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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page consideration of the question of how net access should be insured. The question of whether or not network operators such as Verizon and Comcast should be prohibited from providing (for a fee) expedited delivery of internet packets is addressed. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPnetNeutrality.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
whether some users should be charged more for their Internet usage than others. Some contend that the Internet is so important to society that is should be regulated differently
than other aspects of our society. Indeed, many contend that the Internet shouldnt be regulated at all, that it is a great social experiment that should be allowed to
evolve in the absence of government involvement. There is a definite problem, however, with that view. The Internet is indeed
one of the most powerful tools of contemporary society. Its power lies not only in its capabilities but in its structure. The Internet is not owned or operated by
any one entity but rather by tens of millions of entities, entities that are located all over the world. As the name would suggest, the Internet is a conglomerate
of interconnected networks. The users of that network both draw from its resources and contribute to those resources. Those that
propose Net neutrality contend that everyone should have equal access to the Net at equal cost. Those that oppose Net neutrality, however, recognize that the Net depends on a
certain infrastructure and that components of that infrastructure are owned by various entities. They contend that that ownership conveys, to one degree or another, the right of control.
An obvious question that presents itself is should network operators such as Verizon and Comcast be prohibited from providing (for a fee) expedited delivery of internet packets.
The telephone and cable industries, of course, are the owners of much of the infrastructure upon which the Internet depends. They own the
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