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[citation][nom]ThatsNotNeutral2[/nom]@davewolfgangPoint well made, and i have nothing against packet prioritization, it's content prioritization that im against, in particular prioritizing traffic to one site over another because an agreement may have been made between the service provider and the websitethe internet allowed for small upstarts to come close to a level playing field with your mega corp, this would more or less kill the small upstarts and favor those with big pockets[/citation]
The TCP protocol has a bit for priority in header but that was never really implemented so routers ignore it. The only way to prioritize traffic is to open the packet and see where it goes and which port it uses which if fact violates the privacy of the contents of the packets. Having said that the content prioritization has been there for a while even though it was considered an abuse. Rather than making the average user browse the internet faster or lowering prices that allows the companies to allocate more and more users per link, raising their profits. But the threat is that it will allow certain routes to have their bandwidth limited from the client side, being an alternative to censorship. After all, think about a wikileaks mirror site that is having their client-side bandwidth reduced to 100Kbps and then how many clients will be unable to read a thing even after half an hour with page loading.
The TCP protocol has a bit for priority in header but that was never really implemented so routers ignore it. The only way to prioritize traffic is to open the packet and see where it goes and which port it uses which if fact violates the privacy of the contents of the packets. Having said that the content prioritization has been there for a while even though it was considered an abuse. Rather than making the average user browse the internet faster or lowering prices that allows the companies to allocate more and more users per link, raising their profits. But the threat is that it will allow certain routes to have their bandwidth limited from the client side, being an alternative to censorship. After all, think about a wikileaks mirror site that is having their client-side bandwidth reduced to 100Kbps and then how many clients will be unable to read a thing even after half an hour with page loading.