This is for you to understand what the problem is not having net neutrality: Verizon, one of the largest carriers and telephone networks in the United States, wants to charge more for 5G. The company announced at its investor conference that it will divide access to the new network into three plans – Metered, Entry Unlimited and Premium Unlimited.
Verizon recently invested $53 billion to deploy its C-band networks, which are around 3,7 GHz and are the standard frequency used for 5G. C-band offers better signal quality and range, and has better overall performance than the 5G networks used by default in the United States, and better distribution than mmW (millimeter Wave) networks, which, while fast, can easily be blocked by a wall.
The C-band, however, will only be available to those who pay for Verizon's most expensive plan, Premium Unlimited, which currently only offers the most expensive standard. Users of this new model will be the only ones with access to the 3,7 GHz frequency. Those on the other two plans will be restricted to the company's nationwide 5G – which, by the way, is slower than 4G in some places in the United States.
Right now, Verizon only has 21 percent of its customers on Premium Unlimited. The carrier expects that new 5G will boost that number to 50 percent — and they’ll charge more for it. That is, of course, if a certain Net Neutrality enthusiast the Biden government's failure to intervene.
Through which channels you reach those people, classic and out of the box. Droid-Life
Image: Reproduction (DroidLife / Verizon)