Anna Gomez confirmation means “FCC can act swiftly to restore net neutrality.”

  • @raspberriesareyummy@lemmy.world
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    2010 months ago

    The dystopia of a balkanized Internet floated by net neutrality campaigners (e.g. ISPs charging people extra to access Netflix) has not come to pass.

    You may be unaware, but that dystopia already exists today: Mobile service providers (= ISPs for their customers) are selling e.g. WhatsApp traffic quotas separately from other internet traffic. You’ll buy a package, and you’ll get X GB traffic, but Y GB WhatsApp traffic separately, with Y sometimes even being > X.

    Meaning in effect that people have to pay more to access the non WhatsApp-Internet, which means “ISP charging people extra to access Netflix” (among other services). It encourages people who have little money to stay in their WhatsApp filter bubble.

    • @cyd@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      In a competitive market, bundling/unbundling is good, not bad. It’s a way for consumers to get a better deal. For example, if a tiny minority of users take up a huge chunk of internet traffic through their use of WhatsApp, bundling WhatsApp separately allows the majority of non-power-users to pay less. If you don’t like it, just jump to the other providers.

      It’s under conditions of market power that bundling/unbundling becomes problematic. When your ISP is a monopoly, they can impose bundles on you not because it’s a good way to offer consumer choice, but because it’s a way to stealthily increase prices.

      • @raspberriesareyummy@lemmy.world
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        310 months ago

        I think you missed my point, being that the absence of net neutrality by legislation has brought us exactly what those promoting such legislation have warned about.

      • R0cket_M00se
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        010 months ago

        When your ISP is a monopoly

        Well look at that, they all are. Next.