Both sides are using lots of rhetoric, and there's a little bit of truth to what each has to say. But nobody really knows what's going to happen. |
He needs to put some numbers to the economic arguments. |
I am hopelessly confused about Net neutrality. I know what the Bells are saying, but it's unclear what they mean. |
I don't know if the sound you hear is the sound of eBay's stock going down, |
I don't think any concerns will be significant enough to block a deal. |
If a service connects to the (public telephone network), it will get dragged into the regulation of a (traditional phone) service. |
It is one of those debates that has a world war sense about it. Everyone is implicated, and billions of [US] dollars are at stake. |
It'll get through relatively easily with light conditions. |
It's a game of statistics, but the truth is they are both deeply flawed statistics. |
It's a game of statistics, but the truth is they are both deeply flawed statistics. It is a dynamic product. The per-channel number does not capture that because it values all channels the same, when they are not, and the nominal price really doesn't capture it either. |
It's hard to find someone with a more extensive resume than Dave Dorman in telecom, |
Lawyers represent their clients but when they become judges – or in this case, commissioners – their personal views reflect a broader range of considerations. |
Part of what makes the debate confusing is that neither side knows precisely what it wants to do in the future, nor wants to reveal its plans to competitors. |
People make the mistake of thinking there will be one big decision and it will be thus forever more. There is never any final victory or final defeat. |
Right now, I would never invest in a business model that depended on protection from Net neutrality. |