In $16 Billion Push To Expand Broadband, America Is Flying Through a Fog (wsj.com) 65
Spurred by the coronavirus pandemic, federal policy makers are pushing to spend billions of dollars to close gaps in America's high-speed internet network. From a report: There is one big obstacle: Government officials say they don't have a clear picture of where service gaps exist, meaning parts of the country will be left out when it is time to distribute the funds. While the Federal Communications Commission estimates more than 94% of Americans -- or about 309 million people -- have access to high-speed internet services, it acknowledges that number is based on flawed data from internet-service providers. The FCC requires these companies to report that they serve a census block if they can reach even a single home or business there. That means if one of your neighbors has a broadband connection, the FCC might count your house as having broadband, too -- even if the local internet-service provider can't reach you.
That's because it isn't about broadband (Score:5, Insightful)
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Pretty sure no one expects anything else.
I expect AmiMojo to chime in with some white guilt sooner then later.
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Yeah, Telcos typically lie, cheat, steal and kill their way to these government funds. Traditionally, they have been able to take the money and run. Hi Verizon!
Anyone know if there is anything different in this round of funding?
Re:That's because it isn't about broadband (Score:5, Informative)
What's different - The FCC head is malicious rather than stupid.... That can't bode well.
More and more I recall with nostalgia the days when the government was only stupid.
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About 1783 to 1796. Then we had the Federalists make the original stack-the-benches play with midnight judge appointments, and everyone else decided that dirty play was OK.
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This time around the former lobbyist for Verizon is in charge, and he's rigging it against the best chance for Verizon and AT&T to have honest competition [arstechnica.com] that they can't pidgeonhole by buying local politicians off for pennies - near-earth satellite service.
The fix is already in. Don't be surprised when the big primary colors get the majority of the money on the table, and we don't get anything in return for our excise taxes, just like the last time.
Re: That's because it isn't about broadband (Score:2)
America is Flying Through a Fog... (Score:3)
Title II the bastards already (Score:5, Insightful)
After the last 60 days it should be plainly obvious if it wasn't already that internet is communication and communication should be considered a utility. Just like your power, your water and your sewage, it's just something that is provided for the public good. We treated telephones as a utility and for good reason.
ISP's are gonna have to face the facts, they are "dumb pipes".
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It's not as if last mile fiber is flourishing under the current system either. The ISP's have shown they are less than willing to do it despite decades of promises.
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and then the last mile will never be upgraded again
Citation needed.
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That's what they said about copper. 5G would at least be something. It's been 50+ years for some locations.
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The reason I think Internet service wasn't treated as a public utility was the idea that public utilities get designated as such due to the space the infrastructure takes up. For example, you have to run a whole system of water pipes underground from a water treatment facility, and add water towers in some places to keep water pressure up, just for ONE provider to offer it to people. It wasn't technically possible to run multiple sets of pipes for competing water companies in a given area. (You only have
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Make no mistake: cable, hard-line telephone, and mobile phone companies ALL use up a lot of public resources, in the form of communications lines, both on utility poles and underground.
The argument for "space" also doesn't hold water when competing services are required to share the same infrastructure (wires, fiber, etc.).
Community-based internet, in which municipalities supply the last-mi
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But in about 80% of the land area of the U.S., there hasn't been.
In my area, for example, the ONLY practical way to get affordable high speed internet, for years, was via cable.
And there was only one cable company. (Again, that is true in most of the U.S.)
Things like DSL came around, eventually, but they were not cheap, and though they were symmetric, they were relatively
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The solution to government mismanagement is even more government management?
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No, the solution to unregulated greed and anticompetitive behavior is *effective* government regulation.
I don't hear anyone doing the piss and moan about utility regulations for water, sewer, natural gas, or electricity; why should network availability be any different than these other basic services that society has chosen to regulate access to?
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Though of course there are exceptions like Flint, Michigan, public utilities regulated mostly by their own local governments have worked pretty well.
Community-based last-mile ISP services are among the things that have worked. I'd even rather spend a little more on one of those than sending even more money to one of the ever-expanding cable monopolies.
Re: Title II the bastards already (Score:1)
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That wireless link still has to hit wires at some point. Those wires are in underground vaults and on overhead poles just the same as telephone service.
What was your point again?
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There is limited spectrum for wireless services. See: the multi-billion dollar spectrum auctions the FCC holds.
How is this not an analog for the situations you mention?
Wrong reason to make something a utility (Score:5, Insightful)
The poor state of Internet in the U.S. is because the government is treating it like a utility, not because it's not. Local governments insist on awarding cable TV/Internet service as a monopoly, but then don't do enough regulating it so the company doesn't abuse that monopoly to fleece its customers. If the government isn't going to bother keeping the monopolies it grants in check, it shouldn't be granting the monopolies in the first place. Allow companies to compete so The People can choose which one is providing the best service.
You don't award a utility because it's "for the public good." You award a utility because it's redundant to have multiple providers. For electricity, it's because you don't want everyone stringing up their own power lines on every telephone pole [pinimg.com]. Same for telephone and cable TV service. For gas and water, it's because you don't want dozens of companies burying criss-crossing pipes underground. Only one set of wires or pipes is needed to go to each house, so what you do is hire one company to string up or bury that single set of wires or pipes - a utility.
But then what you're supposed to do is prohibit that company from offering service through those wires or pipes. Instead they have to sell access to the wire or pipe to other companies at a fixed rate. So the gas company owns, builds, and maintains the gas lines. But the gas itself is provided by dozens of other companies, and the people are free to pick which company they buy gas from. Each of these companies pays the utility a transport fee for sending that gas over the pipes. That's also how electricity and long-distance phone service works in most places.
But what local governments have done with cable and DSL Internet (provided by the local phone company, not long distance) is grant a monopoly on implementing the pipes, but then allowed the company which owns the pipes to provide the service. That's not a utility, that's just a monopoly. And since it's a government-granted monopoly, nobody else is allowed to string up new lines to try to break the monopoly. It's a problem caused by poor government regulation, and your proposed solution is more government regulation.
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To do what are you proposing (which I totally agree with and you really was my point. I did not suggest federalizing all internet) requires the FCC using Title II of the Communications Act and declare broadband common carrier and implement local loop un-bundling. That's not more regulation, just different regulation and in my opinion far better. Less regulation certainly isn't going to fix the problem. Not using that regulation and declaring it "Information Services" which the cable companies absolutely
Lest we forget: (Score:2, Interesting)
Oh? I can fix that real quick. (Score:1)
Re: Oh? I can fix that real quick. (Score:1)
Just give the $16bn to SpaceX (Score:4, Interesting)
Just give that to SpaceX. Small ISPs might be competent, but extending the last mile is just not cost effective for anyone. Giving that to terrestrial ISPs is a waste of money. Just look how successfully they've expanded rural broadband so far.
94% is NOT even close (Score:2)
It may be true in cities, but it's definitely not true in rural or semi-rural areas. Not even close
Re: 94% is NOT even close (Score:1)
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It's such BS. I think they should be required to respond to availability requests in writing. If they claim to service the address, they are required to connect within 1 month, with a connection fee no more than 2x the monthly service fee quoted, with a 10x/day penalty to be paid to the customer. Same thing when they report service coverage to government entities. If you claim a ZIP code has 1G service, you MUST provide EVERY address in that ZIP with service on request with the same penalties. If you can't
Incompetence, FCC could ask a CDN (Score:4)
Re:Incompetence, FCC could ask a CDN (Score:5, Insightful)
Netflix should have this data too, and they know billing addresses.
On the other hand, I'm quite sure that while Netflix wants to fix this, the current FCC has absolutely no interest in fixing it. As you said, they and their masters (ISPs, through lobbying dollars) like the fog.
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What if we had a system where... (Score:1)
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Because a lot of consumers wouldn't have the slightest clue whether they could get broadband on their lot unless a provider tells them. They don't know where the cables run or how to spot the access points. The providers, OTOH, know exactly which lots they can serve just from looking at the maps of where they ran their cable and where they put their access points, so they're in the ideal position to accurately report coverage. Except for the small fact that it's not in their financial best interests to repo
I get a blazing fast 3Mbps in Boulder Colorado. (Score:2)
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Have you looked at smaller wireless ISPs?
Re: I get a blazing fast 3Mbps in Boulder Colorado (Score:1)
Sprint used to have an awesome wireless service originating in Boulder some years ago. The antenna needed line of sight with some antenna over there, and it reached some areas in Denver, where I lived. It wasn't blazing fast by current cable standards, but it did everything I needed, was faster than DSL by a lot. I was sad when they shut it down, eventually having to settle with Comcrap.
I'm not surprised the other guy has gripes about internet in Boulder. That place, despite its "progressive" pretenses, is
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There are several small ISPs in Colorado that serve areas like this; finding them is tough, but it sure beats Hughes!
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Hughes latency is an issue.
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StarLink will not provide sufficient bandwidth in dense areas. If your block has [a yet unknown amount] excessive users, that dog don't hunt. RTT has to back off exponentially when multiple hidden transceivers who can't hear each other pass off channel control to the extraterrestrial server/host.
The extraterrestrial server hears all transmitters and the terrestrial transceivers are unable to properly and efficiently use the channels without the bird's control.
So it sounds wonderful, but I wouldn't hold my
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Three Megabits per second. That's almost 6 56K modems!
Off by a factor of 10.
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Yup. Three Megabits per second.
That's almost 60 56K modems!
FTFY. If you're going to go off on a sarcastic rant, you might want to avoid having your numbers be off by an order of magnitude.
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6 56K modems would be ~300 Kbps, not 3000.
Just like usual, we let foxes guard the henhouse (Score:4, Funny)
Why did we rely on companies self-reporting rather than having the government check on this? Why did we, when we found out about them lying, not punish them? I smell the upward-pointing magic finger of the market around here someplace.
Area is a better method (Score:2)
A better method of reporting would be to report the percentage of area of a census block that has broadband available, with area measured by two methods: total area of block divided by total area of lots with broadband available on them, and fraction of lots in the block which have broadband available on them. The results of both calculations must be reported. The providers can easily calculate both numbers, because they know exactly which lots they ran cable past and which lots they installed access points
in the previous town i lived in (Score:2)
Use satellite or wireless (Score:1)
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And yet these areas have copper phone lines, electrical supply, roads and running water... So someone went to all the cost and effort to lay those services.
Laying cables through miles and miles of nothing isn't that hard as you have very few obstacles. Run some fibre alongside the roads where the power and water is probably running already.
It becomes much harder when you have to cross private land owned by many different individuals.
The problem with any form of wireless communication is that spectrum is fin
What about the cost to subs? (Score:1)
Why is a stat as important (Score:2)
as actual coverage, not some BS "Fox counting the chickens scam" allowed to dictate the distribution of these funds.
They are allowed to pinky swear that they cover areas. It would be better if a private company with an impartial eye make that appraisal.
Is it a coincidence that the companies expanding their cell phone networks at the same time crying for money to expand wired service to outlying areas.
And that would not bother me so much except that same company punishes me for using my phone as a hot spot w
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I'm not sure why you believe a private company would be less likely to be suborned by the big players than the government. If anything, they're even more likely to suck up to them.
Why is this a federal problem? (Score:2)
I know that the federal government in the US loves to insert itself into everything, but...seriously? Why is this even on the federal radar? Surely Internet access is a matter for States and local governments?
Oh, they're handing out money. It's an election year. I suppose that explains everything...
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It serves its purpose: to increase donations legal and not.
The problem around here is people think this is a bug of business rather than a bug of government.
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The "inter" part makes part of it interstate commerce, definitely their area. Last mile is not in itself, per se, but the USF was established long ago for telephone.