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Net neutrality: for or against?
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Take the point but...
I wonder how Amazon will feel if Verizon and the others decide that users should pay a premium for accessing Amazon shopping or Amazon Music or Amazon Prime. That is what loss of neutrality allows.
How about Fox News on-line or Hulu. What about other media empires or even Verizon blocking access to AT&T's sign up page.
Would they block Facebook unless they got a cut of the Ad revenue or Google.
They may not block just limit bandwidth or traffic shape as has been carried out on torrent traffic thus blocking some pirated material but also Linux Distros and other peer-to-peer activity.
None of this is certain to happen but the loss of neutrality allows such action and CFOs will see a potential new revenue stream form the users (charge more for access) or the suppliers (charge more not to block access)
I'm not in the US but those carriers have global reach and if I access a US data centre for my Internet browsing my traffic could get blocked or shaped.

This already happens anyway, Nik. It is the position on a browsing list. Places like Apple do it even more strongly. In a neutral search, Google already puts Google friendly ads to the fore. You can't do anything about this because it is fair to charge more for a premier position.

But then why to expect ISPs to be neutral and all other internet players - not?



What net neutrality removal allows is the discrimination on end site or service rather than protocol. E.g block Netflix but Allow Amazon Prime or Vice Versa. More likely it allows the ISP to charge the provider or consumer a premium to give their traffic priority. We already see this with some multi-players (TV, Voice, Mobile and Broadband) bundling additional (free) services in their offerings. The main carriers have so far been prevented from discriminating. This change allows them to do so.
As Nik points out it's not as if many users have a realistic competition to choose an alternate supplier.




VPN (Virtual Private Network) isn't terribly well-known amongst residential users and it does cost extra, but, perhaps, it will become more popular with this repeal of net neutrality in the US?
Then again, the ISPs could throttle connections to VPN servers.

Net neutrality: The internet holds its breath http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-...
via npr: FCC Set To Repeal 'Net Neutrality' Rules For Internet Providers http://n.pr/2CcdeC2