old-pr-pix said:DRR said:...The growth of smartphone photography and the connectivity it provides...
Not to worry, the U.S. government has just addressed the "connectivity" part. The FCC has voted to take over control of the Internet in their move toward "Net Neutrality."
The major DSLR providers can relax now, the FCC will screw it up so badly that no one will be able to upload their photos without a serious per picturechargetax. That willkill offdiscourage all those smartphone toting 'togs Facebooking their way to the future. :-\
Do you think that's the solution?
I hope you are joking or simply have a misunderstanding of what net neutrality actually means. Net neutrality as supported by the FCC and the bulk of technology companies (Google, etc.) means that when you have an Internet connection you are simply paying for a connection to the Internet in which your Internet Service Provider (ISP - Comcast, etc.) cannot modify or force you to pay extra to use the bandwidth you are already paying for based on what you want to do on the Internet. No net neutrality means you are completely at the mercy of your ISP in what you do on the Internet meaning they will have the capacity to slow down or even prevent access to visit or use sites on the Internet unless you pay them even more. Net neutrality ensures that an Internet connection is simply an Internet connection and ISPs cannot add additional fees and charges to use specific sites or services - in fact net neutrality forbids this.
Hypothetically, would you like the Netflix package where if you are already paying for Netflix and now Comcast can say you have to pay an additional $10 per month if you want it in HD on top of what you are already paying, even if you are already paying Netflix for the HD package? Or how about the Youtube Premium package for an additional $5 per month where you can watch full videos without them stalling out every 20 seconds? Performing these feats from a technical perspective at the ISP level is exceptionally easy and their anti-net neutrality position is just a scheme that ISPs want to use to bilk the consumer out of more money for their already excessively expensive and crummy Internet connection provided (USA is already around 11th place in Internet speeds and in the rankings of around 28th in total Internet users). Net neutrality ensures the exact opposite of what you happen to think the USA government is attempting to do.
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