Net Neutrality Hyper-Sensitivity Makes Things Difficult For Telcos' Traffic Protection Racket
from the never-let-the-truth-get-in-the-way-of-a-good-rant dept
Sometimes on the internet, things break. With so many pieces of network gear between a user, their ISP and a content provider's servers, it's not unreasonable that something goes down, gets misconfigured, or unplugged every once in a while. Something along those lines happened yesterday at Comcast, when a DNS server failed, temporarily blocking users from accessing Google and some other sites -- and then the conspiracy theories started flying, with plenty of commenters fingering net neutrality even after the problem had been resolved, and the truth of the equipment failure had come out. The upshot of this isn't to point out trigger-happy commenters ready to jump all over ISPs before the truth comes out, but rather that it illustrates just how difficult telcos have made it for themselves -- should they ever actually go so far as to follow through on any of their inflammatory rhetoric about blocking or degrading the traffic of sites that won't pay protection money. The tremendous amount of press this issue has gotten, fueled by the exaggerated and dishonest claims from people on both sides of the issue has made a lot of consumers hyper-sensitive and imagining "net neutrality violations" where they don't exist. It's seemed pretty clear all along that any telco stupid enough to block access to something like Google in the middle of this highly charged debate would be shooting itself in the foot; but these sorts of reactions to network outages and problems reiterate that even if telcos have the right to demand payments from content providers and block traffic, doing so would be commercial suicide.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Net Neutrality Hyper-Sensitivity Makes Things Diff
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I was wondering why I wasn't affected. . .
The last time around I finally switched to OpenDNS. Forget about them going to the trouble of creating service tiers or degrading/disconnecting those who won't pay the "protection", they can't even get their standard network operating properly. If their "tiered" service was as effective and capable as their wonderful network, we can rest assured that Comcast will be net-neutral ... all services will run equally poorly. Everything'll be Com-Crap-Stick!
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Re: I was wondering why I wasn't affected. . .
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I didn't think so. You dickheads love to spout off about this and that, and either you know you are lying or you can't get beyond the stupid headlines that other crooks use to sell books.
Quit your bitching, I live in New Jersey, and they said they would pay for EZ Pass with additonal revenue, lower headcount totals and additional fines. None of that happened, and now taxpayers pay for it. Get over it, thats how things work.
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Re: NJ Anonymous Coward
How necessary is it to use curse words? Your comment did not need them at all. Nobody incited you. Nobody made inflammatory remarks towards you.
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Re: Re: NJ Anonymous Coward
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Consumer Choice
In my home town, two cable companies compete over the same cable system: switching over is as simple as two phone calls, and can take an hour. They both seem to be doing well, and the DSL provider is also doing a healthy business.
I hope one provider doesn't buy its competition and ruin the good thing consumers have going.
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