Cyberwiz
Decided to test your definition of net neutrality as stated by you here, and was given this reply.
What do you say ?
Mr Krool seems to consider himself extremely smart rubbishing anything that doesnt fit in his head.
Anyways, before writing the definition i had stated that its a very simple/basic/broad definition just to give an outline coz in the posts previous to mine there was some confusion regarding net neutrality.
I'll give an e.g. here to illustrate what i was trying to say. I specifically took the airtel 384 Kbps plan to view streaming videos from a particular site which dont run at 256 K . Now when why speed is reduced to 256 K ..am i not being restricted from what i want to do with my network connection in as much as i can no longer watch my favourite videos ?..Its a blanket block on a service albeit in an indirect way akin to port blocking...I think this amounts to a restriction and is against net neutrality.
Also, what he says at the end of his post
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And the third point contradicts the first - unless you have a leased line, a fair use policy must be enforced to ensure reliability -
unquote
shows a lack of understanding of how networks work.An illustration to substantiate my argument will show that there is no contradiction b/w the 1st and 3rd point
Valid Traffic shaping :
Assuming 25 users on a network. say some 20 are using Bitorrent and maxing out their connections saturating the Upstream circuit to ISP backbone. Now 5 out these 25 users are trying to make VoIP calls for which ping time is critical. Now the ISP applies traffic shaping protocols to delay certain requests sent by Bitorrent users to the gateway and give priority tags to VoIP packets so that the application for which latency is crtitical can function smoothly over those where ping times are not so important. This is a valid use of traffic shaping for stability of network. When the ISP applies traffic shaping in a restrictive sense for eg not delaying but dropping the bittorrent packets to create time-outs for the bitorrent user..would imply restrictions going against neutrality. FUP interms of download caps and genuine traffic shaping for stability are two different things how can one equate the two. We have always had traffic shaping on airtel but not download caps. so how does my third point contradict the first? or the definition?
Moreover, his post also betrays a myopic view of not only net neutrality but also others peoples opinions for eg he says
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"According to the definition above, every ISP in the world is violating it left right and center because they don't provide their customers 1 Gbps connections (only 5 Mbps, OMG they are capping speeds!)."
unquote
My defintion implies the ISP deviating from what iam entitled to ie a free net at a particlular speed for which iam paying the price which the ISP has determined. For eg If i take a 2 KW connection for electrical load of my house, i take it coz i need that much. If iam not getting the 2 KW or there are frequent disruptions, i have a case against the electricity supplier. To suggest that the Supplier is commiting a fraud on me by not giving me 10 KW instead of 2 KW which i am paying for (as is the implication of the statement quoted above) is absurd to say the least.
I would appreciate if u dont cross link my posts especially on another forum. I have posted my opinon and people are welcome to agree with it or reject it..thats their viewpoint..i dont intend to justify my views any further.