Chicago Proposes MAN (Metropolitan Area Network) 187
stumble writes: "This article lacks many details, but the idea is that Chicago wants to bring broadband to the masses and is accepting proposals to design and build a Metropolitan Area Network (MAN): 'The project, called CivicNet, is aimed at bringing a broadband network with integrated data, voice and video capabilities to every nook and cranny of Chicago over the next 10 years.'"
One step closer... (Score:2, Interesting)
But the MAN idea sounds excellent. I hope all cities establish this system. Can they be allocated their own TLD? They practically give them out anyway
The Metropolitan Area Network: One step closer to a networked world. And cheap broadband!
Re:One step closer... (Score:2, Informative)
uhh no
also you probably are assuming that coroporation can support EVERYONE doing about 50mbps traffic at peak times
Re:One step closer... (Score:1)
"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."
Albert Einstein
MAN? (Score:2, Funny)
*looks at Beowulf joke*
Forget it.
Re:MAN? (Score:1)
I hope this doesn't end up like Boston... (Score:3, Interesting)
Unfortunately, because you're dealing with politicians and contracters, both of whom love to lie to get money, the city is losing a bunch of money and the project is in terrible debt. All because of that old problem: if you ask voters whether giving out ponies to everyone is a good idea, they say "yes!", without realizing that it'll actually cost the government money.
Re:I hope this doesn't end up like Boston... (Score:1)
Re:I hope this doesn't end up like Boston... (Score:1)
And keep in mind the only disaster about the big dig is the cost- I hear it's dead-on schedule and a civic engineering marvel- not to say the cost doesn't suck, but look at the brightside, eh?
and weeeeeee!!!!!
an' that's just what I told them. (Score:2)
It's happened over and over again and people just never learn. The Paris sewer system. The London underground. The US rural electrification and interstate. Look at the costs of these huge projects. Everybody now want underground sewers, running water, public transportation, electricity, roads, phones. Each new work is a new chance to screw the public. You know, it's hard to find new houses that don't come with all of these uneeded luxuries. Dear God! When will it all end?!
I knew this would happen sooner or later... (Score:2)
Then again, as underhanded as some ISP's are, Chicago would be hard pressed to do any worse.
Timeline? (Score:3, Informative)
By which time, of course, the system will be hopelessly outdated, to the point where the last 40% of the people to receive it, who are not-so-coincidentally probably the ones who need it most, might as well not even have it.
OK, so maybe that's a tad bit cynical, but you get the point.
Re:Timeline? (Score:1)
Couldn't this money be better spent dealing with real issues? Broadband is *not* a necessity of life. (uh oh, I can hear the mob lining up outside the door now
Re:Timeline? (Score:2)
When I was a kid, you could see fire alarm boxes at regular intervals on every street. If there was a fire, you pulled the lever on the box and a clockwork mechanism inside the box sent a message to the fire department. It has been years since I've seen one of those boxes. The were made obsolete by the wide availability of telephones.
On a recent trip to a local grocery store, the store manager announced that they were having problems with their registers and that they would only be accepting cash until the problem was resolved. The problem was an outage with their Verizon high-speed data line. This had a noticable effect on the volume of business in the store. Their customers had become accustomed to using ATM and credit cards to make their purchases. Even the state issues welfare recipients something that works like an ATM card for food purchases.
Re:Timeline? (Score:1)
OK, so maybe that's a tad bit optimistic, but you get the point.
Re:Timeline? (Score:2)
Still... It has taken 20 years for telephone 'companies' (monopolies) to get from slow modems to slow ISDN-lines; for selected few even DSL is available. And this despite the fact that technology hasn't been the major problem for years now. They have succesfully been dragging their proverbial feet, while leeching out nice bounties.
So, I don't really know; non-competitive monopolies / cartels have already shown the worst case scenario, perhaps this might be the time to try out the alternatives, including society funded infrastructure projects?
Like I have said before, physical infrastructure might as well be built and maintained (mostly) by society (a la roads), but the layers above (from ISPs to content production) can and should be mostly left to companies. And of course, if private enterprises can actually produce better (less expensive, higher capacity with same price etc) physical infrastructure than towns and counties (while still making profit), they would be free to do so.
Hmm... (Score:1, Funny)
Yeah, it's OT, but this headline reminded me of the infamous Ian Malcom line from 'Jurassic Park'...
"God creates dinosours. God destroys dinosours. God creates man. Man destroys God. Man creates dinosours. Dinosours eat man... Woman inherits the Earth."
Well, that, and I'm sure someone will make a joke about Chicago being the codename for Windows 95, and how Microsoft wants to take control of the human ra... nevermind, I'm hopeless
Next coke machine? (Score:1, Funny)
ping crack_whore1351.CivicNet
no route to host
no route to host
Drat, she's out.
Already Outdated (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Already Outdated (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Already Outdated (Score:1)
Re:Already Outdated (Score:1)
Re:Already Outdated (Score:3, Funny)
Support open standards... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Support open standards... (Score:1)
Public Ownership of the Infrastructure... (Score:5, Interesting)
People go 'to and fro' on the internet and don't necessarily turn to one provider for the majority of the service like they do for other utilities. Sure you can use pay-routes to get online, (ISP's) just as you can use toll-roads and turnpikes. The most-used routes to get online will probably be supported via tax dollars in the near to medium future.
This has up and down sides. The up side is that public ownership of the internet will mean that it will be subject to more stringent quality controls and pricing regulation. The down-side is that any public resource is inevitably over-used and abused. It will also be more subject to content regulation if it's truly perceived as a 'community' resource.
Re:Public Ownership of the Infrastructure... (Score:1)
Re:Public Ownership of the Infrastructure... (Score:2)
OTOH, since the article says they're planning to have private contractors handle most of it
Re:Public Ownership of the Infrastructure... (Score:2)
Of course New York's subway system is definitely something to brag about. Convenient, fast, ubiquitous 24-hour public transit.
So the answer is yes, transit systems are well worth bragging about and are a major element in deciding where to live.
Re:Public Ownership of the Infrastructure... (Score:1)
Re:Public Ownership of the Infrastructure... (Score:2)
There is no "vital" infrastructure.
Water? Ancient cities had no water distribution system. The Roman aqueduct systems brought water to cities but did not distribute it widely - mainly to public baths and rich peoples' homes.
Gas? Gas hasn't been available for most of human history. It is quite dangerous. No house ever exploded from a candle or firewood leak.
Electricity? Why would you need electricity? For lights? What do you think the gaslights are for?
Telephones? What do you need a telephone in your home for? If you were a business, perhaps it would be useful, but no one needs it in their home.
Broadband internet? That didn't even exist ten years ago. What makes you think it's vital?
Point being, of course, that in a modern, forward-looking society, ALL of these are VITAL infrastructure; all of these should be distributed to every home. Unless you've got one of those weird all-electrical homes that doesn't need gas. Or one of those natural-gas fuel cells so you don't need any electricity. But I digress...
How it is supposed to be (Score:2)
Private turnpikes happen when your elected representatives fail you. Think about it. Why would you set up some private interest where they can collect money impeeding the public forever? It is always better for the public to recognize it's best interest and cooperate to bring it about. When you fail to do this, someone gets to earn a living at your expense.
Sure, private interests have a place. They can bid against each other to build it. When it's in place, they can either bid for the business or be regulated. Regulation, when it's not all fouled by an ignorant public, works for large well known and fixed indstries. There private interests can be garanteed a modest profit for their services and everyone gets their modern necessities.
We know what we want, let's try to get it. The internet is a different kind of tellecomunications that will require different regulations. There is no more need for "content" regulation than phone conversations. Private communications should be protected from interception the same way US post is. The ability to publish on it in any form must be as free as your ability to buy a Xerox machine and make a newspaper anonymously. These things, while natural extentions of our ordinary rights, have powerful enemies in government, telecomunications and publishing industries. Keep screaming your heads off.
Chcicago is beautiful.
alameda (Score:3, Informative)
It seems to me that broadband internet service is important enough to quality of life that it is proper for a city to ensure that it becomes as available, as cheap, and as reliable as possible.
Tacoma did this a while back... (Score:2)
Privacy Concerns (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Privacy Concerns (Score:2, Insightful)
This could be good or bad:
This sort of public network will help create an awareness among users about their own privacy and will encourage users to educate themselves about good computing practices, including using encrypted protocols for everything. The cryptosystems available for free to the public today (like RSA) are excellent, and people will learn to use them once they get burned. It will help to improve the security of network implementations on consumer operating systems and spurr competition among software companies; commercial network software will no longer be acceptable to the consumer if it does not exhibit the security excellence that open source network software does.
This will undoubtedly lead to the end of a way of thinking: that physical barriers are not adequate to ensure network privacy. Moreover, I think you will se companies and individuals use VPNs to replace the separation they once had with the outside world.
Thanks for reading.
public network = bound by Constitution(s) (Score:2)
At least a government agency providing the service would bound by the U.S. and state Constitutions, as well as other laws limiting the power of the state.
For example, a public network probably couldn't boot you for badmouthing city officials on a web page. Most private ISPs, on the other hand, have terms in their TOS that reserves their right to cut your connection for using it to post "inappropriate content" - where "inappropriate" may be defined arbitrarily as whatever the ISP doesn't like. (I recently got Comcast@Home service, and its TOS definitely has a term like this.)
On the privacy tip, a public network would have to follow the 4th Amendment, where a private ISP need not. (of course, both would probably make you explicitly consent to arbitrary monitoring as a condition of service - this is another term every private ISP I've ever dealt with has included.)
I'm not sure how a public network would be worse than a private one. (As for Carnivore, etc. forget it - private ISPs are typically coopted voluntarily, and if they aren't, their upstream providers probably are. Besides, you don't have anything to hide, do you?
On a side note, I can't wait for the next Watergate, where the sitting party gets caught using the surveillance apparatus to spy on its real enemy - its political opponents. It's just a matter of time, IMO. But this apparatus functions just as well on private networks today as it does on the public ones.
-Isaac
10 years? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:10 years? (Score:2)
I don't really foresee this happening, do you? We've been more closely focusing, now, on making better ways of of delivering information - such as airport or wireless networking - than we have on improving its speeds drastically. In networking, that is.
Re:10 years? (Score:2)
At least, I HOPE that's what they do. Installing connections that are only capable of 1.54mbps might suffice for a few years, but consumers will probably outgrow that in a short period of time. However, there is nothing stopping a company from planning far enough in the future to make it last for a while.
And then there are companies such as netpliance who thought that the average consumer still used only dialup and planned to continue that trend for the next 5+ years. And they're gone.
-Restil
Re:10 years? (Score:2)
In 1986 I was installing 10 Mbps ethernets. It wasn't considered super-fast or anything; it was just what everybody did.
If I had a 10 Mbps connection between my home and the Internet today in 2002, I would be a happy camper (except for the BNC headaches ;-).
Last mile is always way slower than LANs. If you use modern LAN stuff to lay out somebody's last mile today, it'll still be tolerable in 2012. And, as other have mentioned, if you use the right medium (fiber), you can run faster speeds later.
Great idea and all... (Score:1)
hrmm... now to think about it... who at my ISP would fight about that either?
A wonderful idea... (Score:4, Interesting)
Not to mention having to provide tech support for an entire metropolitan area...
Or the fact that the people that can afford computers or laptops with 802.11 cards can probably afford decent DSL access anyhow.
More power to 'em if they can pull it off, but there's reasons why Ricochet [ricochet.net] didn't do so well...
Re:A wonderful idea... (Score:1)
Re:A wonderful idea... (Score:2)
Re:A wonderful idea... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:A wonderful idea... (Score:2)
So, the gov't wants a MAN... (Score:1)
what will this cost the taxpayer?
what will it cost to connect?
what are they going to CENSOR?
this is a good idea, but i would rather not see a government controlling it.
it wont be long before they start filtering porn, or running carnivore on it to watch everything its users do, in the name of 'security' and 'public safety'
what they will most likely do off the bat?
filter ports and NO tellecommuting!
if this was a privately run thing, i would be all for it.
im sure the local telco and cable co. is against this. after all, its lost DSL and cable subscribers.
you have been warned....
Re:So, the gov't wants a MAN... (Score:1)
Re:So, the gov't wants a MAN... (Score:2)
I doubt they'd put this restriction on it. If Chicago is like many cities, the opportunity to reduce traffic by encouraging people to telecommute would be a big selling point for this scheme.
Chicago ... (Score:1, Informative)
The Daley political machine can talk big but moves sloooowwwwly.
And of course (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:And of course (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:And of course (Score:1)
Sponsered by... (Score:1)
Mmmm.. playing Civnet over Civicnet. Now that's a good way to kill time in a traffick jam!
NAN - Neighborhood Area Network (Score:5, Funny)
(OT): You know you've been web stuff too long when (Score:2)
Re:NAN - Neighborhood Area Network (Score:1)
Not so hot.... (Score:1)
like trying to filter pr0n
or blocking gaming ports
or anything else the city councils feels is 'bad for the children'
I'd be more cautious than celebratory. Stinks like China.net.
More information about the project (Score:5, Informative)
I wonder who will own it? (Score:1)
Come on. people, we saw this same behavior with the cable companies and the cellphone providers, and the phone companies before them.
Will Chicagoans be guaranteed the same level of service regardless of which services they're using, or which web sites they're visiting?
Will Chicagoans be allowed to use other Internet Service Providers over the WAN provided?
Will they be able to select another broadband provider in the City of Chicago selected one prices too high, or offers poor service, or will this be an exclusive contract, with other providers banned from the wires, or from the market?
If they do this right, and demand that the selected provider "deliver the bits" fairly, this could make Chicage the next hub for Internet innovation. If they do thie right, they could clean-up big time.
If they do this wrong, they could lock themselves into a single-provider network and find themselves dealing with yet another Cable or Cellphone monopoly.
Time will tell.
Good options now, but could be better (Score:4, Informative)
Most of these solutions do lack geographical reach. Good coverage is confined to the mostly affluent and gentrified portions of the city. I doubt even Ameritech, which already has a wire in most houses, has good DSL coverage in lower income areas, it just can't be a priority for them. This is where the city government can provide a much needed impetus. They can provide the motivation to provide a combination of services and locations that might be commercially marginal at best.
Of course the appearance of high speed internet cafes on the south side of Chicago might backfire on the liberal set, as they find that the locals they hoped to benefit are displaced by yuppies moving in to take advantage of all that cheap bandwidth.
-josh
Re:Good options now, but could be better (Score:1)
Re:Good options now, but could be better (Score:2)
I highly doubt that Yupps are going to move down to 51st and Cermak just so they can save $30 a month on their DSL bill. I know I wouldn't. My personal saftey is worth much, much more than that. Gentrification is happening, it's just happening slowly. The south loop is just being developed. Cabrini Green is slowly being torn down (Now that is PRIME real estate). Living west of Western avenue can still be sort of sketchy. Don't even talk about Uptown. You couldn't pay me to live there.
I'm quite happy paying my $50/month for Earthlink and living in my nice Wicker Park condo thank you very much.
Pete
Well, it may work, it may not... (Score:5, Informative)
It worked like this: a business with an existing Internet connection would be provided another one at a very low cost by the city. The city also provided interconnections to various local ISPs (Sprint, BBN, local ISPs). Then when the user dialed in to the local POPs in each location, each local business would be only 2 or 3 hops away. Interesting idea.
It failed. Turns out, local city businesses with the desire to operate large Internet business could care less about the access speeds of the communities in which they were located. They dispised the extra complexity the initiative forced upon them, even though part of their "backup line" costs were underwritten. And most of them felt that the government wasn't up to the task anyway. ("It took 4 months to repair the sidewalk in front of my house, and you want me to peer with you? Hah!")
The second part of the plan was to offer Internet access. But that plan was shot down by a multitude of ISPs that didn't want to compete with a city government that was intent on taxing them anyway. They went to court, and now the whole effort is a distant memory.
So although it sounds nice, having a city government -- many of whom collect sales taxes from ISPs -- competing against their tax base. Well, it never tends to work out to benefit the citizens in any meaningful way.
The whole city? Unlikely (Score:3, Insightful)
This is the nature of public utilities -- they are forced to install infrastructure everywhere, even in the unprofitable areas, in order to secure a monopoly franchise. But broadband is not going to be a regulated monopoly utility.
So what will this become, if anything? A city-promoted push to install broadband in profitable areas. The problem is, that broadband is already in most of those areas. So unless the city is going to cough up some money to fund building infrastructure that won't pay for itself, this probably won't go anywhere.
Incidentally, this only highlights how the process of widenening the gap between the haves and the have-nots occurs. The poor areas don't even have access to good technology, so it's harder to acquire skills in that technology, making it harder to break out of poverty, which means they stay poor, and continue to not have access to new technology, and so on.
Re:The whole city? Unlikely (Score:2, Interesting)
Finally, we get it (Score:3, Insightful)
It's a shame no one likes the taxes and governments anymore tho, as I realize that it'll be a cold day in the next ice age before the pendulum starts swinging back to this mentality.
Re:Finally, we get it (Score:2)
Re:Finally, we get it (Score:2)
But obviously, point taken. Just keep the pendulum of public opinion and value systems in mind, and dont judge against values you perceive to be 'absolute'.
out of date? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:out of date? (Score:2, Insightful)
OK, I'll bite (Score:2)
10 years ago, I was on like, 14.4kbps. If they installed some sort of hypothetical 14.4kbps dedicated line to everyone's home then it'd be sorely out of date by now. If they just did it within, say, a year or 2 but 10? Any reply on this would be good.
Well, well. I'd be happy with 14.4 dedicated everywhere at a nice low price, but things would be better than that. Let's say your town had put in a whole new dedicated network of phone lines and finished it last year. The wires would be there and you could run more through them and modify them as your town sees fit. It would not cost that much more to bump up to 56.6, now would it?
So what have you got instead? Because nothing was done ten years ago, you are stuck with aging phone company owned lines. You might be lucky enough to pay fifty bucks for cable TV on your puter, no servers, blocked email, barf. You might also be lucky enough to have some poor DSL company being raped by the local telco so that you can pay them fifty bucks a month for a line that's roughly twice the speed of a regualar dial up. If you are really lucky that poor dog of a company will give you a fixed IP and a TOS that's designed to keep you from obnoxing your neighbors but little else. Chaces are, the telco won't let you get that lucky.
So you see, when you sit on your ass and do nothing, people will take advantage of you.
Historically in Chicago... (Score:1)
Wireless? (Score:2)
Furthermore, it would be a great way to show how goverment funding could help advance projects like www.nycwireless.org, which are trying to do things on their own and languishing somewhat.
Re:Wireless? (Score:1)
Wireless is not the future. (Score:3, Interesting)
Liquid(TJ) writes:
Why would you assume that in the future people will choose to move to RF instead of wired connectivity?
Is the future somehow going to magically eliminate the problem of interference, the security concerns, the waste of omnidirectional broadcasting, the concerns about the side-effects of pumping radio waves into the environment?
I agree that it is unlikely that ten years from now we will be using copper wires. But, barring the development of stable wormholes or quantum tunneling or other such 'magic', I'm pretty damn sure the connectivity will be via some physical link, perhaps a vastly improved fiberoptic.
Re:Wireless? (Score:2)
The deal also enhances the name ID and rollout for that provider.
Hope IDOT doesn't get any ideas... (Score:1)
Crooked Chicago (Score:1)
CUB + ICC == asinine decisions. Just this week we had to go to 11 digit dialing because they couldn't agree on provisions for an area code just for cellular devices. Bastards.
Re:Crooked Chicago (Score:1)
MAN is a great idea (Score:4, Interesting)
Imagine there were a municipal dark fiber network that every house and office building were connected to just like they are connected to the sewers and power grid! The home/business owner could then at their convenience connect a fiber optic router/hub and connect to whomever they like within the city/country! For instance, you could connect your fiber channel to one of the 2-5 ISPs in the city and pay for a gateway to the Internet, (probably capped to some reasonable bandwidth) or you could connect directly to your buddy's house or your other branch office at full speed!
You would be able to use 1 fiber strand, or 1 optical "channel", you could use the cheapest 10mbit fiber router or pay the big bucks for gigabit hardware! Or you could use several channels to connect to several different places at once, one 10mbit link to your ISP, one 1000mbit link to your branch office, and another 10mbit link to your home office!
it's a freaking GREAT idea!
I just wish it'd arrive sooner here in Ottawa!
I'm tired of "broad"-band, I want ethernet speeds to as much of the world as possible.
Re:MAN is a great idea (Score:4, Interesting)
Let's put it this way. Let's say your business lives in a large city that has a ubiquitous network like this. All your customers have cheap routers, and most of them are in the city. Will you pay an ISP for connectivity to these customers if you didn't need any more?
If you're an network or communications intensive business such, where are you going to movie your business after hearing about this?
If City 'A' is doing it, and getting business, how long will it be before City 'B' picks up the slack to try to keep businesses from leaving?
It's a bit of a watershed, like electrical wiring and phone wiring was in the early part of the 20th century. It's not going to happen overnight, but once it does, you can bet that it will become a civics project in *every* city in just a few years, and will start interconnecting.
Thank you for your patronage... (Score:1)
[the RFP was] issued to a set of prequalified vendors...
"Prequalified" must mean they have the ability to raise the dead on election day.
"Remember, kids, this is Chicago, the most democratic city in the world...so vote early and often!"
Hope this goes as well as... (Score:1)
Michigan To! (Score:1)
To misquote Caesar... (Score:1)
The boundary is roughly a 25-mile radius around the Sears Tower. Those of us who dwell in the nether regions of Not_Chicago just east of St. Louis, MO can only look with longing at the urban abundance in the far north. We have abandoned all hope of ever enjoying any connectivity better than the proverbial waxed string and peach can.
..and the WOlrd Metro Area Network is called? (Score:2, Funny)
- Peace, Love and Guavafruit
In other news (Score:3, Funny)
How to keeps costs low... (Score:1)
Not First or Best. (Score:2, Informative)
I submitted this story about my home City, Kingston upon Hull in the UK, which announced similar project over a year ago.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsi
This system is already installed in 10,000 of the 30K homes in the City. Supports High Speed internet, Interactive Digital Television, Video on Demand, Council/Health and Educational Services.
More US bias from Slashdots ?
My proposal (Score:2)
End users are still responsible for getting something to plug their APs into, but it defers most of the cost of the MAN to the people who want to participate. Plus, it's a technology that's here today and works.
Yes, there are concerns about theft and network security, but if you're smart enough to consider these, then you're probably smart enough to offer a solution. I can think of a few.
*trenton
Just Wondering... (Score:1)
Goran
Slippery slope (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Slippery slope (Score:3, Insightful)
Where in the Constitution does it say that cities shall not be in the communications business? This is not much different in spirit than running a postal service (which is specifically permitted to Congress in Article I, Section 8).
NOOO, please dont make it another public utility (Score:3, Insightful)
Being from Calif, I can tell you how bad things get when the government oversees the utilities. Look they've screwed up the spectrum market, the phone market(no local competition), the gas market, the electiricty market(nearly ran it into bankruptcy), even the trash(no competition) and sewage (overspills) and transportation(gridlock) markets. PLEEEEEASE do not let them screw up the internet anymore than they already have.
Also, who'se to say that if they oversee connectivity into every home, that they also wont start regulating inappropiate content. NO. We all know the political pressures they're under. Lets just avoid the whole problem and not go there. Were not talking about enlightened researchers anymore like with ARPANET, no it would be run by purebread bureauocrats. God only knows how they'd screw it up. Since we can do it without the gov, we would be raving lunatics to put our balls in their hands. no no no and no!
For once Australia Actually leads the way (kinda) (Score:1)
Wonderful or Terrible? (Score:2)
I think that explicitly talking about telephony and video is a bad sign from a potential network provider. Just sell bandwidth; customers will figure out how to use it. By explicitly mentioning these applications, they make me wonder if they will be pushing their own hare-brained schemes. Will this be one of those "smart networks" (shudder) which have gobs of bandwidth for video (in proprietary formats) but miniscule bandwidth for TCP/IP?
What Civicnet really is. (Score:2, Interesting)
The problems here are manifold, starting with the question of whether the companies who are on the RFP(request for proposal) short list will be able to get the up front capital to build out the network. Then, with an expected time to complete of 10 years, it is questionable as to whether in the intervening time they will be able to service the debt they incur to finance the buildout and at the same time show a path to profitability.
If the issue is getting real broadband to underserved areas of Chicago, there are technologies today which can do that in less than one year, as many of the people here know.
Beware of SBC... (Score:2)
SBC recently hired William Daley, son and brother of Chicago mayors to "fix" SBC's problems with both the FCC and the state regulators in their Pacific Bell and Ameritech territories. Seems SBC needs to bring in some outside guns to teach them how to buy off Democrats. Being a Texas company they usually only have to buy off Republicans.
If you support the idea of publicly owned networks watch carefully for laws and amendments that will outlaw them. The SBCs of the world want to control what you can access and how you can access it. And they want to charge you at least twice for each byte you get.
Stonewolf
Re:Hey! (Score:2)
. . . huh.