darksiege wrote:
Could I possibly link to this paper for others who would like to read it?
Sure, although technically, legally speaking, I shouldn't be distributing several of the source materials. Some of them are publicly available online, but a number of them came from academic journals that I was only able to access through DCCCD's EBSCO account. Personally, I don't really care, but since they're presently stored on Mookhow's server, it's not my call. If you want to re-up them to somewhere else, then I suppose you can do whatever you want.
darksiege wrote:
I suppose it really boils down to I do not want my ISP telling me that I can or cannot access various things I may want to view.
Sure, no one wants that. I just think that A) the chance of that actually happening, let alone succeeding in the long run are much smaller than people think and B) as things currently stand, your choice is to either risk having your ISP tell you what you can or can't access or risk having the FCC tell you what you can or can't access. I certainly won't deny that ISPs have done some shady **** now and then, but the FCC has a much worse track record when it comes to restricting people's freedom of choice/speech.
darksiege wrote:
I do still have the firm belief that Comcast is a bunch of cock bags though. And chances are that will not change. Even if they come out and apologize for every shitty thing that they have ever done.
Oh, no doubt. It's just that the reach of their cock baggery exceeds their grasp. If they could have pulled off the kinds of things that net neutrality advocates have been fretting about for decades, they would have done so long ago. The FCC, on the other hand, is pretty well unlimited in their cock baggery. They've already displayed a willingness to completely disregard judicial review. There's no reason to think they'll gain a sudden, road-to-damascus, new-found respect for rule of law, privacy, and freedom of speech any time in the near future.
And it's not really a choice between letting jerk A or jerk B run the show, anyway. Comcast, etc. may be somewhat limited in what they can get away with now, but I won't expect that to continue with someone like Wheeler running the show. I hate using this phrase because of the connotations, but he's pretty much the textbook definition of an industry shill. I'd wager good money that the effect of whatever gets drafted by the FCC will be to silently shield ISPs from consumer wrath while sounding "good on paper" to consumers. I've said it before, and I'll say it again: the foxes are guarding the hen house. Whether or not there's a problem, the solution is definitely not to hire more foxes.