That statement completely confuses me.  Why is asymmetry evil?  Does that not 
reflect what "Joe Average User" actually needs and wants? The statement that 
the average users *MUST* have the same pipes going UP as he does going DOWN 
does not reflect reality at all.  Do a lot of your users want to stream 4K 
video to their friends UHD TV?  Given that all transmission media has some sort 
of bandwidth limit it would seem to me that asymmetry is actually more fair for 
the user since he gets more of what he needs which is download speed.  There is 
no technical reason that it can't be symmetric it is just a reflection of what 
the market wants.  As an ISP I can tell you that a lot more people complaint 
about their download speeds than their upload speeds.  Do you think that you 
(or the average home user) would be happier with 27.5 down and 27.5 up vs your 
50 down and 5 up you have today?  Don't tell me you want 50 down and 50 up 
because that is a different bandwidth total that requires a faster transmission 
media.

Do you actually believe that average users are suffering with a 5 mbps 
upstream?  I don't. I just don't see the average user "freely interchanging 
ideas" at more than 5 mbps.  I don't feel like "Big Brother" forced me to watch 
Netflix and my next door neighbor just doesn't provide a lot of engaging HD 
content that I just must see.

By the way, most carriers have plenty of symmetric offerings, it is just that 
they are marketed as business class not because we are evil but because that is 
the normal usage case.  Remember that most offerings were symmetric up until 
DSL became available which allowed us to provide the faster downloads users 
actually wanted.  Modems and TDM circuits were symmetric and everyone hated the 
fact that all this upstream went unused while people longed for better download 
speeds.

Actually if the traffic patterns were actually more symmetric, the carriers 
would be happier because it would create a much more any-to-any flow and this 
net neutrality garbage would never have been an issue.  In the real world, 
there are actually a handful of sites pushing tons of bandwidth in one 
direction to a lot of users.  That is what it is until "Joe Average User" 
starts creating engaging content.


>The REAL evil in the ISP marketplace is, of course, essentially entirely 
>unremarked-upon - ASYMMETRY.  For the Internet, as >such, truly to live up to 
>its promise to continue to revolutionize the world through free exchange of 
>ideas, information, >data and so forth, Joe Average User
>*MUST* have the same pipes going UP as he does coming DOWN.  Just as an 
>example, my service at home is what, 50 down/5 up?  >That structure is less 
>conducive to free interchange and more conducive to the 
>Big-Brother™-seal-of-approval mindless >consumption of whatever content THEY™ 
>deem necessary and sufficient to keep the bread and circus masses dull and 
>uninvolved.  >Plus, the slow uplink speeds make remote backups dreadfully 
>impractical for the home user.  So let's see some symmetry in the >offerings, 
>ISPs, ok?

Steven Naslund
Chicago IL

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