I thought under current regulations, a packet was a packet. That is, the owner of the transmission facilities have no ability to bias the availability of a packet for their own application services. I can imagine we will have to continue to fight any change in that approach because the monied interests see a profit opportunity if they can get the regulations changed, but currently owning any additional transmission facilities only increases the potential customer base for everyone connected.
On Thu, Aug 22, 2013 at 8:27 PM, Mitar - [email protected] < freedombox-discuss.neophyte_rep.01607b5a90.mmitar#[email protected]>wrote: > Hi! > > They are just trying to counter the Google's loom project. It is very > simple, who will control the transmission media, will win in the long > term. This is why competition migrated to mobile devices and now they > are migrating to the transport media itself. Service providers are > trying to control the whole stack. > > > Mitar > > On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 6:44 PM, > <[email protected]> wrote: > > Technology leaders launch partnership to make internet access available > to > > all > > Facebook, Ericsson, MediaTek, Nokia, Opera, Qualcomm, Samsung to be > founding > > partners > > > > > https://fbcdn-dragon-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-prn1/851575_492821944140017_1070145609_n.pdf > > > > Is this good, bad, or indifferent? > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Freedombox-discuss mailing list > > [email protected] > > > http://lists.alioth.debian.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/freedombox-discuss > > > > -- > http://mitar.tnode.com/ > https://twitter.com/mitar_m > >
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