
Shanzem
The Collective Against ALL Authorities
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Posted - 2008.03.26 13:14:00 -
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Edited by: Shanzem on 26/03/2008 13:22:37 Edited by: Shanzem on 26/03/2008 13:18:14 Edited by: Shanzem on 26/03/2008 13:15:58
i gave up on TV along time ago ^^
Secondly net neutrality isn't that much of an issue, its a network its designed to be networked, you can always bridge networks. another good example of this is Wifi mesh networking
Hell one individual creates an ISP (some one like Chribba - not picking on him but you can the point eve-files comes to mind - again thanks Chribba ) they buy some cheap wifi routers and places them up. all connecting via Cat5e (going with cheap easy setup here) to his main isp location. let say he does this in his hometown, let say hes leasing the connection or cable from another isp, (with no limits and a basic EULA)
he says he will charge everyone a portion of the leasing charge plus a little extra for up keep and maintenance, so 5 people use it each person pays 2/5 of the cost also note the more people join the cheaper it gets, and slower the network becomes this is were they have to manage coverage and locations, bottlenecks and cable connections but were working with a theory here soo...
if this person then continues expanding and getting more customers that he fills his small little town.
now abit further away in another small town, someone has already done the same. both isp or owners of the mesh network get together and decided among them selfs to bridge both wireless meshes, this continues across a very small state until eventually multiple states are joined thus recreating net neutrality which again is user content.
its then just a matter of building up some old computers, slapping a small distro of linux on there with FTP, HTTP server controller and wham, back to p2p and user made web pages.
Remember both the 802.11b and 802.11g standards are unlicensed they are apart of an industries standard which was created so all devices share a common method or language, ANYBODY therefore can do this. you can always recreate what was lost to wired.
losing industrial standards on the other hand is more worrying.
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