>>3330307Except that even the lowest price in the new freer market will be higher than the prices currently, because current legal mandates ensure a service for free by prohibiting a particular activity. How will we lower the cost of accessing websites when ISPs are currently prohibited from throttling websites and charging for premium access to them, and net neutrality will allow them to do so?
Free markets have only led to the lowering of prices over time when the good, product or service in question is already for sale. Here, we are giving businesses permission to monetize something that was already free and granted. No matter how competitive the field is, it will be more expensive than it is currently because it will be monetized at all.