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Comment by bifocal

2 days ago

> As an imperfect analogy, consider a road, representing a mobile network. This road has some capabilities, such as speed limit. There are cars driving on this road, representing mobile phones. And then consider that a road management company, representing the carrier, would impose different speed limits on different cars, depending on whether they are affiliated with the road management company or not. > Would that be acceptable in a physical world?

A number of cars on the road today can be remotely disabled by a device built-in to the car.

While personally I think this is risky, in the U.S., we also have police, sheriffs, highway patrol, M.P.s and others that have authority to tell other cars to stop or to physically stop them, which is just another way of doing the same thing. They also enforce speed limits.

So, no I don’t think that the ability to drive a vehicle as fast as one would like is a global right, per current laws.