Quote:
Originally Posted by Akria
I highly doubt such a move would be successful.
Consumer technology has reached the point where it's possible to completely circumvent such things.
In particular, I could see a network of high-capacity routers in people's houses acting as a chain to a more powerful one with uncurtailed Internet access, no matter how expensive, with the network mainly consisting of those routers acting in a bridge role and each user paying a small fee to whoever controls the Internet access point so that they can afford the uncurtailed package offered by an ISP.
And, if nothing else, it would not be so hard to set up a second global Internet. The main problem is bandwidth, and that could be overcome by concerted action.
I would also have suggested secure proxies, but presumably any limited package would be based on allowing specific domains and IPs and disallowing others, and of course you would not allow a proxy in a limiting package.
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And how is connectivity between these routers provided ?