Tech Giants Respond to Markey and High Speed Internet Isp
| Posted by Hungry Lion at 13 August 2008 22:3 | |
Hi, I'm Lion Loomis, welcome to my den. Read my collection carefully, I am behind you...... |
Broadband High Speed Internet Access Service? That is for sure. Even though high speed internet isp are probably one of the most important undertakings people embark upon, they are often simply shortsighted.
When we discover, as most of us do, how little our precious possessions will fetch in the marketplace we are inclined to be disillusioned, event to feel that we are being updated.
Did you know high speed DSL and Cable providers have expanded its operations to countries all over the world. Broadband adoption among U.S. consumers seems to be slowing, with the three largest broadband providers in the US posting the lowest subscriber increases in years during the second quarter of 2008. AT&T and Verizon, in particular, reported increased in broadband subscribers that were small fraction of numbers in past quarters, with growth in the tens of thousands instead of ..>>.
They said:
Earlier this month, Frontier Online, a small US ISP that serves 24 states added new language to their terms of service agreement that appears to cap almost half of its users at a minuscule 5GB of data a month, including downloading and uploading. "Customers must comply with all Frontier network, bandwidth, data storage and usage limitations," reads the new TOS. "Frontier may suspend, end or apply additional charges to the Service if such usage .. Read the rest of this entry.
The synthesis of the idea of high speed internet isp dominated early news:
Is your ISP or preferred search engine tracking your online behavior and potentially putting your personal information in jeopardy? Of course not, many of the country's top Internet companies said Monday. The companies, including Google and Yahoo, wrote to Congress this weekend in response to a letter from Rep. Edward Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat and chair of the House Energy and Commerce's Internet subcommittee, that asked them to answer 11 questions relating to their data ..[next].
Like it or not, things are better day after day.
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