Video streaming is a MUCH heavier load than text based sites and even image based sites. Anecdotal, but I am aware of at least four of the street side boxes that failed early in the pandemic because the constant teleconferencing and streaming was literally orders of magnitude more concurrent traffic than at any time in the past. That has a cost. Theoretically, it is a “one time” cost but it is also a significant one.
My personal feeling is that this is the ISP’s, optimally the local government’s, problem. But I don’t know enough about how Korean ISPs and infrastructure are handled to have a proper opinion on this. But I can definitely see a push to throttle certain sites that make up a significant majority of the overall load. It is not net neutrality but… is one site accounting for 40 or 50% of the traffic net neutrality either?
knotthatone@lemmy.one 1 year ago
Because then the ISPs would have to respond to changing customer preferences and spend their own money on infrastructure improvements to meet the new demand.
Or they can lobby/bribe the government to demand fees from wealthy tech companies.
Guess which one’s cheaper.
luthis@lemmy.nz 1 year ago
Is that what is really going on here??
KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 year ago
I mean… yes?