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U.S. Broadband Access Falling Behind 683

EpochVII writes "FreePress recently released a report(PDF) detailing the woeful situation of U.S. broadband access. From the press release: 'By overstating broadband availability and portraying anti-competitive policies as good for consumers, the FCC is trying to erect a façade of success. But if the president's goal of universal, affordable high-speed Internet access by 2007 is to be achieved, policymakers in Washington must change course.'"
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U.S. Broadband Access Falling Behind

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  • façade? (Score:3, Funny)

    by zegebbers ( 751020 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2005 @11:08PM (#13345097) Homepage
    Ohh I see, I thought there was something on my monitor
    • Re:façade? (Score:2, Funny)

      by cujo_1111 ( 627504 )
      That sir, is what is called a cunning C...
      • Re:façade? (Score:4, Funny)

        by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Thursday August 18, 2005 @06:01AM (#13346223) Journal
        I think the shocking thing is that Slashcode managed to handle a non-ASCII character. Even more impressive would be if it handled proper unicode and didn't replace every trademark symbol I type with (tm). I'm sure it will manage this Real Soon Now(TM).
  • by grolaw ( 670747 )
    Have the U.S. beat . . .

    Where are our leaders? Oh, yeah...

    Bought and paid for.
    • Re:The S. Koreans (Score:2, Insightful)

      by xlv ( 125699 )
      Where are our leaders? Oh, yeah...

      Vacationing yet again in Crawford?

    • Re:The S. Koreans (Score:5, Informative)

      by JohnTheFisherman ( 225485 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2005 @11:49PM (#13345269)
      You're right....South Korea has the US beat in corporate ownership of the government hands down. Ever been there? Hyundai, KIA, Samsung, and L.G. pretty much run the whole country.
      • You're right....South Korea has the US beat in corporate ownership of the government hands down. Ever been there? Hyundai, KIA, Samsung, and L.G. pretty much run the whole country.

        That's just South Korean propaganda! The U.S. government is owned by thousands more corporations than S. Korea can ever hope to be.

    • Re:The S. Koreans (Score:4, Insightful)

      by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Thursday August 18, 2005 @12:15AM (#13345388) Homepage Journal
      Where are our leaders?
      Why are you expecting "your leaders" to provide you with Internet access? Is there anything wrong with you, that you must depend on the government?

      Must they supply you with food and toilet paper too?

      • Re:The S. Koreans (Score:3, Insightful)

        by CaptDeuce ( 84529 )
        Why are you expecting "your leaders" to provide you with Internet access? Is there anything wrong with you, that you must depend on the government?

        Whether there's anything wrong with me is strictly between myself and the voices in my head, thank you very much.

        As for relying on the government ("of the people, by the people, for the people" ... hey, maybe that's where the voices in my head come from ...), yes, I do expect that. Our government -- local state and federal -- set policies that dictate how c

    • Why is this a Big Deal (tm)?

      Around these parts, this might be debatable, but broadband Internet is NOT a necessity. It is a luxury. People don't NEED it. Why the hell is this "news" every few months on Slashdot?? Why is boradband access considered as some kind of poverty measurement?

      There's plenty of people here (in the U.S.) who can't afford to pay for necessities like rent, utilities, food, and medicine. Let's fix that before we take on the plight of people who are forced to download pr0n at 56K.
  • Australian (Score:4, Interesting)

    by cujo_1111 ( 627504 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2005 @11:14PM (#13345117) Homepage Journal
    Australian Broadband is much worse...

    I live 50 km from a major capital city and I cannot get broadband due to cost saving due to RIMs. It sucks royally.
  • FW: WHITEHOUSE.GOV FROM TEXASPLAYSCHOOLRANCH.TX

    Now listen here you com@#$@S=-ASDmies^h^h^h^h^h^hliberal media puppets, everything is just fine, on schedule, an@$#JJJ@#$J&_d we're even ahead of schedule on most points. Why even the white@#$((___house network, where I am communicating from now, is wired to mindblowing speeds. Have fa&@*(&(ith, America.

    Yours,

    G.
  • From the press release
    Analysis of "low-priced" introductory offers by companies like SBC and Comcast reveal them to be little more than bait-and-switch gimmicks.
    SBC tried that on me. Threatened to drop their service, and they gave me the lower price again in a heartbeat.
  • Why is it the role of the federal government to ensure cheap broadband by 2007? I'm much more comfortable with an array of choice from private sources. That's much less likely to lead to bad things like censorship and limits on free expression.
    • by hoeschen ( 457736 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2005 @11:22PM (#13345150)
      I'm also waiting private libraries to replace those provided by the government. Those public libraries are for losers and eggheads.
      • once you've got into a university library, you'll never go back to the public library again.

        we're talking about the state here. everything it touches turns to stinky brown goo.

      • ``I'm also waiting private libraries ...''

        Oh, those'll be so much better. Conservatives can have their library, liberals theirs. It'll be just like the old classical music ad on TV: remember ``No unwanted passages!''? The private libraries won't have any books containing of those annoying ideas that aren't the same as yours. They'll be great. And so much smaller than today's libraries -- since none of those materials you don't agree with will be cluttering up the stacks -- that it'll be easier to find

      • Many older US cities do have private libraries. The Mechanics Institute [milibrary.org] in San Francisco is a very pleasant little library. It's well kept, and the books, almost all on open shelves, are in excellent condition. The collection is broad, and the older material is heavily engineering-oriented. They have the engineering drawings for the Panama Canal, and bound volumes of most of the journals devoted to heavy engineering.

        If you spend much time in SF near the Financial District, it's worth buying a membershi

    • by Dr.Hair ( 6699 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2005 @11:33PM (#13345198) Homepage
      It's the role of the government to ensure competition in a marketplace. Y'know, the free market.

      Competition reduces prices by eliminating monopoly/oligopoly pricing structures.

      The current FCC is ruling in favour of monopoly/oligopoly pricing structures, since big telecom companies want government to ensure appropriate return on investment. Y'know, the antithesis of the free market.
    • This is fine in theory, but the current monopolistic practices of EVERY MAJOR PROVIDER mean that this will NEVER HAPPEN. Unless the government steps in and levels the playing field, which those major corporations are paying them handsomely NOT TO DO. So the consumer is screwed and there's no way out except an educated electorate that actually demands real elections and real government by real policy makers that don't take huge sums of money from AT&T, AOL, COX, VERIZON, SBC ETC.. Those candidates who
    • Perhaps because the free market has been futzing around for the better part of a decade without much real improvement. Sure, we have a variety of platforms and a variety of providers, but somehow, they just aren't competeing.

      Amazing how they're all priced within a dollar or two of each other, isn't it?

      The problem here is there isn't a profit motive for lowering prices. So long as all companies involved accept the current price, consumers are stuck paying it. And they've found a price to penetration level
    • by Vellmont ( 569020 ) on Thursday August 18, 2005 @12:19AM (#13345411) Homepage

      Why is it the role of the federal government to ensure cheap broadband by 2007?

      It isn't, and no one but you seem to be claiming that's the goal. I don't know where you got the word cheap, certainly not in the article summary or the article itself. The goal is universal affordable broadband. I see this goal much like rural electrification that started in the 1930s.

      The nation as a whole has an interest in broadband internet access being available to everyone. This is no different than roads, power, and phone service. Why is that so hard to understand?
  • by eobanb ( 823187 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2005 @11:16PM (#13345128) Homepage
    Hasn't this been known a long time now? And by long time I mean around seven years??? The US has pretty infrastructure, yet we aren't doing anything with it, and broadband remains ridiculously overpriced compared to the likes of Sweden, where synchronous 100Mbit/sec connections can be had for just few dozen kroner a month.

    The real challenge is rural areas. Unless something spectacularly revolutionary happens, like somone launching a bunch of solar-powered autonomous blimps with WiMax transceivers onboard, anyone outside city areas is going to be left behind. I blame our government's lack of involvement in progressing the telecom industry here, such as a series of bad decisions by the FCC, and letting Verizon and Friends® hold the sword instead.
    • Synchronous? I'm not sure fibre/ethernet is, actually - and more to the point, I suspect the fact that it's symmetric is more important.

      I'm in Australia, and I must say - you folks are lucky by comparison to us, though it *is* getting better here. We have an agency called the ACCC - Australian Competition and Consumer Commission - that's been slowly beating the incumbent telco into shape.
    • Rural Areas (Score:3, Interesting)

      by vivin ( 671928 )
      I recently moved from Tempe, AZ to Downtown Chandler, AZ, because I graduated college and now work at Intel (which is in Chandler). For those who haven't been to Phoenix, downtown Chandler is in the boonies. The area has only been seeing intense development over the past year or so (some roads are still two-lane farm roads, and they're only starting to widen them). I had a 1.5M down, 896k up DSL line when I used to live by ASU in Tempe. I get my service from Qwest. Ever since I moved here, I've been having
    • by Anonymous Coward
      100Mbit/s in Sweden can not be had "for just few dozen kroner a month".

      For instance, bredbandsbolaget.se offers 100Mbit/s up/down with 300GB/month for 595 SEK/month (about 80USD/month). However, this is not available everywhere - most ISPs offer at most 24Mbit/s.

      For most Swedish households, 1Mbit/s is probably the limit.
      • Mostly correct, except that 8 MBit/s is the limit for most Swedish households at this point (and 24 MBit/s is very commonly available at this point). There is an ongoing upgrade effort so it is all coming around.

        The broadband availability in Sweden is not all that fantastic (the 8 MBit/s ADSL is most common), but the infrastructure is at this point great. 90% of the population are reached by the fiber backbones at this point, it is mostly the ISP that have not really gotten things rolled out beyond ADSL i

    • by Brandybuck ( 704397 ) on Thursday August 18, 2005 @12:44PM (#13349145) Homepage Journal
      The real challenge is rural areas.

      Unlike Europe, which everyone insists we must be compared to, North America is an extremely rural place. If you're going to grade on the curve, don't compare The US to Europe, compare the US to Canada. Does everyone in the Yukon have high speed broadband? What did it take to wire every home in Saskatchewan with quality reliable broadband access? Is the provider the government, private ISP, or state monopolized corporation? Do you have a choice of provider in upper Manitoba, or do you have to settle with the lowest-common-denominator solution?

      Please stop comparing us to Europe. The distances between some US homes and the nearest computer retail outlet are greater than the size of some European nations.
  • 200 Kbps? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by _Sharp'r_ ( 649297 ) <sharper@NOsPaM.booksunderreview.com> on Wednesday August 17, 2005 @11:16PM (#13345129) Homepage Journal
    The article takes issue with the FCC calling anything over 200 Kbps broadband.

    Maybe I'm just alone in this, but I've always thought of pretty much anything faster than 56K dial-up as broadband.

    Sure, 200 Kbps isn't super-fast, but it's certainly not dial-up.

    Another issue they have is that a lot of "broadband" is upstream limited to as little as 128 Kbps and thus they don't think it should count.

    While I decry providers who don't give people much upstream bandwidth, it's a bit much to claim something "isn't broadband" if it's say, 1.5 Meg down and 128 K up. For a lot of people (the less techy amongst us, not /. readers) that's a pretty typical usage ratio.
    • I take issue with it, too. 200Kbit isn't fast enough to move us into the next level of connectivity, whatever it might be. It doesn't allow you to do much (if anything) more then a dial-up account does. It doesn't enable live video, or video conferencing. It doesn't allow you to access your data anywhere, because you're severely limited to small files.

      While it's better then dial-up, it's not even close to what the internet is capable of. 100Mbit connections could enable all sorts of things we can't e
    • Re:200 Kbps? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by quarkscat ( 697644 )
      WTF? I want some of what you've been smoking (not for myself, mind you, but for evidence when I rat you out to the DEA).

      I do not live in a rural area. I live in a bedroom community 16 miles from the White House. The only broadband service provider "way out here" is Verizon. (The cable company has "broadband" that requires Windoze 98, an open ISA slot, and a phone line for the uplink.) I live 18,000 feet from Verizon's closest Central Office, and due to the crappy underground POTS wiring had to use an A
  • by techarnate ( 786687 ) * on Wednesday August 17, 2005 @11:26PM (#13345168)

    i'm an optimist. the market will grow to hit this goal. i think the only thing that can get that kind of market penetration (not government sponsored) would be over the only wire that goes to every damn home. broadband over power lines.

    wow, wouldn't Google put themselves in a pretty little position if they were the company that could hit that goal, *and* could get the feds to throw in the cash to hit that 07 deadline?

    heh heh. =)
  • By overstating broadband availability and portraying anti-competitive policies as good for consumers, the FCC is trying to erect a façade of success. But if the president's goal of universal, affordable high-speed Internet access by 2007 is to be achieved, policymakers in Washington must change course.
    Translation: By strengthening this façade, the FCC will portray its achievement as a success and continue to follow its current strategy.
  • by Arkham79 ( 219828 ) <<ten.drofremoc> <ta> <mada>> on Wednesday August 17, 2005 @11:29PM (#13345181) Homepage
    These countries were once behind the US in terms of broadband adoption, speed, availibility. That gap has almost disappeared - having worked in the industry for some time on both sides of the Atlantic, it is obvious that the US is falling behind. Take the price of a 6 MB DSL line with VOIP included in France - you can get the whole thing for $30 (~20 euro). In the US you are lucky to see $30 for the VOIP alone, and my total bill with a 4MB cable connection is over $70.
     
    While they push on with triple-play products in Europe to include Video and bump speeds up to the 20MB range with ADSL 2+ Verizon are bumping people to 2MB.......
     
    South Korea is a world leader in broadband penetration and they started from zero just s few years ago. They're government made it a vital policy to get broadband to everyone, and it worked. The US Government needs to wake up, something needs to be done - and quickly before the US becoes a comsumer digital backwater.....

  • ISPs are addicted to their tight fisted, stingy ass pricing models

    why the hell would they let go of that control ? bastards

    when a cheaper, higher speed wireless or BoPL service starts causing lost customers,
    then maybe we will see real competition
  • by delirium of disorder ( 701392 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2005 @11:37PM (#13345222) Homepage Journal
    Residential and commercial access appear to be slowly but steadily improving. Despite the progress that the US has made, the future looks somewhat mixed.

    I'm worried about College and University connections. Usage limits and even outright censorship are the norm on High School networks. I'd like to change this, but for now, it's just a fact of life. University networks, on the other hand, have been the most unrestricted and fast ways of getting online since the birth of the Internet. My old High School class is starting college right now, and I've talked to a few friends about their school's network access. The bandwidth is usually good, but a lot of connections are filtered, firewalled, or otherwise limited. All of them so far have been behind an IP masquerading device. End-to-end connectivity has been a core principle of the Internet, supported, for example, by the Internet Architecture Board. NAT is a detriment to the Public Internet. Is your school even providing "Internet" service if hosts on the Internet cannot initiate TCP connections with you? Asemetric data rates and private IP addresses could make the Internet just another TV network, a medium where passive users consume content that only big rich corporations can provide. Hopefully the demand for p2p will keep upload rates up, and more users will become technically competent enough to host other services. Let's keep the Internet democratic and egalitarian!
  • As long as corporations dictate our governmental policy to dis-benefit the populace, you can see this trend continuing for sure. I don't always agree with Dvorak (maybe 25%, or slightly more, but disagree with his details and examples), but he's DEAD ON on this one. Check out the new PC world article he wrote about Philly's municipal broadband shut down.
    http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,1843330,00.a s p [pcmag.com]
    Our entire government should have been up against the wall and shot about 20 years ago. The fac
  • by ZombieEngineer ( 738752 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2005 @11:43PM (#13345245)
    It appears that they mis-spelt Australia as Austria (acording to World Bank [worldbank.org] Australia is rank 13 while Austria is 21).

    The fact that Australia is only a couple of percentage points behind given that it has a far lower population density AND has a monopolostic telecomunications carrier should be a worry. Most of Australia does not have access to cable television (only in upper middle class suburbs or better), hence most Aussies only have ADSL if Telstra has bothered to make it available.

    Da ZombieEngineer

  • In Japan... (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward
    50Mbps/3Mbps ADSL .... $35/month
    100Mbps FTTH ... $55/month
  • by Quiet_Desperation ( 858215 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2005 @11:44PM (#13345250)
    Falling behind what? Some arbitrary political goal? What does universal broadband access give us? What problems does it solve?

    I'm not trolling. These are fair and honest questions. The Net is a great informational tool, but are that many people unhappy with their bandwidth? Is broadband *that* important for enough people that this should be considered a crisis?

    Where's the next revolution here? Is there one? Content delivery? Whoopee. How's that improve my day to day life? How does that make the mundane drudgery of existence smoother.

    Someone compared us to South Korea. If you can't see the problem with that comparison, I mean, geez... (hint: population density) But still, are the Koreans experiencing some sort of magical Vinge singularity?

    Or is it just more fucking plastic gadgets?

  • I suppose I can expect the usual comparisions of US broadband access to other countries. Despite having lost count of how many times this has been gone over and beat to death, the same uninformed posts still show up either praising or bashing US broadband penetration/quality. If US access compares favorably, the other country's system is probably being intentionally mismanaged because the US does have a difficult job facing it: A vast network of POTS and old copper, ugly monopolies, and enormous rural areas to reach. If US access compares poorly, it's usually against a small and densely populated nation that has few areas with less with 150 people/sq mile. Either way, I think the USA is doing fairly well. On to the article:

    The FCC overstates broadband penetration rates.


    All retarded bureaucracies overstate their achievements - don't you read Dilbert?

    The FCC defines "high-speed" as 200 kilobits per second


    More BS to inflate the numbers -- see above. Personally, I don't view anything slower than 768/256 as broadband.

    The United States remains 16th in the world in broadband penetration per capita. The United States also ranks 16th in terms of broadband growth rates, suggesting our world ranking won't improve any time soon. On a per megabit basis, U.S. consumers pay 10 to 25 times more than broadband users in Japan.


    Seeing as Japan's land is all densely populated, it won't cost much to run fiber, copper, or WiFi to everyone. The US has a much more dispersed population to reach.

    Despite FCC claims, digital divide persists and is growing wider. Broadband adoption is largely dependent on socio-economic status. In addition, broadband penetration in urban and suburban in areas is double that of rural areas.


    People with little money to spare don't spend it on faster internet access, and companies are more willing to run broadband where it's economical. No duh - next?

    The FCC ignores the lack of competition in the broadband market. Cable and DSL providers control almost 98 percent of the residential and small-business broadband market. Yet the FCC recently eliminated "open access" requirements for DSL companies to lease their lines, rules that fostered the only true competition in the broadband market.


    Mmmm... don't even want to go there. As usual, Washington whores itself out to the biggest campaign donator. This will happen as long as money is considered a form of speech.

    There is nothing anyone can do about having to cover a large expanse of rural areas. The only thing we can do is force corruption out of government and reign in the monopolies, allowing competition to benefit everyone. Until then, we will see broadband access intentionally mismanaged to benefit monopolies.
  • by lukev123 ( 904740 ) on Thursday August 18, 2005 @12:21AM (#13345419) Homepage
    .. about who supplies you with your broadband access. In South Africa we have a single telecoms provider, Telkom, who is the sole international bandwidth provider for the entire country, and (what a surprise) they're also an ISP.

    It's a government enforced monopoly busy making money hand-over-fist on the backs of an emerging economy. http://www.mybroadband.co.za/ [mybroadband.co.za] reports that the average adsl bill is 110% of the average salary in South Africa, meaning it's a service that's only available to a select few who can afford it. The sick part is that goverment is the majority shareholder, and so does not have the people's interests at heart when it comes to accessable (meaning cheap) telephony and broadband.

    So, at least you have choices and wide deployment.
    • In almost all areas of the US, there are at most two broadband providers; the local telco which may provide DSL service, and cable television. Not all areas have DSL available and not all areas have cable televisoin available. SOME areas are getting broadband wireless service and the wireline providers are pretty successful in maintaining their control over wireless broadband also.
  • Goal (Score:3, Insightful)

    by jmv ( 93421 ) on Thursday August 18, 2005 @12:28AM (#13345443) Homepage
    But if the president's goal of universal, affordable high-speed Internet access by 2007 is to be achieved, policymakers in Washington must change course.

    Nah, just redefine "universal".
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 18, 2005 @12:47AM (#13345504)
    As someone who lives in Canada and frequently travels to the US, this data is no surprise. Broadband coverage in the US is awful, as compared to Canada, but also as compared to places that I have traveled to and would not have expected to
    be better - Israel, UK, even major (and not so major) Chinese cities.

    The authors are clearly biased however, and do not acknowledge the problem of low population density.
    For example, here in Canada, even though the country is huge and the population small, cities are relatively younger and much more dense than US cities. Americans like to live in very large houses, in very distant suburbs, and terrible bandwidth is an unsurprising outcome.

    In the city where I live, and where both DSL and cable have been available at every address for years, a 50' x 120' single house lot is considered huge, and more common are apartments, townhouses, and 35' x 80' lots.

    I guess it just boils down to: If you must live far apart from your neighbours, then you must pay the price in gasoline, traffic time, poor bandwidth, etc. I can't imagine a magic wand that government could wave to make these costs go away.
  • Broadband in America (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Nonillion ( 266505 ) on Thursday August 18, 2005 @01:06AM (#13345566)
    While not really considered "broadband" I am testing my "National Access" via my verizon cell phone service. On the average I get 16.3kB/sec, not too shabby, about 3X the speed of dial up. A friend of mine has EVDO service, while not the be all end all it's still better than nothing.

    The biggest thing I hate with US phone and cable service providers is that they try to make you think they are doing you a favor by giving you sub-standard service. I won't be truly happy till I get 100M/bit full duplex access to the Internet via fiber, cable or some sort of UW-band data service.

    Since I live in a real rural area (no cable Internet or ADSL) dial up or cell phones are my only choice. I know there is satellite but low latency is a must. So in the meantime I am posting this via my cell phone service...
  • by TooncesTheCat ( 900528 ) on Thursday August 18, 2005 @01:15AM (#13345587)
    I live in a small town in North Carolina. Around 45 minutes away from me is the capital of Raleigh, probably one of the most tech saavy / heavy places in the United States. They have xDSL / FTTC / Cable / Wireless solutions etc.

    Being that I live in a small rural town ( like the rest of the state ) I am very limited on the whole broadband thing. We have cable in our county, but its a locally owned monopoly called Johnston County cable ran by a bunch of aging rednecks. None of their equipment can carry a cable signal nor do they care. Scratch cable as a solution

    Satellite is out of the question. The lag is so immense that I can forget about online gaming. And the caps on downloading keep me very far away from even thinking about it.

    Wireless is non existant.

    The last solution is the local telephone monopoly.
    Sprint.

    I pay 59.99USD a month for 512k / 128 DSL from Sprint. Why so high? No competition. The reason? No other broadband solutions are available because I live in a rural town.

    Nevermind the fact that Sprint has interleaving on my line, equating to 60ms to my first hop.

    Dont expect one country to be exactly like the other. Apples and oranges people. Plus the whole thing of states and counties having laws which might affect how / when / you get broadband.
  • by Murasaki Skies ( 894086 ) on Thursday August 18, 2005 @05:59AM (#13346220)
    This puts the United States near the average for the OECD, and far behind countries such as the England and France, which have made rapid progress in broadband adoption.

    I'm moving to the England.
  • Oh, Gee (Score:3, Funny)

    by Winkhorst ( 743546 ) on Thursday August 18, 2005 @06:46AM (#13346313)
    You mean they are substituting lies and distortion for facts? Gee, I never would have expected that from this administration... [/sarcasm]
  • by kilodelta ( 843627 ) on Thursday August 18, 2005 @06:48AM (#13346318) Homepage
    That one is almost laughable. For example, we all subsidized telephone service in those areas. Granted, it started as party lines and then moved to private lines.

    But we still subsidize much of rural America to this day. Yet they continue to get squat. I don't have to wonder where all the money is going.

    While it would be all well and good for the FCC to really examine its own rules and procedures, a more fundamental shift has to happen. Sadly, it is a shift that might have to come at the point of a gun.

    The biggest error ever made in the U.S. was giving a corporate entity a voice and essentially making it equivalent to a person. Until fairly recently, once you were incorporated you were pretty much shielded behind that corporate fiction. But what is being done now is simply lip service. For example, the recent energy bill is nothing but a gift to energy producers and transporters.

    If you consider that Japanese got themselves a new government some 60 years ago, while ours sat and festered you can see what I'm getting at.

    Sometimes wholesale regime change is a good thing. It keeps politicians honest.
  • by Anita Coney ( 648748 ) on Thursday August 18, 2005 @07:38AM (#13346533) Homepage
    A lot of people are perplexed at why broadband sucks in the US. They blame the government. They blame the size of our country. They blame the market. But look who's primarily behind broadband over here: Phone companies and cable companies.

    Let's start with phone companies. Does it really benefit phone companies to have great and cheap bandwidth? Not when everyone switches over to VoIP killing their high profit long distance service. Not to mention that businesses pay for EVERY call they make. If broadband was great and cheap, the phone companies would disappear.

    Let's move on to cable companies. Pretty soon you'll be able to watch movies via broadband. E.g., Netflix is about to offer movies. In a few years you'll probably be able to watch any movie and any TV you want with a simple clicks. Does this benefit cable companies? Nope. Because they make tons of money, nearly all their money, selling premium movie channels and content via pay-per-view. In other words, if broadband was great and cheap, they'd also be out of business.

    Thus, the ONLY way we're going to get real broadband in the US is by wrestling control of it from the current status quo. That's why I'm really excited about broadband over power lines. The power companies have nothing to lose with broadband.
  • by MtViewGuy ( 197597 ) on Thursday August 18, 2005 @10:35AM (#13347976)
    I think you have to consider the following factors:

    1. Population density makes it far easier to justify the cost of running the Last Mile hardwired xDSL or cable modem connection to your home or business with a broadband connection. That's why you have a lot of broadband in South Korea, France, Germany, much of the UK, and Japan, mostly because the population density per square kilometer means there are enough potentials to justify the exorbitant expense installing those connections.

    2. I think people are forgetting how all those broadband Last Mile connections are funded. I can almost say that the xDSL and/or cable modem setups in France, Germany, South Korea and Japan are heavily subsidized by government-owned and/or very recently privatized former government owned national PTT entities such as France Telecom, Deutsche Telecom, NTT, etc. Here in the USA, most of the Last Mile connections are funded by the Baby Bells and the cable companies, which have to justify the cost of setting up such connections to their shareholders. You wonder if the broadband setups in the countries I mentioned are paid for by steep taxes of various forms on the local population (VAT, motor fuel taxes, etc.).
  • by inkswamp ( 233692 ) on Thursday August 18, 2005 @11:09AM (#13348223)
    This can't be true. You mean turning over something like this to large corporations and reducing government influence so as to use the lure of profits to drive better technology and wider availability and therefore serve the public better doesn't really work???

    Oh dear god, please say it ain't true! Please don't tell me that big corporations don't care deeply about me and my family. My dreams, my world view, my whole life has just come crashing down like a house of cards.

    (Sobbing quietly, if not sarcastically, to myself.)

"I'm a mean green mother from outer space" -- Audrey II, The Little Shop of Horrors

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