What about bank robbery? Little ISPs could supplement their incomes using that 
immoral revenue stream too. The ends don't justify the means. Browsing history 
belongs to the user, not the ISP. Robbing users of this data is not justified 
just because it would give ISPs -- of any size -- a new revenue stream.

 -mel beckman

> On Mar 28, 2017, at 6:14 PM, Mike Hammett <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> What about little ISPs? There are already monetization platforms out there 
> that can be resold to small ISPs. The company sells the aggregate data 
> upstream. Not that I would, but in a small ISP, that money makes a big 
> difference. 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ----- 
> Mike Hammett 
> Intelligent Computing Solutions 
> 
> Midwest Internet Exchange 
> 
> The Brothers WISP 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> 
> From: "Mel Beckman" <[email protected]> 
> To: "Hugo Slabbert" <[email protected]> 
> Cc: [email protected] 
> Sent: Tuesday, March 28, 2017 8:08:19 PM 
> Subject: Re: EFF Call for sign-ons: ISPs, networking companies and engineers 
> opposed to FCC privacy repeal 
> 
> Hugo, 
> 
> That's a great find! I note in the article: 
> 
> "Not only is the price of the premier service (with ads) only $70 a month, 
> but it comes with a waiver of equipment, installation, and activation fees. 
> The standard service without ads is $99 a month..." 
> 
> So that's $29 a month to let AT&T track your Web browsing, but only for 
> targeting ads. ATT promises "And we won’t sell your personal information to 
> anyone, for any reason." 
> 
> I would guess that the ability to sell that data would be worth several times 
> the $29/month, so it's conceivable that a provider could offer $10/mo Gig 
> Internet in exchange for browsing history. 
> 
> But nobody does. 
> 
> Because they think they can steal it. 
> 
> I think this pretty well demonstrates the greed of the big-ISP executives who 
> lobbied for today's legislative atrocity, which lets them rob customers of 
> browsing history that even AT&T execs acknowledge users own. 
> 
> -mel beckman 
> 
> On Mar 28, 2017, at 5:56 PM, Hugo Slabbert 
> <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: 
> 
> Now, if ISPs want to PURCHASE browser data from customers directly, I'm 
> sure they'll get some takers. But that strategy has never appeared in 
> any business plan I've seen. 
> 
> https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2013/12/att-offers-gigabit-internet-discount-in-exchange-for-your-web-history/
>  ? 
> -- 
> Hugo Slabbert | email, xmpp/jabber: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
> pgp key: B178313E | also on Signal 
> 

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