Saturday, October 21, 2006
Net Neutrality
Net Neutrality means an idea that Internet users should be guaranteed to use the Internet equally, and any companies ought not to be accepted to have an influence on users of the Internet and the access. For example, the following is the example of Net Neutrality's menace. “Two Pipes” are that a company provides the customers a service which permits the customers to be able to have a priority to access a particular content. That means it can be difficult for people who do not use the service to access the content. In addition, in the case of the Internet, there is a special characteristic that if a person or an association has a lot of the flow of data around the Internet (Internet traffic), it is extremely advantageous to the person or the association to act in the Internet. For this reason, some corporations and organization insist that Net Neutrality should be the law. Also, the argument whether the idea should be the law or not is continuing now.
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