Canada's CRTC Declares Broadband Internet Access a Basic Service (www.cbc.ca) 48
New submitter jbwiebe quotes a report from CBC.ca: The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) has declared broadband internet a basic telecommunications service. In a ruling handed down today, the national regulator ordered the country's internet providers to begin working toward boosting internet service and speeds in rural and isolated areas. With today's ruling, CRTC has set new targets for internet service providers to offer customers in all parts of the country download speeds of at least 50 megabits per second (Mbps) and upload speeds of at least 10 Mbps, and to also offer the option of unlimited data. The CRTC estimates two million Canadian households, or roughly 18 per cent, don't have access to those speeds or data. The CRTC's goal is to reduce that to 10 per cent by 2021. To achieve that, the CRTC will require providers pay into a fund that's set to grow to $750 million over five years. The companies will be able to dip into that fund to help pay for the infrastructure needed to extend high-speed service to areas where it is not currently available. The fund is similar to one that subsidized the expansion of local landline telephone service in years past. Providers used to pay 0.53 per cent of their revenues, excluding broadband, into that fund. Now they'll pay the same rate on all revenues, including broadband.
option of unlimited data. so (Score:2)
So our sat plan has an option of unlimited data*.
*data slowed to 56K speeds when you hit your fap cap or for an added $150-$200/mo you can get 50 down / 10 up all the time.
Just sayin' (Score:1)
The CRTC is an even more toothless cur than the FCC is in the US. Nothing will change except the artful choreography with which the telecoms will dance out of the way of doing anything substantive. This is what they pay the politicians (in Canada and the US) to do for them, and they are getting their money's worth from the spend.
Re:Just sayin' (Score:5, Informative)
What has the FCC ever done? The CRTC maintains an effective wholesale access regime (enabling providers like TekSavvy to exist), and has managed to piss off incumbent providers to no end with their wireless code (mandating, among other things, the end to 3+ year contracts) and television code (mandating skinny basic and pick-and-pay). The incumbents fought tooth and nail against those. The incumbents also screamed bloody murder when the CRTC mandated that all the next-gen networks (FTTH and fiber-fed DOCSIS) need to be available to wholesale providers, and they also raised a big ruckus when the CRTC recently dropped the wholesale rates by up to 90% recently...
Re:Just sayin' (Score:5, Informative)
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The CRTC doesn't regulate retail rates, but enforce a wholesale regime that results in independent ISPs covering all incumbent territory with prices that are generally somewhere around two thirds that of incumbents. So their strategy seems to be working pretty decently on that front.
Re: Just sayin' (Score:1)
The CRTC does enforce retail rates. The most recent example being $25 TV plans.
Re: Just sayin' (Score:3)
They regulate wholesale access price, which permits completion that the suppliers need to compete with.
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Re:Just sayin' (Score:5, Interesting)
I dunno. Teksavvy just sent me an email saying they reduced my rate by $5 per month because the CRTC forced the big guys to lower the wholesale rates they were charging Teksavvy.
That doesn't seem toothless to me.
Re:Just sayin' (Score:5, Interesting)
Agreed - mine dropped almost 20$/mo. That's not nothing.
Thanks CRTC!
Min
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nah, teksavvy is one of the decent providers. I was with them while in their service area and NEVER had issues with them. Wish I could say the same about big red....
Re:Just sayin' (Score:4, Informative)
They'll get it back out of you somehow. Either by raising some other fee, or by reducing the quality of service.
If by reducing quality of service you mean increasing the quality of service, you're right. My notice from Teksavvy reduced my bill $9/month while simultaneously increasing my link speed 10%.
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you'd be surprised. I'm with Electronic Box, they dropped my rates by $10 / month. $5 / month because they upgraded some infrastructure and no longer were relying on Videotron's, and another $5 / month for "loyalty" as I've been with them for a while now without ever signing a contract.
Re: Just sayin' (Score:3)
My internet bill just went *down* 6 bucks a month thanks to a CRTC ruling. I understand calling regulatory bodies toothless makes you feel like a grizzled callitlikeitis realist, but it makes you look naive when it's demonstrably untrue.
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My internet bill just went *down* 6 bucks a month thanks to a CRTC ruling. I understand calling regulatory bodies toothless makes you feel like a grizzled callitlikeitis realist, but it makes you look naive when it's demonstrably untrue.
It pains me to say this, but you are wrong (and naive) to think that on /. being wrong makes you look naive.
Common carrier status? (Score:3)
So if internet access is a basic service, logically by extension their ISPs should be considered common carriers?
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Back when we built the giant railroad, I think it worked the same way.
Mass infrastructure projects tend to have this bizarre social calculus where the hat is passed around during the daylight hours, and then the bat makes its rounds (among the free riders) after sunset, i.e. these projects are pretty much always designed to get you coming or going.
The golden goose [mftd.org]
0.53 per cent? (Score:1)
Providers used to pay 0.53 per cent of their revenues
One dollar earned, that is, 100 cents, means 53 dollar to pay. There must be something wrong in this sentence.
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WHOOSH!
The OP was interpreting "Providers used to pay 0.53 per cent of their revenues" as meaning.
Providers need to pay $0.53 for every cent that they earn. That's technically correct given the above sentence... Methinks there's an extra space that should not be in the original sentence.....
Re: (Score:2)
We often write "percent", but the word actually means "per cent," i.e. "for each hundred." 0.53 per cent literally means 0.53 for every hundred.
You maybe were thinking $0.53 per cent, which could be interpreted as meaning 53 cents for every cent earned. Yeah, one character makes a lot of difference, but it isn't the space.
Re: (Score:2)
The problem is with the reader, not the writer.
Indeed, I now understand I should have readen "percent" and not "per cent". If it is 0.53% of revenue, then it makes sense.
Didn't we try something like this in the US? (Score:3)
About 15-20 years back?
Didn't the Internet companies at the time take payments, pay out a bunch of HUGE bonuses that year, and then did fuck-all to improve infrastructure?
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That was the reverse of this.
This requires the telcos to put money into a fund for development.
The US gave telcos billion dollar tax breaks in exchange for empty promises of development.
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Re:Didn't we try something like this in the US? (Score:5, Informative)
Doubt it. In Canada we did this kind of thing with phone service. Everyone has phone service now, and the CRTC mandates that the owners of the lines must make the available at regulated wholesale prices to other companies that want to sell phone, long distance or Internet service. It seems to have worked out pretty well.
Data Speed and Cost (Score:2)
In Canada the major telecom companies (telephone, cable, satellite, wireless) collude like a mafia don's wet-dream. We pay outrageous rates for data regardless of its delivery method (cable, fibre, wireless, satellite) for slow download and even slower upload transfer rates. I recently augmented my cable ISP service with wireless ISP as a connectivity backup. In general, the wireless Internet service is no worse than the cable Internet service although the same price gets me 5 GB wireless and unlimited cabl
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In Canada the major telecom companies (telephone, cable, satellite, wireless) collude like a mafia don's wet-dream. We pay outrageous rates for data regardless of its delivery method (cable, fibre, wireless, satellite) for slow download and even slower upload transfer rates. I recently augmented my cable ISP service with wireless ISP as a connectivity backup. In general, the wireless Internet service is no worse than the cable Internet service although the same price gets me 5 GB wireless and unlimited cable. The wireless service has tiers so as I use more than 5 GB I pay about CAD15.00 more for each upstream tier. If I dumped my cable Internet service then streaming videos (CraveTV, YouTube, and education / professional training) would get expensive pretty fast. The area in which I live is urban but not sparsely populated compared to Montreal, Toronto, or Vancouver . There should be plenty of wireless bandwidth available to enable the wireless carrier to decrease the cost to the consumer; the service is HSPA+ (on a good day) and most (95+%) of my Internet usage is education, professional training, and career related. I am willing to pay CAD75.00 per month for true unlimited data (wireless) and based on past usage the typical bandwidth "consumption" tends to be less than 50 GB a month. Today the 50 GB costs CAD110.00.plus taxes and fees. By the way, CAD75.00 is the current 10 GB data usage price plus taxes and fees.
So where exactly do you live that you think Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver are "sparsely populated"? :-)
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Data caps make high-speed useless (Score:2)
For many years, I had a paltry 12 megabit DSL service. One day it went out and the company said it would take FIVE days before a tech could come out to look at it. I told them that that was unacceptable and I switched over to cable modem on the grounds that a) I would be getting 100 megabit and b) it would be slightly cheaper. What I didn't realize is that I was only given 300 gig per month of data which I burned through in about 2-3 weeks. I quickly figured out that this is how they are screwing over t
Needs to be a utility in the US (Score:2)
I work for a Canadian ISP - watch out in 2017 (Score:5, Interesting)
Also a basic service ... (Score:1)