Ano, I think that you may be missing one of the real issues. It's not about how fast your individual service is. It's about the content providers ability to provide their product to you at reasonable speeds. Netflix is one example. Comcast could decide, now legally, that Netflix will be throttled to half speed unless they pay for access to Comcast's network. So you as a customer of Netflix have no say. So either Comcast makes a bunch of money off of Netflix, or you, as the customer, get so frustrated, you just buy Comcast's streaming services (content) rather than fighting the battle.
But even worse, those of us in small business America are even more screwed. I work for a company that sells pro audio products, both wholesale and retail. With these new (lack of) rules, Amazon could pay a premium to the providers and lock our little company virtually out of the market. They get fast, priority access to the ISPs network, we get throttled. How much business are we going to get if that happens.
And I live in the Chicago area. There are only 3 real providers available to me. Not much choice.
And in 3 years, 1 month and 5 days, we could be out of business.