocked to TimeWarner customers unless he pays them a fee? He would have to payoff all the major providers for most of us to have the access we currently enjoy.
Here is a WikiPedia link to get familiar with this issue. It is something to think about.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_neutrality
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