looking forward to hearing how repealing net neutrality is good for a majority of americans. let's hear it.
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If Murdoch ever turned on Trump he could effectively end him in a matter of weeks.
It's hard to come up with a good historical parallel for Murdoch. JP Morgan? WR Hearst?
I'm always going to encourage more competition in a market place and less government regulation. It will be interesting to see if services improve at a cheaper rate. Almost a microcosm as to how we should run the rest of the economy.
I'm always going to encourage more competition in a market place and less government regulation. It will be interesting to see if services improve at a cheaper rate. Almost a microcosm as to how we should run the rest of the economy.
The way it looks to me, ISPs have very little incentive to offer better services at cheaper rates, because most markets offer little choice. So this appears as more an opportunity for rent-seeking than competition.
The results may not be as bad as critics have speculated, but I just don't see what the upside is (for consumers, anyway).
The way it looks to me, ISPs have very little incentive to offer better services at cheaper rates, because most markets offer little choice. So this appears as more an opportunity for rent-seeking than competition.
The results may not be as bad as critics have speculated, but I just don't see what the upside is (for consumers, anyway).
I'm always going to encourage more competition in a market place and less government regulation. It will be interesting to see if services improve at a cheaper rate. Almost a microcosm as to how we should run the rest of the economy.
If it encourages more ISPs to enter the market then the consumers will receive more services at cheaper costs. At least that is what I believe in all economic instances.
Sure, but ISPs can't just snap their fingers and enter a market. There are substantial barriers to entry for new broadband providers that make it impossible or prohibitively expensive to do so. It would take--you guessed it--government intervention at the national, state, and municipal level to make that a reality.
Sure, but ISPs can't just snap their fingers and enter a market. There are substantial barriers to entry for new broadband providers that make it impossible or prohibitively expensive to do so. It would take--you guessed it--government intervention at the national, state, and municipal level to make that a reality.