• tal@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    The infrastructure over which that data travels isn’t free. If you have a resource and it has any kind of scarcity, you want to tie consumption to the cost of producing more of it.

    You can reduce the transaction cost – reduce hassle for users using Internet service – by not having a cap for them to worry about, but then you decouple the costs of consumption.

    Soft caps, like throttling, are one way to help reduce transaction costs while still having some connection between consumption and price.

    But point is, if one user is using a lot more of the infrastructure than any other is, you probably want to have that reflected in some way, else you’re dumping Heavy User’s costs on Light User.

      • tal@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Like, what kind of costs exist? Lines, network hardware, putting up the tunnels and poles that hold up lines, the network admins who deal with issues on them. Your ISP can’t just push a button and instantly provide 1Tbit bandwidth capacity at no cost to themselves to every subscriber.

        • Hot Saucerman@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          Oh you mean like the $400 billion the industry has taken to adopt Fiber-optic high speeds, but somehow Fiber access has never materialized in most US cities? You mean like that infrastructure? That we’ve already fucking paid for through grants and other federal programs handing money to the ISPs?

          Are you having a laugh or do you work for these fuckers?

          I’m not disputing the costs, I’m disputing that they already have money to cover the costs (taxpayer money, I might add) and they’re bilking the consumer on top of it.

          EDIT: Also, let’s not forget that they got this money during a period of media consolidation. Why was Comcast using its money to buy NBC in 2011 instead of spending that on (*audible gasp) infrastructure?

          • tal@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            I’m disputing that they already have money to cover the costs

            Federal subsidies to telcos were not intended to provide Internet service for free, but to reduce costs.

            You could argue that a subsidy should reduce prices relative to what they should have been, had no subsidy existed.

            But you cannot argue that pricing should be decoupled from consumption as a result of that.