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What Canada Can Teach the US About Net Neutrality

blottsie writes If there are two ways in which the Internet is similar in the United States and Canada, it's that it's slow and expensive in both places relative to many developed countries. The big difference, however, is that Canada is looking into doing something about it. The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission—the northern equivalent of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)— is examining how the wholesale market, where smaller Internet service providers (ISPs) use parts of bigger companies' networks to sell their own services, should operate in the years ahead. The industry reaction to this proposal provides insights to the potential consequences of re-classifying broadband in the U.S. as a Title II public utility.

2 of 80 comments (clear)

  1. What is it? by jamesl · · Score: 5, Interesting

    No posting on Slashdot about Net Neutrality without including what you think Net Neutrality is.

    It is many things to many people. Most wrong.

    What is it? I don't know. Tell me.

  2. What Korea can teach US in true broadband by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The US of A was the world's first nation in implementing broadband, to pave the road for the "Information Highway". That was a few decades ago

    Now, the US of A trails behind Korea, Japan, Estonia, and a few other countries in the availability of TRUE BROADBAND that is affordable for the masses

    The US consumer not only have to pay through their noses for broadband, and what they got are miserably slow, in compared with what the Koreans (for example) are getting

    US of A should learn from other countries to find out how to remedy and rectify the current pathetic situation

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !