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by sythe2o0
3111 days ago
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It absolutely follows. > 1) Throttling sites the ISP doesn't like Is the definition of censorship. ISPs could just choose to not let anybody access their competitors' websites, for example. You're correct that data caps don't fall under this, however. |
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>Is the definition of censorship. ISPs could just choose to not let anybody access their competitors' websites, for example.
You're changing the example -- the scenario was allowing transmitters to opt to pay for the faster link. Packets would still get through at the same speed as e.g. today. It's not blocking them wholesale. At most, it's favoritism, and downloaders still get the data at a reasonable speed as under the pre-upgrade terms.
And the example involved a simple "did you pay?" structure, which is otherwise neutral. It would be a different story if favored sites got the fast pipe without paying, or if only some favored sites were allowed to buy the fast hop at all. But this example doesn't have that.
Prudent policy or not, I don't see how that comes close to censorship.
Do you say it's "censorship" when an activist wants to drive to other activists' houses to plan subversive activities, since it takes longer when you don't use the toll roads?