I think you're seriously missing the point that we are all paying for bandwidth on the internet. Including corporations.
Do you have a job? Does your employer have an office? Does that office have an internet connection? They're paying for use of the internet to an ISP.
By the way, ISP simply means Internet Service Provider. I'm not completely sure that you have grasped that concept yet based on your comments. By definition, that means they are providing access to the internet to people who want to consume data from the internet. Data on the internet is consumed with bandwidth.
So if I access Google, I'm using bandwidth on the internet. If I access any webpage, I'm accessing and using bandwidth on the internet. When I "stream" movies or music, I'm consuming bandwidth on the internet. The company providing that content is not pushing bandwidth out into the ether constantly. They are receiving requests, known as packets, over the internet, on their internal servers (not floating off in the interwebs somewhere).
This means when an ISP attempts to charge a corporation for having a large quantity of packets sent to them, and them sending large packets back, that ISP is now DOUBLE CHARGING those corporations. When that happens, it's no longer "the normal cost of business". It's EXTORTION.
Do you work from home, or simply access the internet from your home? Do you pay fo your internet connection? You're paying for your bandwidth, too.
Just some food for thought...