He's conflating two points here:
1. Whether Title II imposed regulations that made it difficult for ISPs to innovate.
2. Whether ISPs have the ability to throttle, ban, or outright charge additional fees for content.
He didn't address (2). Also, the Internet has changed significantly since the good 'ole 90s. The Internet isn't used by just hackers, gamers, and college students. Now it's a utility. Hence, the need for regulation.
It maddening how much this administration equated free markets to predatory practices....
1. Whether Title II imposed regulations that made it difficult for ISPs to innovate.
2. Whether ISPs have the ability to throttle, ban, or outright charge additional fees for content.
He didn't address (2). Also, the Internet has changed significantly since the good 'ole 90s. The Internet isn't used by just hackers, gamers, and college students. Now it's a utility. Hence, the need for regulation.
It maddening how much this administration equated free markets to predatory practices....