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Answer Overview

Response rates from 31.8k Congressional District 10 voters.

17%
Yes
83%
No
15%
Yes
72%
No
1%
Yes, only if it’s strictly based on a pay-per-quality model
7%
No, treat all traffic equally and continue the openness of the internet
1%
Yes, but only give priority by type (video over images) and not source (big website over little website)
4%
No, this would allow them to remove competition, create artificial scarcity, and increase prices
1%
Yes, this would make the internet faster and more reliable for users

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 31.8k Congressional District 10 voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 31.8k Congressional District 10 voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from Congressional District 10 voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @4T2WTMMfrom Colorado  answered…4yrs4Y

Internet should be a service like water, sewer and electric. Just another utility.

 @53LH4W3from New York  answered…4yrs4Y

No. The internet should be treated as a utility like it is in other countries. Our access speed is much slower than other countries and it's embarrassing.

 @9N8MT4F  from South Carolina  answered…5mos5MO

No, ISPs should be allowed to speed up general internet access based on levels of consumer pay, but not website-by-website.

 @9H7ZNLM from Arizona  answered…1yr1Y

No, this would not only allow the popular websites to remove their competition, but they create artificial scarcity and increase prices. Internet traffic should be treated equally and that way it can continue the openness of the internet.

 @8GCLT5S from North Carolina  answered…4yrs4Y

 @8GVBV23 from Colorado  answered…4yrs4Y

yes they should speed it up for people that pay more but dont slow the people who pay less.

 @8ZNFZ2T from New York  answered…3yrs3Y

Should providers be allowed to? Sure, but only at their own peril. Government should remove restrictions so that newer competitors can threaten their monopolies. These companies also face threats from decentralized networks like Helium. They should be allowed to implement variable site speed, but it should cost them in the market by allowing competitors to exist.

 @9XNXH47  from Colorado  answered…1mo1MO

Yes. Service providers are private entities. They are entitled to run their business how they like it.