this post was submitted on 06 Jun 2024
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[–] Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world 272 points 5 months ago (23 children)

For all those that say that net neutrality does nothing, and doesn't matter, I ask this. If net neutrality never made a difference, then why is every ISP pouring a collective billions of dollars into stopping it? Why did they do the same thing about 5 years ago trying to kill it? Why did they do the same AGAIN 10 years ago trying to prevent it becoming law the first time?

If you can't see how net neutrality affects the internet, then you don't understand. As a general rule of thumb, if you don't understand something just look at what big money corporations are doing. You generally want the opposite of that. They are not here to be your friend. They are here to try to take every dollar they can from you.

[–] qjkxbmwvz@startrek.website 36 points 5 months ago (8 children)

Not every ISP! Where I live there's an awesome ISP, Sonic, which is pro-NN, and last I heard only offers "best effort" service


which means there's no throttling your link, no paid tiers; if the fiber and hardware can support 10Gbps symmetric, then that's what you get.

Sadly, they're not the norm. And sadly, not offered at my address.

[–] lemmyvore@feddit.nl -1 points 5 months ago (6 children)

Bandwidth is a finite resource. If everybody on your street wants that 10GB at the same time there's going to be throttling.

But that's a common sense type of throttling. Net neutrality is about not giving priority to certain types of content or websites over others.

[–] qjkxbmwvz@startrek.website 9 points 5 months ago

Right


not immune to congestion at all. Unlike ATT fiber, where we had 300Mbps (symmetric I think)...but if you log in to the modem it reported a gigabit link. Starting a download, you could often get more than 300Mbps, but it would slowly fall in line with bandwidth policies.

With Sonic, my gigabit connection would get north of 900Mbps (iperf3), both ways, to a nearby university computer. I miss it.

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