General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: New Yorker: "A Clear Violation of Obama's Promise" [View all]TheKentuckian
(26,314 posts)The path to the actual stated mission is clear so if you wish to abandon the mission in favor of maintaining tiers then it is entirely on you to make such a case rather than to insist neutrality minded make your case for you.
Personally, I don't give a shot if the pipe is a terabyte a second if the content I actually want is throttled down to dialup or some other useless speed. So, it is my argument that it is up to tier advocates to prove that the greater public benefit is with this path.
I'm not arguing for tiers, you are so make the argument. Go ahead and explain how you are guaranteeing 100mps and that the most anything will be throttled is 80% of pipeline.
You must also explain why I should care when the FCC can go net neutral and actually impose standards and if not for corporate capture could make them productive as we saw them fail to do with HDTV standards that are quickly falling behind the tech curve even as less foolish governments set standards that caused providers and even governments themselves to actively to strive toward them.
If you want to argue tiered versus net neutral you are free to do it, you may change some minds but it isn't anyone else's job to make that argument for you or the FCC and I would think if it was of overriding importance then somebody over the last decade would have stressed the importance because the possible need to clarify Internet providers as common carriers was always not just possible but plausible but be that as it may, net neutrality advocates are in no way required to navigate a path that includes maintaining tiers at least until they are convinced of their value as above neutrality as you and the FCC infer here to have cause to say the promise was disregarded.
If the ruling caused you to come to a decision branch off that abandons neutrality then speak up but no one else is required to have a similar change to heart on the issue or to negotiate some middle path that is now cut off and was always tenuous.