How ISPs Collude To Offer Poor Service 207
alexander_686 writes "Bloomberg is running a series of articles from Susan Crawford about the stagnation of internet access in the U.S., and why consumers in America pay more for slower service. Quoting: 'The two kinds of Internet-access carriers, wired and wireless, have found they can operate without competing with each other. The cable industry and AT&T-Verizon have divided up the world much as Comcast and Time Warner did; only instead of, "You take Philadelphia, I'll take Minneapolis," it's, "You take wired, I'll take wireless." At the end of 2011, the two industries even agreed to market each other’s services.' I am a free market type of guy. I do recognize the abuse that can come from natural monopolies that utilities tend to have, but I have never considered this type of collusion before. To fix the situation, Crawford recommends that the U.S. 'move to a utility model, based on the assumption that all Americans require fiber-optic Internet access at reasonable prices.'"
Interesting theory (Score:5, Insightful)
Crawford recommends that the U.S. 'move to a utility model, based on the assumption that all Americans require fiber-optic Internet access at reasonable prices.
This all sees well and good. Too bad it's not capable of happening, since the USA is run by corporations, and it'll be a cold day in hell before they shoot themselves in the foot.
If you want not retarded internet, your single only option is to move out off the continent.
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America definitely has this problem as well.
It costs $500+/mo to get about 3meg upload in far northern california.
Re:Interesting theory (Score:5, Insightful)
and yet my comcast gives me 25Mbps down and 3Mbps up.
They just don't want me to use it. They'd rather I downloaded from their networks with services like hulu and any other video services which require a cable subscription to be viewed on the Internet. ISPs should not be in the content business as well.
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Australia will soon be $100 / month to get 10mb upload, 100mb download
and a full 33 minutes of download until you run out of your CAP, welcome to Australia NBN, bend over and pass the lube.
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I think you're shopping at the wrong ISP's. Both TPG and DODO have indicated they'll be doing unlimited NBN, and PennyTel already have plans.
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It could be worse. It could be like Australia where they have fast downloads but roflbad upload speeds.
or national fiber-optic network with Download CAPS for internal traffic.
Re:Interesting theory (Score:5, Insightful)
If you want fiber-optic Internet access at much lower prices than we have today, you'll have to convince millions of others.
There are millions of people on 1.5Mbps or less DSL who see no need to pay even $1 more.
There are millions of people on dialup who don't need to stream anything at all.
There are millions of people who don't know what all the fuss over this Internet thing is about.
But you want those millions of people to buy you a pony!
Re:Interesting theory (Score:4, Insightful)
Absolutely. Step 1 is figuring out if the statement "all Americans require fiber-optic Internet access" is true. So far, it isn't by a long shot and the assumption that it is true is one of the big problems.
If Internet access is needed by everyone, then maybe a utility model would work - everyone pays and everyone gets service. However, if it isn't true then moving to that kind of model would impact a huge number of people in very negative ways, especially in the pocketbook.
Another aspect that should be considered is if the Internet is ready for everyone to need it. What would happen if the entire US had unlimited fiber access? Well, my guess is that spam would increase (ha!) and that scammers would get a lot richer. Most of the people that do not have access today wouldn't know what to do with it if they had it and would certainly believe that a Nigerian prince was holding millions of dollars for them, if they only send $125 to him today.
Does this sound like a good idea?
Re:Interesting theory (Score:5, Insightful)
Depends on what you mean by "require". Not everyone "needs" electricity, gas, telecommunication lines or water either. Hell, why don't we all go back to the days where everyone lives in cottages on a ranch with maybe a well and some farmland?
The point is, Internet access has an infrastructure dependency and provides a service which fits perfectly with the utility service model, so it makes no sense that we use a better model for gas and electricity and not for Internet. This is Economics 101, here, but the wikipedia page provides a good explanation https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utilities [wikipedia.org]
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The Wii U has a huge day-one system update patch, weighing in at 5GB. I have FIOS (15mbits/s) and it took 30-45 mins to download. Steam and other digital distribution systems are becoming more popular and games easily weigh in at multi-gigabytes. Today I just got Assassin's Creed 3 as a gift and it is a 15gb download.
As services like these are more commonly used, more people will eventually figure out that they will need improved internet connectivity to better use these services.
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So? You don't need the update to play single player
Play a few games, set it to download and go to sleep
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
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You are looking at the problem the wrong way. Step 1 really is "Does the US needs all American to have fiber-optic access". That is a political decision that is first strategic as it may be crucial for US competitivity in the future. But also societal/cultural: should the US become a society that is more connected (get the work to you) or a society that is more mobile (go to the work).
Re:Interesting theory (Score:4, Interesting)
You're very much right that not everyone actually requires fiberoptic service. First, separating wants from needs is important. I'd like to have super fast fiberoptic, but I don't "need" it. Few of us do, really. We can be patient, and wait for ten minutes to get a file that would have downloaded almost instantly on fiber. So, we're in agreement there.
But, you're a lot less right when you say that the internet isn't required by everyone. In today's world, if you don't have internet, then you cannot be competitive with the competition just a couple miles away. I live out in the sticks, where internet service was very spotty until five years ago. The access that is available is still pretty crappy today.
My "auto parts" store of choice lost business to franchised auto parts stores, until they finally got online. People searching for things simply couldn't find them. The franchised stores were either on line, or they were represented by a corporate headquarters site which listed them, along with a map with directions to their stores. My supplier simply didn't exist. Even though I knew where they were, I couldn't go online to find out if they had a particular item in stock, or if they would have to order it.
Now that Mr. Baker has an online presence, he does get more business. His online presence isn't a very good presence, because he is not tech savvy, and doesn't understand the need to hire someone who is tech savvy. Still - he's there. And he gets business that he never did get before.
If the old guy would hire someone to market him online, he could gain a lot more business, because he offers things that the franchise stores don't. Farm and tractor supply parts, tractor trailer parts, small engine parts, that O'Reilly's and others don't offer at any price. The bulk of his business comes from word of mouth advertising. A real on line presence, tailored to suit his needs would easily increase his business by 10%, probably 20%. I could potentially increase his business by 100%, but there's no way to prove it until someone actually does it.
I say that in today's world, internet access is a necessity. You simply can't compete unless people can find you.
Re:Interesting theory (Score:5, Insightful)
To clarify.... Not everyone needs internet just like not everyone needs roads... What? Not everyone needs roads? Correct. Some people don't go anywhere, or go places on foot and on bikes, which could be mountain bikes, and using dirt footpaths. They don't need roads...
But they DO need roads.... they want a pizza delivered. They want the ambulance to show up when their kid biffs hard on his bike. They want their neighbors to be able to get to work 40 miles away and come home in time for the neighborhood bbq.
Sure.. you don't need internet to have fun, or maybe for your own personal choices. But you need internet for the businesses around you to keep their prices lower with digital age technology. You need your government to have communications tech so they can protect you from the various nutjobs around the world that are angry for debatable reasons. I could go on with a million examples of how you passively take benefit from the internet --- so much so that your current state of life, even without you personally using it, NEEDS the internet.
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Few of us do, really. We can be patient, and wait for ten minutes to get a file that would have downloaded almost instantly on fiber.
That's all very well for small files. Loads of games on steam are over the 10Gb download mark now.
Re:Interesting theory (Score:5, Insightful)
As a dialup user, I still have a smartphone if I want to stream anything video.
The main problem with dialup these days isn't even the slower connection speed (I have seen as slow as 21600 bps) or the host-based softmodems (HSP or HSF modems). The main problems are: bloated oversized page graphical elements, websites using tons of JQuery and/or Yahoo API and/or Google API and/or Facebook API. Many of those sites use additional scripts just for user tracking and that's even before addressing the ad-serving scripts on the page. Watch that modem process and process sometimes for well over 10 minutes before the site finally loads--IF something doesn't time out and cause a Page Cannot Be Displayed error to be generated by the browser.
Turn off scripts, and see how fast the actual HTML-only content of the page actually loads over dialup. But, then the page is still mostly broken because buttons and even hyperlinks on some pages are dependent on client-side scripting.
In summary, it's shitty web design all over "Web 2.0" that designs every page as a dancing and singing application in a web browser instead of a mostly static page with a few optional active elements. I would welcome a throwback to the earliest days of web pages where they would still load over 14400 bps and used mostly HTML-only elements for the page, graphical content was minimal and any graphics used as small of a size as possible balancing quality with loading speed. Either that, or stop using my client-side bandwidth for page control processing, user tracking, and ad serving--do all that shit on the server-side and give me a quick-loading client-side page that will actually respond on click--not a few seconds later.
Re:Interesting theory (Score:4, Insightful)
I used to care about users like you--on dial up, or huge latency, etc.
Use to. Until I realized that my ad revenue from you is basically zero.
Welcome to the capitalist web.
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But you want those millions of people to buy you a pony!
You want people to fund your kid's school.
You want millions of people to subsidize the roads you drive on.
How is this really that much different? Before motorcars took over, millions of people got by just fine with their horses. You ignore that internet service isn't as much an entertainment option as a utility today. A utility that's rapidly changing the way information and notices are delivered to homes and it's in the hands of private comp
Re:Interesting theory (Score:5, Insightful)
The pony was bought and paid for. The telcos have accepted money over the years, from the government, purportedly for the purpose of getting broadband internet out to the "last mile".
We're not asking for another pony. We just want to ride the frigging pony we've been promised. The pony that we paid for already.
I would agree with this mockery you make, except, just across the water in Europe, everyone has the pony. Fast ponies. They have pony races, just to see how fast they can go. We can't even climb on a broken down old circus pony to be led around a little rope corral.
Obviously, we're doing something wrong on this side of the pond.
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If you want not retarded internet, your single only option is to move out off the continent.
Or get your municipality to run their own fiber as a public utility.
I want common carrier broadband. AT&T doesn't offer it, nor does Comcast. So there's no issue of public entities competing with private business here.
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If you want not retarded internet, your single only option is to move out off the continent.
Or get your municipality to run their own fiber as a public utility.
I want common carrier broadband. AT&T doesn't offer it, nor does Comcast. So there's no issue of public entities competing with private business here.
Then your municipality would get sued by the Telco/CableCo for being anti-competitive (of all things):
http://tech.slashdot.org/story/08/09/12/2326251/telco-sues-municipality-for-laying-their-own-fiber [slashdot.org]
http://arstechnica.com/uncategorized/2008/09/telco-to-town-were-suing-you-because-we-care/ [arstechnica.com]
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The essential good angle is about the importance, which is one piece, but the real basis for utility treatment is the impracticality or undesirable consequences of mutliple competing sets of infrastructure, and is common with delivery networks of all types. For food (and lots of other goods) that's why you tend to have eith
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Huh? If a city starts selling broadband services, you don't see that as competing with both Comcast and AT&T?
Not at all. Comcast and AT&T are not common carriers. If that's what my city offers, how can they be competing with these private entities. They are two completely different products.
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Food is a much more essential good than fiber optic internet service, and yet I never hear anyone calling for the municipalities to nationalize (city-ize?) all the food stores in town.
Because for utility like services, the barrier to entry is extraordinarily high, dangerous, or otherwise seemed some sort of national threat.. Also for these reasons, competition is scarce. Again this warrants government intervention since there aren't any grocery store monopolies in any major urban center and I believe nearly all population centers greater than 10,000 has multiple chains and likely distributors servicing them. Yet in the 150,000 population city I live near, you have 1 option for wired i
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Actually, in some parts of the country Walmart has eliminated the competition. There are many areas where they have an effective monopoly on grocery distribution. I'd say your analogy should actually be looked at in reverse and we take a good hard look at the impact of having a single distribution chain.
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Actually, in some parts of the country Walmart has eliminated the competition. There are many areas where they have an effective monopoly on grocery distribution.
If there are so many then I have to assume it's easy for you to cite a 10,000+ population center with the only available grocer as being Walmart. Can you name one such instance, or are you just assuming their market monopoly and claiming knowledge on it?
Do you want to know why Wal-Mart's pricing is so low? It's because reality is the exact opposite of your delusion. Wal-Mart hasn't eliminated the competition. ISP's have therefore you pay more and get less.
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Sure, Choctaw Oklahoma, Population about 12K. At one time there were three different grocery chains with a presence there. Today the three nearest stores are all Walmarts. There are thousands of more examples.
Drive through any city in the central US and you will find multiple empty and abandoned grocery store properties. Note that I didn't say anything about Walmarts effect on prices. My concern is with the lack of alternative distribution channels. The idea that we have a healthy and open market for gro
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Sure, Choctaw Oklahoma
Wrong try again although I suspect your delusion will persist.
Drive through any city in the central US and you will find multiple empty and abandoned grocery store properties.
Sure, but empty lots existed before Wal-Mart and will do so after it's gone. This point doesn't even defend your original statement directly. Only if you leave to reader to assume Wal-Mart has forced out all or very nearly all competition. This is just fiction.
Walmart is keeping prices low by squeezing their suppliers.
You answered how. I asked why.
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There are many citations of the same observation I just made. Here is great one:
http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/bitstream/21101/1/sp06ma03.pdf [umn.edu]
I was just in Choctaw (Score:2)
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There is not a single grocery store in Choctaw unless your counting convenience stores. Thats the point...they are all closed. There is a Country Boy grocery in Newalla and and there is another independent grocer in Midwest City. All three of the stores formerly in Choctaw are gone. They were killed by the three nearby Walmart stores. There were several Krogers, Homelands, and IGA stores in Midwest City. Almost all of them are gone now as well.
YP.com must be pretty useless.
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So much for learning history... Roads have been made public for food and army distribution. As those services are critical, eveybody already called for it a long time ago. Today nobody even thinks they can be left for the free market.
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>Food is a much more essential good than fiber optic internet service, and yet I never hear anyone calling for the municipalities to nationalize (city-ize?) all the food stores in town.
I see you know little about America [washingtonpost.com] and what is 'nationalized'.
You've not been reading much lately [rawstory.com], ISP's have consolidated and are not profit taking at record levels after years of fights cities laying their own fiber [dslreports.com], luckly in this case the city finally won and is laying their own fiber at much higher speeds. I worked f
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You'll have to cry tears made of money, thats what Congressites and Senatoids eat( besides newborn babies) Further , you'll have to bleed more money than the ISPs that currently feed them for their own immortal porpoises.
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excellent point. And the only solution is to fix the election process and take the money out of politics by limiting donations to individual donations only, of 1000 dollars or less. when elections are decided by the will of the people and not by corporate might the government will serve the people again.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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Sorry, I 've reconsidered Ron Paul to be a Repubmocrat wearing Libertarian clothes.
Not always sure I agree with Libertarianism either. The open borders thing grates against the Constitutional directive to protect our borders. Besides, we see the problem with borders as open as our have been. No need to throw out the baby with the bathtub.
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While I'm no fan of socialists robbing my pocket to support the slothful instead of putting their money where their mouth is, I can say I have enjoyed watching undercover Paul be a burr under the saddle of the Repubmocrat dictatorship. Still I think working from within is worth a spit in the ocean as far as usefulness. .Don't expect to see it change any time soon. Kind of s
Yeah the Electoral thing is crap and everyones vote should count. But , then that's what helps keep the Repubmocrat dictatorship rolling
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Here's a proposed plausible promise.
"Sorting proponents of political theories into governments that test them." [sortocracy]
Any system opposed to that can be considered an enemy to be neutralized by any means available to individuals acting alone or in
to the surprise of no one. (Score:5, Informative)
``I am a free market type of guy... but I have never considered this type of collusion before."
no shit. try doing some homework. here is a quote from that rampant communist, Adam Smith:
``People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices. It is impossible indeed to prevent such meetings, by any law which either could be executed, or would be consistent with liberty and justice. But though the law cannot hinder people of the same trade from sometimes assembling together, it ought to do nothing to facilitate such assemblies; much less to render them necessary." — book I, ch. 10, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, published 1776.
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I'm glad someone else noticed it.
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Maybe there shall be a separation between physical net and carrier service and make sure that no operator gets exclusive right to a fiber network.
Completely unforeseen! (Score:5, Insightful)
What, you never possibly considered that collusion happens because nobody wants to stop the gravy train? AT&T and Verizon and everyone else there have got it good, their train will chug along with minimum investment and massive profits for as long as none of the people aboard says "Stop the train! I want to spend billions of dollars on infrastructure investments and charge less to compete with you head on!"
Re:Completely unforeseen! (Score:5, Interesting)
The history of utilities until they became massive monopolists was that various jurisdictions granted them easements, right-of-way, and lots of other considerations in exchange for getting services built. The telcos were independent, and a long distance network consisted of AT&T, ITT, and others. Then came Judge Greene, a breakup of AT&T, GTE and ITT consolidations of the Baby Bells, and the sense that utilities were unbridled and focused on shareholder return based on serious assets.
The landlines were different than what is now the Internet. Most were analog copper cables that had muxed data channels. Fiber is only the last 20yrs.
So there is this mixed bag of monopolist thought as we've boiled down the US landline carriers to six, wireless carriers of significance to four, each with a territory in landlines. Some communities did their own fiber optic services, but they're rare. Communities became forbidden after their state legislators were sufficiently bribed to prevent community utility access. Co-ops went the same way, although there are still some around.
Collusion? The telcos shifted much away from the State PUCs to the Feds with the TCAct, so they'd only have to fight (I mean bribe) Washington and deal with the FCC.
And in reality: this is a huge freaking country, and trying to cover it with copper, fiber, or wireless still takes a lot of capital. How do you get capital? A business plan with a guaranteed return on investment. How do you get guarantees for revenue floors? Collusion? What a bright idea.
Utilities are unique and used to be cooperatives and had a ceiling on revenues, each price increase in front of a state or perhaps federal committee, breathing down their necks to keep prices reasonable. Government doesn't protect people much anymore, it protects the interests of business in the blind faith that says: in doing so, you're disciplining investment. Bullshit.
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The telcos were independent, and a long distance network consisted of AT&T, ITT, and others.
AT&T WAS the phone company. Oh, there were a handful of tiny, independent telephone companies, but for the most part everybody in the U.S. had AT&T (you know Mama Bell). If it wasn't for Judge Greene, there would not have been any Baby Bells to consolidate. They would all still be AT&T.
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Your sense of history varies from mine, but let's say for a moment, AT&T was it, and there was no ConTel, no ITT, no GTE, and so forth. Yes, Judge Greene broke up AT&T, and then the landgrab was on.
Today, AT&T is a reverse merge of Southwestern Bell primarily, which had acquired Ameritech, Southern Bell, and so forth. Verizon took on GTE/ConTel, Nynex, and others. But there are landline and longlines assets, datacomm infrastructure (yes, real OC12-OC192+) that are intermixed.
I said nothing about
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We can agree on the size of AT&T and its monopoly in numerous areas. They were gargantuan. They became a monopoly through the actions of their board of directors, and what the directors did. The government gave tacit approval in most cases, to their actions.
MCI, Sprint, WorldComm, many other Tariff 12 Carriers started to thrive. When the data business blossomed, and cellphones looked to rule the day, many different actions happened. The breakup of AT&T lead to many other countries taking everything
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Today, there's a sense of ownership by the telcos
AT&T had that sense of ownership before the breakup. Today's telcos inherited that sense of ownership from the original AT&T, it is not a post-breakup phenomena. At one point before the breakup of AT&T, you were not allowed to connect a non-AT&T device to your telephone line. AT&T owned your phone. The first step that led to the breakup of AT&T was a lawsuit because AT&T would not allow you to connect your own modem to their phone lines.
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AT&T in 1980 is not in most reasonable ways, the AT&T today. It tries to act that way, but it's Southwestern Bell with lipstick, covered in testosterone patches.
AT&T often rented your phone to you; you didn't even own it, as you mention. That's when Western Electric got its first competition, sometimes by GTE, ITT, and others. I lived through that entire era, battling what was AT&T through the breakup and ostensible reformation. I watched the squirrely tariffs, the State PUCs, the FCC, and a
Re: Completely unforeseen! (Score:2)
Between my wife and I we had all the iPhones on AT&T since the 3G which barely hit 1mbps in 2009. Here we are three years later and our iPhone 5's can download at 20mbps on a normal day in midtown manhattan.
Verizon is the same. Sprint has always sucked but that is their problem.
The only people who haven't seen an improvement are the ones who live in places where the cows outnumber the people
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So basically most of the fucking country. Ironically, you'd starve to death without those places where cows out number people, you're just too ignorant to realize it.
God I hate attitudes of morons like you.
Also, 20mbps, not even a little impressive, neither was 1mbps in 2009. Pull your new yorker head out of your ass and get a clue.
Make them operate like utilities. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Make them operate like utilities. (Score:4, Interesting)
Eminent domain (Score:2)
Municipalities should take over the physical wires and allow each customer to choose which ISP to connect them to.
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I think cars ought to be operated like utilities. You know, flat screen TVs too. Everyone needs food, too. Food ought to be a utility.
All of this should be regulated and provided by government.
And if one day in the future everything is made by robots, it will be.
We'll Get There (Score:5, Insightful)
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Competition will solve this problem
At one time there was competition in the US, not anymore. The US is where Canada was back in 99 through 2008. Back oh 10-12 years ago, I was in total awe of the US broadband speeds(I live in Canada) compared to what my parents could get in Florida, or my best friend was getting in Indianapolis/Franklin(15/1@$33/mo with no cap on cable). Jump a head 9 years when I'm at a state where I can winter travel and work, to avoid to cold and what can I get in Florida at my winter place? 6/1 cable @$55/mo, no DSL
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I sure did. I also remember the "competition" being killed in the last decade by incumbents crushing them out of the marketplace. It doesn't matter that it's one of the most powerful technology companies or not, especially if they're locked in with peerage agreements and continue to do their best to push them out.
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(NB: Not grandparent poster) No it doesn't. His 1) talks about a free market and his 3) talks about a capitalistic economy and keeping it strong, without mentioning a free market.
In fact, his 1) and 2), taken together, show why there is no such thing as a "free market" it anything but the shortest of terms.
NEVER HAPPEN (Score:2)
"move to a utility model, based on the assumption that all Americans require fiber-optic Internet access at reasonable prices"
Sure, this is common sense.
Sure, this could be a major national economic stimulus.
But - politicians are required to enact such a move and
they know who is buttering their bread and
they know it's not you.
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"they know who is buttering their bread"
Yeah, but once in a while they should think of 'We, The People' who provide them the bread to be buttered in the first place.
Google Fiber (Score:5, Insightful)
Isn't this why Google created Google Fiber?
The primary purpose of Google Fiber is to give the industry a kick in the arse.
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The primary purpose of Google Fiber is to allow them to drill even deeper into your personal life and private information so they can "sell you" to advertisers.
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Re:Google Fiber (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes and no.
The ability to mine it for information is a plus to them, but their primary motivation was to FORCE the local providers to get off their bum ass and do their jobs.
I honestly hope google spreads and actually becomes a major player that the local providers have to compete against on a national scale so they have to upgrade and give us decent service instead of this 1 meg up 45kb/s down they want to give us now in some areas.
Google is offering what the other guys should have ALREADY been offering but refused to do so and for that, I thank them. Do I like the fact they are mining my information online when/if I use them? I am not particularly thrilled about it but it is their entire core industry and they do not hide that fact now what they do with it so I honestly have no issues with it with how they are currently doing it and just follow the rule of "Never put online what you don't want the world to know" and for the other stuff, encryption is your friend.
My biggest issue with google is not standing up to the US government on requests enough. As far as I am concerned, the government shouldn't be able to ask for information without a warrant period unless in emergency life or death situations and even then, that would be a 90 second phone call to get a warrant.
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I completely agree.
And all the more reason to use SSL encryption for every transaction, every webpage on the internet.
Re: Google Fiber (Score:3)
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Since its a paid service where the consumer is the service, I think that there is at least some reason to consider that (in addition to pushing the incumbent players in the market in a direction which improves accessibility and usefulness of Google's existing services) its a move to diversify their revenue stream so as not to rely solely on adver
Re:Google Fiber (Score:4, Insightful)
Thanks to... (Score:2)
..all your elected Congressmen and Senators elected by informed, focused voters who stay on top of issues like this. They all make sure these corporations will not get away with this...
Leak (Score:2)
Google needs to "leak" a presentation about their fiber project in KC with a slide that says.
Project Completion
- When Time Warner has no more customers in The KC area.
Cringely was prescient on the subject.. (Score:2)
The current situation has a long history in a multi-billion-dollar ripoff of the taxpayers and customers of these companies. Cringeley wrote an amazingly prescient article on the hows and whys we have what we have today (I believe it was even featured here a few years ago when it was published):
The $200 Billion Rip-Off: Our broadband future was stolen. [pbs.org]
This all is nothing new, it was planned in the 90s, and we have pretty much the implementation of that plan today.
Does it piss you off? It pisses me off for s
Capitalism in America? (Score:2)
They could take a leaf out of the UK's method... (Score:2)
Pass a law requiring incumbent ISP's (if they run a monopoly in the region) to provide competitors with access to their copper/fibre network at wholesale cost.
Also tag on an addition that each incoming ISP has to give the ISP they are buying from the same ability to buy bandwidth at cost from them as well. Stopping a single big player taking over multiple markets and force others out by sheer financial weight.
So competition and the ability to provide better/ value for money services in other area outside th
It's been tried (Score:2)
Correction - 50% price reduction from deregulation (Score:2)
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Until 1984, national telecommunications was a regulated utility, with the government controlling prices. A long distance call was $2.87 per minute. In 1984, it was deregulated and natural competition quickly brought the rate to $0.10 per minute - a 97% reduction.
Tight government regulation of internet service as a utility is a great idea, if you want to pay $12 / GB. I can understand how this might have been debatable in 1812, but in 2012 we've already tried both ways over and over again. Competition beats government fiat every time.
Gotta love revisionist historians...
The cost of long distance pre-1980s was due to the existence/enforcement of a monopoly, not due to regulation, but due to the incorrect assignment of the telephone network as a NATURAL monopoly, which it never was.
In 1982-4, the monopoly was broken over the collective knee of the People, and natural competitive market forces kicked in, just as they should have been allowed for the previous 70-odd years. Regulation wasn't done away with until the 1996 Telecommunications Ac
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It seems neither system is ideal.
Government monopoly means everyone gets access, but the quality is rubbish.
Private monopoly means people in high population densities get semi-reasonable access, everyone else can go fuck themselves. Even if everyone else wants the government to intervene they can't because the private monopoly has bought the government.
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I pay $80 a month for DSL and local phone service.
My internet DNS is so bad, I switched to Open DNS, a free service, because DNS provided by my DSL provider times out 90% of the time.
My packet loss is always > 45%, and my internet speeds for "3.0M down, 750K up" are 128K down, and less than 56K up.
Wrap "open market works" around you in the night, fondle it, and stroke it.
But it's a pipe dream. It doesn't work, not here, not for me, and not for people around me.
Oh yeah (Score:2)
And posting this comment took 3 tries due to network timeouts.
collusion (Score:2)
Lack of demand my ass
When a city tries to start its own municipal internet and the incumbent telecom sues their asses off, gets an injunction, and then drags out the court case while they build their own internet right under the city's nose, it's not lack of demand, it's blatant anticompetitive rent seeking.
investment (Score:2)
a national fiber network would be a huge infrastructure investment with lasting benefit, like the highway system.
Fool (Score:3)
As usual, someone that lives in a large city has no concept of what it's like to live outside their metropolis. His plan might work in New York, but in Iowa, not so much.
Wasn't that long ago.... (Score:2)
20% of your income is "free" (Score:2)
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Re:Antitrust (Score:4, Informative)
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You're funny. The last string of balanced budgets was under Clinton.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:CBO_-_Revenues_and_Outlays_as_percent_GDP.png [wikipedia.org]
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You're funny. The last string of balanced budgets was under Clinton.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:CBO_-_Revenues_and_Outlays_as_percent_GDP.png [wikipedia.org]
Which were not passed by Democrats. The Republicans controlled Congress at the time.
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There is more to the world than US. I've never heard of Verizon, Comast or time warner
First time to slashdot?