• teft
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    11 months ago

    Net Neutrality.

    The principle that internet service providers should enable access to all content and applications regardless of source and without favoring, blocking, or throttling particular products or websites.

    Sounds exactly like he is disregarding net neutrality to me.

    Edit: To be clear, proponents of net neutrality believe that all corporations, not just ISPs should follow net neutrality. It’s because of this exact situation that people want shit like this put into law.

    • @[email protected]
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      1811 months ago

      internet service providers

      This is the key here, though. Twitter isn’t an ISP, they’re just making it more annoying when navigating from their site to elsewhere.

      • @[email protected]
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        1411 months ago

        Which is hilarious. This will only hurt them.

        People will just think Twitter is slow. Obviously Threads or NY Times will work normally when people are on those sites.

      • teft
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        11 months ago

        Net neutrality is the concept of an open, equal internet for everyone, regardless of device, application or platform used and content consumed. You can argue semantics all day but twitter slowing traffic or redirects to certain other websites is a violation of net neutrality. If not the letter of the definition then for sure the spirit of it.

        • @[email protected]
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          1111 months ago

          They’re violating the spirit of net neutrality, but not the law. Since they aren’t an ISP, they can’t actually slow down or block you from accessing certain websites. The most they can do is slow down (or block) their own URL redirection service when its used to access to those domains. That’s within their right of free speech, even if it’s really fucking petty.

        • @[email protected]
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          -311 months ago

          Just concede and learn from your mistake, because you’re missing the point. Cloudflare throttles connections to sites as part of their DDoS protection, but that isn’t even remotely related to net neutrality. On your site, you can do whatever you want, but ISPs preventing customers from accessing certain sites (or accessing them as they would “normal” sites) is what net neutrality is concerned with.

    • @[email protected]
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      511 months ago

      He’s like the asshole bakers who won’t make the cake for the gay wedding. Or he’ll do it eventually but whine about it the entire time and it’ll arrive late and burnt.

      • @[email protected]
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        211 months ago

        I’ve got no problem baking anyone a cake, but you’re right it’ll be late and burnt. I can’t bake for shit.

        But your assumption that I wouldn’t force anyone to bake that cake, you’re absolutely right.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          I was talking about Elon, but I’m sorry about your lack of baking skills in case you wanted to be good at it or something.

    • @[email protected]
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      411 months ago

      That’s because you don’t know what an “internet service provider” is. Twitter is not one.

      • teft
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        011 months ago

        I know what ISP means. Read my edit.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          Twitter isn’t, and shouldn’t be under any obligation to respond to you proxying your requests through their url tracker with any service level.

          Is it unethical? Yeah. Does it violate the letter of proposed NN laws? No. Does it violate the spirit of proposed NN laws? Also no. Those laws don’t cover what happens while a request is inside a parties network, only the traffic that travels in and out of it, of which Twitter was manipulating neither.

          Well, I suppose they could deliver a few packets with a couple microseconds of latency when they delivered the HTTP response payload but they would have to literally modify their OS’s TCP stack to do so and the entirety of that actual throttling would be literally milliseconds of difference.