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System Name | Firelance. |
---|---|
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Mouse | Logitech G604 |
Keyboard | Razer Pro Type Ultra |
Software | Windows 10 Professional x64 |
... the hole backbone was therefore rebuilt with fiber infrastructure during the 90’s.
This is how it should be done. If you make a internet access a utility like electricity and water, then it becomes mandatory for everyone to have internet access - in other words, exactly what Net Neutrality intends to achieve. It also allows you to have a government company that is responsible for building out and maintaining the network, which creates guaranteed jobs - ISPs can only rent parts of said network.
Alowing ISPs to build and own their own parts of the fibre network is a nice idea, but the problem is that they're never going to make provision for getting fibre to rural communities, because it isn't cost-effective. If you make internet access a utility, and require providers to set aside money to ensure rural communities are connected, then nobody gets left out. Fees overall will be higher, because the urban areas essentially end cup subsidising the rural ones, but that's the tradeoff you make for equal access.
As for Cox's "fast lane" service, it's not even snake oil, it's worse: they are essentially deprioritising gaming traffic for no other reason than they can, then charging people to get back to normal priority. Net Neutrality will prevent that too.