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Answer Overview

Response rates from 6.1k University--Rosedale voters.

14%
Yes
86%
No
12%
Yes
79%
No
1%
Yes, but only give priority by type (video over images) and not source (big website over little website)
5%
No, treat all traffic equally and continue the openness of the internet
1%
Yes, this would make the internet faster and more reliable for users
2%
No, this would allow them to remove competition, create artificial scarcity, and increase prices
1%
Yes, only if it’s strictly based on a pay-per-quality model

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 6.1k University--Rosedale voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 6.1k University--Rosedale voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from University--Rosedale voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @9ZJS72Hfrom Ontario  answered…1wk1W

Yes, if the prices for consumers go down and they can only speed websites up and are not allowed to slow down websites

 @9VT96JXfrom Alberta  answered…1mo1MO

If the internet is slow then since what is most popular is what most people are trying to get to, then I think it’s fair to speed up a more used website at the expense of another

 @9TNKQWJfrom Ontario  answered…2mos2MO

It would be good if the internet was faster for providers who pay more money, but not to slow down the internet for those who don't pay.

 @9F5KMPVfrom Alberta  answered…1yr1Y

It's really unfair if the bigger sites have a faster connection. There's too many monopolies online. The little guy shouldn't be at the disadvantage. A website should not be allowed to pay for optimal speed. Every site should have equal speed.

 @93BR42Hfrom British Columbia  answered…2yrs2Y

 @93B6FPPfrom Ontario  answered…2yrs2Y

Internet should be open and not controlled by only two overseers (bell and rogers)