> On 24 May, 2021, at 10:18 pm, Stuart Cheshire via Bloat 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> When first class passengers board the plane first, all economy passengers 
> wait a little bit longer as a result.

Technically, they all get to the runway at the same time anyway; the 
first-class pax just get out of the terminal to sit in their airline seats 
waiting for longer, while the more congested cattle-class cabin sorts itself 
out.  If the latter process were optimised better, the first-class passengers 
might actually end up waiting less, and pretty much everyone would benefit 
accordingly.

Where first-class passengers *do* have an advantage is in priority lanes at 
check-in and security.  It means they can turn up at the airport later to catch 
the same flight, without fear of missing it and without having to spend 
unnecessary hours in duty-free hell.  They also get posher waiting lounges with 
"free" food.  It is that sort of atmosphere that Net Neutrality advocates 
object to in computer networking.

I believe NN advocates will respond positively to concrete signs of improvement 
in perceived consumer fairness and reduction of costs to consumers.  I also 
believe that implementing AQM well is a key enabler towards those improvements. 
 That is probably the right perspective for "selling" AQM to them.

 - Jonathan Morton
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