Whats to stop Lawyers from doing that now?By lawyers suing engineers for their ideas and "Brilliance" :slight_smile:
Whats to stop Lawyers from doing that now?By lawyers suing engineers for their ideas and "Brilliance" :slight_smile:
Nothing, but the engineers have more room to move. Less of a target. The attack surface has been reduced.Whats to stop Lawyers from doing that now?
But that's literally what net neutrality did, get rid of the lawyers. Now that it's gone, it'll be run by 'lawyers, accountants and bureaucrats' again. How can he even say that with a straight face?Its going to get rid of the lawyers.... let the engineers run the show.
“It is time for the Internet, once again, to be driven by engineers and entrepreneurs and consumers rather than lawyers, accountants and bureaucrats,”
So Repealing Net Neutrality has actually done nothing?Nothing
How?but the engineers have more room to move. Less of a target. The attack surface has been reduced.
It is pound for pound (kb per kb) consumption.... people are going to find better ways to stream content or play internet space ship games... Like the netcode... due to known limitations, we have to find better ways to deal with them. Moore's law still applies.How?
You're Canadian! - FCC does not apply to you. Again, I'd say work within your community to make things better.Then again, I really don't want my Netflix prices to go up. And if ISPs start charging money to MMOs, that would really suck.
I can't tell if you're trolling or not...Its going to get rid of the lawyers.... let the engineers run the show.
“It is time for the Internet, once again, to be driven by engineers and entrepreneurs and consumers rather than lawyers, accountants and bureaucrats,” FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said in remarks before the vote.
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And what stopped them from doing this when Net Neutrality existed?It is pound for pound (kb per kb) consumption.... people are going to find better ways to stream content or play internet space ship games... Like the netcode... due to known limitations, we have to find better ways to deal with them. Moore's law still applies.
Look, mate, FCC doesn't apply in Canada, and sure, Canadian ISPs can't do it, but that doesn't matter when the vast majority of websites and internet companies are based in the US. Hell, imagine if CIG had to start paying extra to ISPs, ship prices are already high enough :)You're Canadian! - FCC does not apply to you. Again, I'd say work within your community to make things better.
I hate trolling... but I am a little bored today... so I'm being the devil's advocate. Just want people to understand the sky is not falling. I'm not trying to mean or disingenuous. There are people fighting for food so they can live another day.... and here we are in the first world fighting about the internet - Something that only came to life in the last 30 years - since AOL and suchI can't tell if you're trolling or not....
That was the complaint with Net Neutrality, that as everyone had an equil share of the bandwidth things slowed down. They had the opportunity to innovate for that, to do more with less, did they?The "squeeze"... now innovators are going to have to find ways to do more with less.
Whether or not we have net neutrality does pale in comparison to the struggle for survival. 100% agreed. :)I hate trolling... but I am a little bored today... so I'm being the devil's advocate. Just want people to understand the sky is not falling. I'm not trying to mean or disingenuous. There are people fighting for food so they can live another day.... and here we are in the first world fighting about the internet - Something that only came to life in the last 30 years - since AOL and such
Just one thing. You do have something to worry about, just less than Americans. In Canada, the CRTC has enacted rules that protect consumers against unilateral actions by monopoly carriers on it's own, and against the wishes of companies like Bell Canada, Telus, Rogers and Shaw. They implemented additional rules around 'traffic shaping" just this year.But that's literally what net neutrality did, get rid of the lawyers. Now that it's gone, it'll be run by 'lawyers, accountants and bureaucrats' again. How can he even say that with a straight face?
Not that Canada's got too much to worry about, nobody's seriously considering getting rid of it in Canada right now. Then again, I really don't want my Netflix prices to go up. And if ISPs start charging money to MMOs, that would really suck.
I am delighted you are taking a contrary stance, it gives me the most wonderful practice and it would simply be a boring echo chamber if we all agreed on everything. If I wanted that i'd post a picture of my lunch on Facebook and lap up the applause.I hate trolling... but I am a little bored today... so I'm being the devil's advocate. Just want people to understand the sky is not falling. I'm not trying to mean or disingenuous. There are people fighting for food so they can live another day.... and here we are in the first world fighting about the internet - Something that only came to life in the last 30 years - since AOL and such
Please answer my above question, unless you'd like to stop. I have enjoyed our conversation and thanks once again for being a counterpoint, you have helped keep this on-subject and calm however it feels like my line of questioning is petering out a little.That was the complaint with Net Neutrality, that as everyone had an equil share of the bandwidth things slowed down. They had the opportunity to innovate for that, to do more with less, did they?
I'm all in favor of net neutrality but this is a terrible law if you go and check it out.