• 001100 010010@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    Meh, it’s good enough to be usable. I have 50/10 Mbps down/up and I can watch 1440p videos just fine. What do y’all use your internet for? Do you have like 5 family members watching stuff at the same time?

    But yea these greedy corporations aint gonna change anything unless we get laws passed and actually enforce them.

    Edit: spelling

    • fades@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      50/10

      good enough to be usable

      On a post about how ISPs are literally fucking us all over, overcharging for the most basic connections that are far behind other countries and all you have to say is iT’s UsAbLe lmao

      Youre advocating for the SLOWEST avg speed in the nation

      Americans are getting nearly 200 Mbps in download speed, but are you?

      https://www.allconnect.com/blog/us-internet-speeds-globally

      As of May 2023, Ookla’s Speedtest.net shows Americans are getting over 200 Mbps of download speed and about 23 Mbps of upload speed through their fixed broadband connections — good for 6th in the world for median fixed broadband speeds. Considering “fast internet speeds” are generally defined as any download speed above 100 Mbps, Americans are doing quite well by this measure.

      In fact, according to a recent Allconnect data report, 9 in 10 households can access at least 100 Mbps speeds.

      That’s an incredible improvement from just under a decade ago when the U.S. had an average download speed of just 31 Mbps. In 2013, America ranked 25th among 39 nations for broadband speed.

      Sub-100 is not good enough by most standards these days around the world. 50 is not even double the fastest speeds from TEN years ago

      We as consumers and citizens deserve better, especially as working from home continues to be a popular and realistic option and our global culture continues to be directly tied to internet culture/media/content.

      • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Honestly, I would rather have universal health care than faster download speeds any day.

        I’m currently shelling out about $18,000 a year to have a $2,500 deductible.