The latest rallying cry is “network neutrality.” This campaign started out with the legitimate goal of making sure that consumers could continue to access whichever services or content they want, rather than having to take those offered by the cable and phone company duopolists. But lately the campaign seems to have morphed into a broader demand that all consumers should be able to pay the same monthly fee for using the Internet, no matter how much bandwidth they use or how much their movie downloads and video chats are slowing service to everyone else in the neighborhood.
Perhaps this is the kind of economic illiteracy we should expect from people who get their information from “The Daily Show” and the Daily Kos. But isn't it time for the rest of us to move on and acknowledge that the days of the online free lunch are over?
Harold,
Thanks for keeping them honest, hope Mr. Pearlstein takes your kind invitation to fill in his knowledge gaps — did his piece happen to mention that his paycheck comes from a company that owns 350 cable communities in 19 states?
Hat's off to you, sir!
I had thought about mentioning that, but it seemed unnecessarily hostile. (For those unaware, Washington Post Co. also owns CableOne and a number of broadcast television stations.)
The irony here is that your google adsense ads are featuring Comcast prominently on this post.
I was shocked to see you've yet to gift us with one of your inspired analyses on the Keisler appointment. Bring it on, Harold!
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Harold,
You're a rock star. Keep telling it like it is.
Thanks.