Network neutrality is the idea that internet service providers (ISPs) should treat all data that travels over their networks fairly, without discrimination in favor of particular apps, sites or services

The FCC will meet on October 19th to vote on proposing Title II reclassification that would support accompanying net neutrality protections

    • @LetMeEatCake@lemm.ee
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      1047 months ago

      To do that the current party in favor of removing rights needs to be kept out of power long enough that they conclude that removing rights is an electoral loser and changes their ideology accordingly.

      I’m not going to hold my breath.

    • PupBiru
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      327 months ago

      hopefully at least when ISPs and companies see that it’ll just be back and forth, and that things like “fast lanes” can’t be relied upon in business planning there just won’t be a market for it, or at least the fuckery will be significantly diminished because it’s not reliable long-term

      • @Isthisreddit@lemmy.world
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        67 months ago

        ISP’s are also the same companies that market and sell fast lanes(i.e. 5G), and they have bigger bribing/lobbying pockets than everyone on Lemmy and reddit combined. They ain’t changing shit and will throw money at it to make sure their business models don’t change (hint - look at the supreme court).

        • PupBiru
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          257 months ago

          as aStonedSanata mentioned, different tech isn’t what we’re talking about: fibre shouldn’t be limited to the speeds of, say ADSL or cable to keep things neutral

          what we’re talking about here is, for example, netflix paying your ISP to prioritise traffic to their service over other services… this causes an enormous disadvantage to new startups, because they likely can’t afford to pay a similar fee or even enter into complex agreements with every carrier! in which case, netflix has a better service not because they’re better: just because they’re incumbent

          of course these kind of things happen all over the place, but it’s the exact failure of capitalist systems that governments should seek to patch with regulations (like net neutrality) because it’s not good for consumers, the economy, or innovation… which are all the very things that capitalism is meant to promote!

        • @aStonedSanta@lemm.ee
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          7 months ago

          New technology is not fast lanes like you are implying though. It’s functionally different equipment. Running services is relatively cheap but expanding them and installing new technology like 5G requires a lot more physical equipment due to 5Gs lower range. So it does indeed cost more. Atleast initially and most likely continuously as it requires more physical equipment. So more failures innately.

          • @Isthisreddit@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            I’m aware 5G is new hardware and infrastructure, but my point is ISPs And service carriers are one and the same, and there are multiple business models that throttle speeds (ie premium 4G service vs deprioritized cheaper 4G service), fast lanes in 5G, whatever other QCI stuff the carriers are doing - all stuff they don’t want to change and my point was they will spend money fighting it in court vs willingly changing anything

          • ianovic69
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            17 months ago

            I still can’t work out what 5g is supposed to do. Can you ELI5 please?

        • PupBiru
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          27 months ago

          that’s true, but this would require time and money to implement, market, etc, and would almost certainly require big b2b contracts to be signed

  • @Waluigis_Talking_Buttplug@lemmy.world
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    907 months ago

    My internet is run by my coop power company, just a reminder that all the major ISPs took billions and promised fiber and then royalty fucked us, so now my internet is run by a rural power company.

    Call your power company and find out if they’re installing fiber. Support this move as it weakens Comcast and AT&T’s death grip.

    Net Neutrality has been taken away before and it can be taken away again. Just get with a coop. I’ve torrented literal terabytes without even an email telling me not to .

    • @bluewing@lemm.ee
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      217 months ago

      Co-ops are a good thingtm , I belong to several small co-ops, from electric, to telephone, to farm.

    • @wendortb@lemmy.world
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      217 months ago

      A coop near us is rolling out 1Gb fiber up/down to rural homes. Considering most of them could only get DSL or use 4G/3G internet, it is amazing. I have to wait to see if they come in town for their rollout, as they have to pay another power company to use their power poles. Everyone I know is switching to the coop as it is cheaper, more stable, and unlimited.

      • @Rambi@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        I didn’t even know co-op power companies were common, it seems like an odd (but good) service to be provided by a co-op. I wonder if there’s any in the UK

        • @sleepdrifter@startrek.website
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          47 months ago

          They’re mostly in rural parts of the states where private (read: investor owned) utilities determined the region wouldn’t turn a large enough profit to expand there and the state’s public utility commission didn’t mandate their expansion

          • @Rambi@lemm.ee
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            17 months ago

            Ah I see, well it’s nice the circumstances existed for them to come about. It’s good having goods and services being provided by co-ops, for the workers especially but usually for the customers too.

    • @rchive@lemm.ee
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      -107 months ago

      This is a better idea than Net Neutrality. Stop begging government to fix things for you when you and your neighbors can just fix it yourself.

      • @atrielienz@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        The thing is though public utilities are supposed to be implemented and paid for by the tax payers of the area. Suggesting that the government shouldn’t be doing what we pay tax money for doesn’t make sense. That would be like saying , “oh, I know your taxes pay for your government to upkeep the roads, but stop bothering them about it and you and your neighbours band together to fix that sink hole, and those potholes, and reline that crosswalk”.

        Plus these ISP’s took government money to provide and upgrade infrastructure and then didn’t do that and faced basically no consequences.

        • @rchive@lemm.ee
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          07 months ago

          ISPs mostly aren’t public utilities, so none of that applies to them. Taxes generally don’t go to them. They’re no more public utilities or tax funded than a company that would come to your house and cut your grass.

          It is true that several times in the last few decades the government has handed ISPs some cash in exchange for doing specific things like expanding service to certain areas. It’s more than justified to be mad at them for not holding up their end. That doesn’t make them public utilities, though. The government deserves a bunch of blame for that, too, because it’s stupid and handed a bunch of private companies a bunch of money with no accountability mechanism. Of course they’re gonna take the money and run.

          That’s why I’m saying stop trusting the government to fix things like this.

          • @atrielienz@lemmy.world
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            17 months ago

            The government gave these companies money to build up and expand their infrastructure though. On more than one occasion. And we don’t have anything to show for it.

  • @seang96@spgrn.com
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    327 months ago

    Maybe this will be the one thing that will fix my ISP and let me play online video games without frequent disconnects. I think it’s bad node or something, but I had my ISP at my house over 8 times and they couldn’t figure it out. Meanwhile my unifi gateway shows a high ping at least once a day.

    Go spectrum!

  • @Jeredin@lemm.ee
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    187 months ago

    The internet is healing…Don’t look over there, it’s already necrotic…

      • @littlecolt@lemm.ee
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        77 months ago

        What didn’t happen was internet being classified as a title II telecommunications service. So there’s one consequence.

        • @Squizzy@lemmy.world
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          37 months ago

          I was being genuine, there was a lot of doomsayers about what would come next and to my eye nothing changed.

          • @littlecolt@lemm.ee
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            107 months ago

            Mobile carriers took advantage almost immediately by offering preferred services that wouldn’t use your mobile data. Listening to Pandora? No problem! Listening to Napster or Tidal? That’s data usage. And that’s a pretty tame example.

            • @wesley@yall.theatl.social
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              77 months ago

              Yes, it’s a lot of subtle things like this that are anti competitive in their nature. These things may not seem all doom and gloom but the point is that without regulation there is no stopping them from doing worse.

              Xfinity could start throttling streaming services like Netflix in favor of their own streaming service Peacock and there would be nothing to stop them except that it might piss off their customers.

  • RheingoldRiver
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    117 months ago

    For anyone who was confused by what “vote to propose” means:

    If the FCC issues the notice as expected on October 19th, the next steps would be a public comment phase followed by issuance of a final rule. This process could result in a final rule restoring net neutrality requirements around spring of 2024.

  • @WarlordSdocy@lemmy.world
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    77 months ago

    Did companies ever actually do anything after net neutrality went away? I still think it’s a great thing to have but just genuinely curious if anything really happened cause I didn’t notice much.

    • Cosmic Cleric
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      177 months ago

      Did companies ever actually do anything after net neutrality went away? I still think it’s a great thing to have but just genuinely curious if anything really happened cause I didn’t notice much.

      Well I doubt if companies would tell you “we are giving you a worse Internet experience so we can make more money”, voluntarily.

      • Spaz
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        7 months ago

        Doesn’t apply; X isn’t an Internet Service Provider. They can screw over their users how they see fit.*

        *Within bounds of law.

        Edit: added clarification

    • @mob@sopuli.xyz
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      97 months ago

      It’s plausible that some of the websites you like run faster because ISPs aren’t throttling them, while throttling the competition.

    • @virtualbriefcase@lemm.ee
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      67 months ago

      My understanding is that they mostly haven’t, with a couple exceptions like a few ISPs offering to priorities to pings for gaming (as FeelThePower mentioned), throttle certain protocols (e.g. Torrenting), or refuse to carry traffic for certain sites (e.g. Kiwi Farms). All of this would be prevented under net neutrality.

      As far as I’m aware though, an extremely overwhelmingly portion of traffic (like you’d have to do a lot of digging to find an example otherwise) already adheres to net neutrality since it’s pretty pointless for a company to spend resources and goodwill to mess with traffic.

      I don’t think too much will change. It is nice in the sense it will prevent an ISP from doing things against specific sites, although like mentioned above most of the protections are theoretical ATM.

    • @FeelThePower@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      77 months ago

      tldr: net neutrality means everything that uses an internet connection is treated equally. EX: cox communications offers a “fast lane” for gamers on their networks, but if all connections were treated neutrally, everything would be as fast as possible by default without the need for an upgraded service plan.

      • @chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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        107 months ago

        That’s actually kinda backwards.

        User speeds can still be tiered under net neutrality. But the same cap must be applied to all data.

        So they can’t slow down a user’s Twitch connection versus their connection to YouTube live streaming. It all has to be treated the same.

        A good example was when T-Mobile had 2 gig data plans, but uncapped Netflix usage. So YouTube, Prime Video, etc were at a huge disadvantage to Netflix for those phone users.

    • Ghostalmedia
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      67 months ago

      Internet infrastructure companies have to treat all traffic equally.

      For example, without net neutrality, Comcast could elect to throttle any streaming services that they didn’t own / co-own. So great speeds for Peacock and Hulu, but was a Max, Netflix, AppleTV, etc all get throttled unless you pay up.

    • Cosmic Cleric
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      57 months ago

      Can someone tldr what’s net neutrality?

      Simplified, your ISP cannot favor one company over another when delivering their website content to your computer. All data must be delivered equally.