The buffet needs to change the pricing model. This isn't what's happening though. This is having all your customers decide they like one type of meat the best and then the buffet turning around and asking the meat supplier to subsidize the customer for the longer cooking time the meat requires despite the buffet already charging the customer for the meat. You're missing the point though that Netflix is not my ISP's customer. They already pay their own ISP to make their content available.
This is a pretty good article summarizing the comcast-netflix dea. www.forbes.com/sites/markrogowsky/2...o-good-after-all-wants-government-to-step-in/
Thanks Space Ghost, I liked the link at the end of that article even better: http://blog.streamingmedia.com/2014...hanges-want-net-neutrality.html#disqus_thread. Looks like my analogies were a little short sighted and assuming Netflix connected to the internet through an ISP the same as anyone else was wrong.