Ferno wrote:Comparing the internet with utilities falls completely apart when scrutinized.
You can't compare the internet with water, simply because there is only so much water that's held in a reservoir.
Can't compare it to power either because power is created using a finite resource.
Natural gas? finite.
Data from the internet on the other hand is infinite. you can have one original on a server and on the next machine a hundred thousand copies of that original file. And yet, the ISP's want to charge for those copies. It's simply a way to make money out of nothing.
Besides.. there are no provisions for people to use less at all. it's a set amount per month whether you use one gig a month or fifty.
I hear your reasoning. I'm not rying to disagree with you here, just trying to understand better:
1. Why do companies with high usage have to pay per GB rates?
I think the answer lies not so much in volume but in throughput. Extra through put involves extra cost in the form of capital improvements needed to get enough equipment to handle the volume, and in the form of extra electricity to run the extra equipment that you just bought. This is why I buy into the MMO subscription fee. You're not really paying for their bits, you're paying for them to have the machines running on the far end to provide those bits and for them to be connected to more machines that provide streamlined pipes to the backbone of the internet.
Volume is just a convenient way to measure throughput requirements when it comes to a server that has a more consistent demand than the average internet user. It''s also the way that people are used to paying for things.
2. I'll back down from the being okay with per GB charges for consumers, but only to a degree. The finite resource involved here is bandwidth. If the average bandwidth demand of a small percentage of the user base is significantly higher than the rest, and it is such that the ISP has to upgrade/add equipment to handle it, doesn't it make sense that the heavy users should bear more of the increased operational cost for the ISP? You're right that most of the cost to an ISP is capital (fixed), and that a very small amount of the cost is bandwidth; so I'm okay with per GB charges, as long as my bill consists of a (relatively) high fixed service charge, and a very small per-GB fee.
3. I'm in favor of internet service being treated more like utilities more in the sense of wanting regulation that guarantees a level playing field for service providers, web servers, and everything in between. I agree that the threat to net neutrality right now lies in the service providers. If XYZ company can fairly compete for money as an ISP, then it is detrimental for other ISPs to degrade sites, because the competition can step in, and the company with the best attention to the customer's needs wins out, not just the biggest one with the most clout.