New article that gets some things right, and some things so very VERY wrong:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/columnist/wolff/2014/09/21/net-neutrality-debate/15881687/
It's this quote that shows a fundamental disconnect with how things work:
As much as 70% of Internet-distributed data is now video, 50% of it from Netflix. This new video industry — growing exponentially and transforming the nature of entertainment — is getting a free ride on the cable and telco investment in broadband.
NO THEY'RE FUCKING NOT!!!! They pay for access. As does the consumer. The companies that are sad here are because they over-promise, and under-deliver: "Oh sure, you get 10Mbps. Uh huh. Ya. That's yours. *wink*wink*". And then if you try and actually USE the capacity you are paying for, they get upset, with things like caps on data usage. This is basically what they say next: "Well you weren't actually supposed to USE that the whole time! We only wanted you to burst a webpage, and then stop! We don't ACTUALLY have the capacity we're selling you! You're running us into the poor house, boo hoo, etc"
Same thing on the "Netflix" end of things. Their provider themselves might be charging appropriately, but then the under-built infrastructure of the "last mile" people get upset that all their customers, all at once, are always (essentially) watching video all night, and they can't keep up.
This whole "problem" came about because people started actually using the capacity of broadband, instead of just "bursts" of it, which the cable/last mile internet companies were banking on. And Billions of dollars are being spent on lobbying to keep it that way so that they can keep selling capacity they don't have.