Slashdot Mirror


Who Pays for Rebuilding the Internet?

pcause writes "The Internet (physical as opposed to technical) was really not designed for applications that want to use maximum bandwidth all of the time, such as P2P and streaming video. Here in the US we've seen Comcast try to balance the demands of P2P traffic with other traffic and its backbone capacity. In the UK, a flame war has broken out between the BBC and ISPs about the same issue. So the question is who pays? Should the content owners who make the profits pay for the extra infrastructure, or should the consumer pay?"

1 of 473 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Duh - we all do. by Dun+Malg · · Score: 5, Informative

    So, if by "build" you mean "solicited bids," then yes. Yes it is, then, as that is how the government "builds" everything it builds. The Lunar Lander was built by Grumman, who won the bid. The M-1 Abrams, General Dynamics, who won the bid. The Interstate Highway System, which was built by hundreds of different contractors who won the damned bid to build them. With the exception of historical oddities like the Springfield Armory (closed in 1968) and the Army Corps of Engineers, that's the way the feds get things done: they pay someone else to build it to their specs.
    --
    If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.