We buy our DSL connectivity from a small local provider that we’ve been doing business with for years. We could pay a little less and go with one of the big companies, but when you read stories like this, you might understand why we’re happy with the status quo:
Canada’s largest provider of high-speed internet access is exploring a controversial data substitution technique that lets it add its own content to the webpages customers visit.
[snip]
This is what Net Neutrality is about — it’s not just making sure that data is handled in a competitive and non-discriminatory manner, but it’s also that the data that’s sent is the data that you get — that the content is unmodified, not with messages that are woven into your data stream.
UPDATE: Lauren Weinstein has an interesting solution to the problem: kiss http goodbye.