Bill Calls For Wi-Fi Base Stations In All Federal Buildings 196
GovTechGuy submits this from Hillicon Valley: "Sens. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) and Mark Warner (D-Va.) introduced legislation on Friday that would require all public federal buildings to install WiFi base stations in order to free up cell phone networks. The Federal Wi-Net Act would mandate the installation of small WiFi base stations in all publicly accessible federal buildings in order to increase wireless coverage and free up mobile networks. The bill would require all new buildings under construction to comply and all older buildings to be retrofitted by 2014. It also orders $15 million from the Federal Buildings Fund be allocated to fund the installations."
We don't have the cash for this let the cell phone (Score:5, Insightful)
We don't have the cash for this let the cell phone companies pay for it.
Alternate solution (Score:2)
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except you want the signal to be out in the street
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Great (Score:3)
WiFileaks.org ?
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WiFileaks.org ?
Just how exactly, could this go wrong? Considering past performance, the Congress (the opposite of progress) and the Senate (much like the one in ancient Rome) have little understanding of the bills they pass, unless there's something in it for them or their constituents ($$$, not the voting kind).
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Small nit..it's the House and Senate - both together make up "Congress".
Shows how much I pay attention to corrupt politicians.
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Actually, the Government will pay for this. The money will come out of the "Federal Buildings Fund". It is collected from "rent" the GSA is paid by Federal Agencies that use federal facilities.
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We don't have the cash for this let the cell phone companies pay for it.
By which, you mean, the consumer will pay for it.
ANY costs assigned to the cell carriers will be directly (or even inflatedly) passed onto the consumer. Period. Heck, if you asked them, they would admit as much.
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No, the telcos don't have to pass the cost to the consumer. They can pay for it out of their profits, which are huge. If there's a problem with that, it's in the protections they have in a cartel, where they don't have to compete with each other. Which is probably the most essential reform that Congress should pass, and this kind of development forces that issue into the open.
The idea that all costs to business are simply transferred 100% to the business' customers, ignoring the source of funds in profits,
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ANY costs assigned to the cell carriers will be directly (or even inflatedly) passed onto the consumer. Period.
That's not really how markets work. Cell carriers will charge whatever they think will get them maximum profits. Input costs... the cost of doing business... only have an indirect effect upon output charges.
They charge as much as they think they can get away with. If their price structure is flexible enough to "pass the costs on," then they weren't charging enough to begin with.
And of course cel
Public WiFi (Score:3)
We should go all the way, make a Federal law requiring counties and municipalities to deploy and operate a unified public WiFi network with complete coverage wherever the public access density exceeds some small number of people (the number in which at least 10 people an hour are statistically likely to be present). The Feds should back that mandate by hosting WiFi and Internet interconnect infrastructure in any Federal building at Federal cost, as designed by the municipality/county. And pay for the entire
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You will also have to run more lines into the building as you not going to want these access points on the internal network.
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No, expenses come out of either profits or increased revenues. You're so stupid you don't even understand the most basic facts of business. And you're an asshole.
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Anyway, I guess it will last only for 3 strikes according to their own ACTA law.
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Pay for it out of the reduced market-clearing prices for higher-limit data plans and data overage charges that result from more access to WiFi?
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Re:We don't have the cash for this let the cell ph (Score:4, Insightful)
I couldn't agree more. This is one of those good ideas we just can't afford, especially with the country's present financial condition.
Oh for the love of Pete! You spend over half a trillion dollars a year on your military, as much as the rest of the other militaries on the planet combined. Cut your military spending by a few percent and you could pay for proper schools, the space program, and still have money left over to put wifi in your government offices.
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But if we do that, how will those defense contractor executives take home their multi-billion dollar bonuses?
What I find really sad about the whole thing is that for all the money we spend on the defense budget, VA (Veterans Administration) hospitals are generally lame. I mean, seriously? All that and you can't even take care of people? What the fuck.
Bah (Score:3, Insightful)
LOL.....Poor mobile phone providers....Waste tax payers money building out a completely useless wireless network so they do t need to upgrade their own networks.
If your public servants need a wireless network to do their job, install a wireless network, dont mandate it in legislation!
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Legislation is the only way Senators have to get things done. It's the only power they actually have (except sleazy intimidation tactics that are backed up by threats of legislation).
You're not a Senator, so I'd like to hear the way you know for them to get things done that's not legislation.
Re:Bah (Score:4, Insightful)
Come, now. I was aiming for funny, not insightful. But since you ask..
Senators are US citizens, just like most people living in the USA. Introducing legislation is one of the special powers that they have as members of the legislative branch of the government, and as such it is more effective for them than for the rest of us. But do you really believe that legislation is the only tool US citizens (legislators or not) have for getting things done? You must feel pretty powerless. :c(
They could talk to the people in charge of technical infrastructure in federal buildings. Communicate with people in the FCC and Presidential cabinet. I don't know who would be in charge of the oversight and implementation of the installations that they are trying to introduce with this bill, but it seems to me that Congress is probably not the closest Womb of Policy for this particular issue. I have no doubt that if I felt strongly about increasing wireless coverage, I could find out who the important people are, and get in touch. As senators, Snowe and Warner have more ready knowledge of these hierarchies, and the station and name recognition to have their voices heard.
That said, the article indicates (in the fourth paragraph) that they are not only interested in Wi-Fi coverage in Federal buildings, but "preventing dropped calls that occur indoors and in rural areas due to poor cell phone coverage, while also hopefully boosting wireless network capacity". This sounds much more comprehensive than the summary, which indicates that they are simply focusing on federal buildings. That is a scenario where legislation may be warranted.
My comment, however, was simply playing off the parent, who was basically asking, "Do we really need a law on the books so that members of Congress don't get dropped calls in the Capitol Building?" If that is all this bill is about, then it seems like these senators would be better-served by walking down the hall and knocking on the door of their helpdesk. Maybe they've already tried that, and now are going over the head of an ornery sysadmin.
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You and I are both powerless to get anything done to the telcos without the government. That is why we have a government. The Senate help desk isn't going to get anything done about dropped calls that are the telcos fault without the government either, which means legislation.
Indeed, this Senate legislation protects more than just the phonecalls in the Senate. It works to solve a more general problem for all Americans, that happens to also affect the Senate. That kind of universal management is what we want
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You really need to redirect your venom at the AC which started this thread, not me. They are the one who said that this should not be mandated in legislation. If "public servants need a wireless network to do their job", then this is a dubious application of legislation – but it seems to be about more than that.
If, indeed, the proposed bill is about solving telecommunications problems for all Americans, then I am 100% for it. The telecommunications infrastructure in the United States badly needs
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This isn't "venom", it's criticism - that is directed at your comment, not at the other post.
I asked if there are non-legislative ways for Senators to do something, and your response did not show one, as I pointed out, and you haven't amended with one - because you can't. "Not as effective" is such "hyperbole" as to be meaningless: other than legislation, there's nothing senators can do that is effective at all.
You really should just agree that what you said wasn't legitimate - though getting you to admit i
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Hmm. Lots going on here. I think that a disconnect on the discussion's framework is probably at the core. Let's see if we can reign things in.
My original reading of the ACs post was of senators as lusers [jargon.net], wielding legislation as a sword to solve mundane technical problems. ("When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.") I thought it to be facetious, and crafted a reply in kind. This may have been foolish, but I did not think it out of place in a Slashdot thread. To be honest, you
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That's a very thorough and sincere retraction. I appreciate it. I didn't find your subsequent comments to be radically anti-government, and indeed a reasonably anti-government attitude is one of my pride American traits :). I was a little confused when you said that the government should fix what the telcos have left broken, so I'm not surprised you retracted that original statement. And I'm glad, because I despair of the rising tide of insanely anti-government crapola flying around especially on the Intern
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Whew! I am glad we have found common ground, because I am interested in discussing the telecom problem, too! I was afraid we would remain at cross purposes and never get around to it. ;c)
I feel that I am far too timid in participating in debate; I would like to become more active in such discussions, and Slashdot has helped me become braver in this. I think it is because I am able to choose who I argue with, but more so because I can take the time to ponder what I say. I often fear that if I engage in
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I think you're doing fine - I'm not usually as willing to retract, especially when I think the person demanding the retraction is posting "venom" at me in return.
I'm looking forward to hearing from you.
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How much coverage would federal buildings really provide, and how much EDGE/3G/4G traffic would be relieved in reality?
Data costs over 3g are outrageous, the only things with higher data costs are satellite and SMS. After the initial hardware expendature having faster more reliable internet/lan access is a good thing.
I'm sorry, but aren't we in the opening stages of one of the largest know breaches of confidential government documents? How dull do you have to be to make it easier for this to happen again? That doesn't speak to the current state of ease with which such a breach could happen, but only that with a public wifi hotspot in easy reach, you suddenly have an external network in range.
Secret documents aren't accessible to public networks nor this network. Any such classified information is generally only accessible via computers that are designated for access to such materials and have much higher security requirements than regular machines.
Nothing will stop a breech of protocols, if you get
Who was behind this? ATT? (Score:4, Insightful)
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LoB
Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
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Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Not exponential (Score:3)
with technologies from HSPA+ to LTE improving available bandwidth per MHz exponentially
Not to get all nitpicky, but I think there is this guy Shannon [wikipedia.org] who would disagree with you. (Also this has a more concise formula [wikipedia.org].)
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Many, if not most, public government buildings already have guest-access Internet ports. Some are wifi, some are wired. That means the connection and most maintenance costs are already provided for.
As for who would use it...any public person who has to do business with the gov't and needs internet access. Don't like the idea of a gov't run connection? Set up a VPN and tunnel.
-me
(a gov't employee, speaking from personal experience)
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I fail to see how you can bailout a business by providing an alternative to their services (metered mobile data.)
It would be like the government "bailing out" GM by, instead of investing in GM the way it did, starting up its own auto factory and providing free government-made loaner cars at federal buildings.
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Telcos could do more, but it seems to me that sooner or later, especially in congested urban areas, just about everybody is going to be fighting for bandwidth over the cell networks. As phone usage approaches 100% of the population, in combination with usage of USB/PCMCIA wireless doodads, something is going to have to give, especially if/when the world moves on to IPV6.
Seems to me the sensible thing would be to get as much
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The obvious solution is to move to mesh networks where phones act as repeaters and more phones make the total available bandwidth in the mesh go up instead of down. There are obvious technical hurdles, and social ones too (like convincing users that their battery life is not going to drop off to nothing because they're occasionally acting as a repeater) but the real reason it isn't the way they went already is that central control is everything to telcos. They want to bring your calls home so that they can
Free wifi here! (Score:4, Funny)
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Not for long (Score:3)
They should go wider... (Score:5, Interesting)
You can just bring a laptop and work there (for as long as your battery lasts at least) or whatever. That way people who don't want/have data plans can still get wireless internet.
Re:They should go wider... (Score:4, Informative)
Yeah, because internet access is a RIGHT
In the EU, it is now regarded as such, along with things like clean water, heating, and access to education, because it is increasingly difficult to participating in society without Internet access.
and the government should be spending our taxpayers money to make sure everyone should be able to get online
One of the things that governments are responsible for is ensuring that everyone has (at least approximately) equal opportunities.
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If our society requires that an ind
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The more that our government uses the internet for the purpose of public services (ie. pay your taxes online and such) the more it becomes a necessity.
Wonderful! Then the Government will pay the postage for my tax return if I mail it in? Or are they going to selectively decide which means to subsidize the filing of your taxes?
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Then the Government will pay the postage for my tax return if I mail it in?
No. They do, however, pay for the postal service that you use to mail it in.
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I suppose you could always hand-carry a copy of your return to your local IRS office.
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Don't you think that internet access should be a right? People don't need high-grade, 1080p porn streaming for free, but to be able to get online and read wikipedia, participate in automotive forums, apply for jobs, and so on, the kind of stuff that the nerdly take for granted? Telephone access is a right, you only have to pay the barest amount to get it by law if you have low income. Television access is apparently a right, which is why we got DTV converter boxes. To give people telephone and television an
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http://www.csmonitor.com/Business/Mises-Economics-Blog/2010/1017/Home-uninsured.-Firemen-let-it-burn.-Crazy-capitalism [csmonitor.com]
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I was just correcting your point saying that "government provides services that aren't a right such as fire control" when they don't necessarily do so. You were disproving the idea that government is not always wrong by using fire fighting as an example. It wasn't clear whether you were aware that there are whole districts out the
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Yeah, that will work out (Score:2)
Lets let anyone attach to the network!
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Exactly. It pretty regularly screws us over in the labs since the FAA has a ban on wifi in ALL buildings. Means we simply can't use certain hardware. How are they going to work that out?
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Paint the lobby with wi-fi blocking paint and install the AP in the lobby.
What a waste (Score:2)
Who is Bill? (Score:2)
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Math is hard for senators. (Score:2)
Sample costs: ...
Labor $40/hour. 3-5 hours.
hardware: cat5, mounting brackets, PoE adapters, routers
travel costs: Maybe $800/trip, one way?
Electricity: ?
Management/project oversight: ?
shipping and handling: ?
I'm going to guess (low, I think) that each install would cost about $5,000. So how many wifi installs can $15 million cover? About 3,000 buildings. How many people thing that in all three branches of the federal government, they only have 3000 buildings?
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What's the public interest here? (Score:2)
I'm confused. . . what is the compelling public interest that requires the Federal Government to 'free up cell phone networks'? Why should my taxpayer money be used to offload traffic from the cell phone networks, when people are already paying the cell providers for service? Let the cell providers ensure they have enough coverage and backhaul to fulfill the service they have sold to customers, and if they don't/can't, then haul them into court on breach of contract, false advertising, etc.
If this move woul
unfortunate summary (Score:2)
Maybe the real motive is... (Score:2)
Bill calls for Wi-Fi... (Score:2)
Hidden Node Problem (Score:2)
Maybe it's better if they update WiFi to use a TDMA protocol, make it a free standard and then think about using Wifi to help cell networks.
15 million? (Score:2)
Come ON! A wifi acces point is like...what? 50 bucks?
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Especially when you consider every building will be a government building eventually.
What do you mean "eventually"? Stop paying your property tax and you'll find out who the real owner is ...
Sovereign states own all the land within their confines. You have the right to "buy" some of it, but you will pay "taxes" (rent) for that "ownership privilege".
What you're really buying is the usufruct of the land. You will never own it, even if the mortgage is paid.
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Uh, no.
Your bogus anti-tax argument blows chunks.
You get to own it until you die. Then, depending on the theory of post-death ownership, someone/thing else does.
And gladly, my property taxes pay for public safety, schools, infrastructure, and other things needed in a civilized society.
Your theory doesn't get past the tip of your greedy nose.
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It's called eminent domain.
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The main exception being the folks that want the rich to pay their fair share of the taxes as they've generally already given up their stuff to get those low taxes for the rich. Returning that to where it belongs is a tad different than the right wing antitax nuts that seem to think that no poor person should ever expect any help making something of themselves.
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Just to be clear here... "Fair" does not mean more. The rich are already paying a higher percentage of their income (28-35%) than the poor (10-25%.) (Arbitrary line drawn by me) You can see by the first chart:
http://www.taxfoundation.org/news/show/250.html [taxfoundation.org]
that even after adjustments, the rich still pay over 17% (up to 23%) where the "poor" pay under 15% (as low as 2.59%.)
I think what you are referring to as "Fair" is the rich being taxed so much that they can only afford minimally more than the poor. Th
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Just to be clear here... "Fair" does not mean more. The rich are already paying a higher percentage of their income (28-35%) than the poor
Fair does indeed mean more. The rich use significantly more government resources than the poor.
Their income is dependent on massive federal infrastructure and subsidies like interstate roads, civil courts, "small" business loans (currently totally 84 billion dollars) and enormous indirect oil subsidies, mortgage deductions, state department promotion of international business, etc, etc.
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Unless they are an idiot, being "rich" doesn't mean simply sitting on a pile of depreciating money.
It means generating an income - after all this is about income tax isn't it?
And the income streams of the rich are essentially all dependent on a vast array of government services.
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Unless they are an idiot, being "rich" doesn't mean simply sitting on a pile of depreciating money.
It means generating an income - after all this is about income tax isn't it?
And the income streams of the rich are essentially all dependent on a vast array of government services.
I can't understand why you would think that generating the 250,000th dollar or the millionth dollar would take a higher percentage of those "vast array of government resources" than the first dollar or the 20,000th dollar.
If anything, it's likely to take less.
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I can't understand why you would think that generating the 250,000th dollar or the millionth dollar would take a higher percentage of those "vast array of government resources" than the first dollar or the 20,000th dollar.
Because most of those resources aren't even used by the poor.
For example, the poor have practically no usage for corporate law or international trade delegations or even interstate highways.
At the very least there is a step function with a very high step.
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You are saying that all rich people deal with international trade and corporate law?
Yes I am and many other areas in which they receive government support.
How? The stock market.
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You named a bunch of unrelated institutions to justify theft of wealth. Want me to counter your meaningless arguments?
So, in your mind, consumption of government services paid for with tax money are completely unrelated to taxation levels.
What the hell was I thinking?! Thanks for showing me just how wrong I was!!!
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Because most of those resources aren't even used by the poor.
For example, the poor have practically no usage for corporate law or international trade delegations or even interstate highways.
There are so many holes in this argument it's pathetic.
First, it seems to be based on the assumption that "the rich" are using corporate law and international trade delegations and interstate highways more than the poor. But is it the rich that are using those services? Or is it corporations?
You see, most large corporations are taxable entities. If you had made the case that corporations should fund these services, you'd be a little closer to having a valid point. But you want to tax someone else - the
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Now, consider where those poor criminals would be living if there was no police protection at all. :)
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The taxes they charge are for the services they provide as a result of your owning that property. The reason why they can seize the property if you fail to pay the taxes is that it's how they c
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What bullshit antitax rant are you talking about? I pay the taxes that I owe, and have no problem with that. Whether or not you actually lose the property, you will be punished for evading property taxes. Yes, these taxes go towards the services that they provide for living in the jurisdiction, but they are directly tied to property ownership, not residency. You still pay property tax on land you own, even if you never live or work there. This is why it seems reasonable to think of it, in one possible
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No, there are ways to make you stop owning the property. If you sell it to someone else, or otherwise agree they own it, then you don't own it anymore - but that doesn't mean you never owned it. Another way to stop owning something is if the state takes it from you. There are some obligations property owners have to the state that when violated result in the state taking ownership from the owner. If you use property to damage someone else the state can take ownership. If the owner fails to pay certain taxes
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Think of it for a minute - your government can tax your land "ownership", same as a feudal lord - but a foreign government can't - because they cannot exert sovereignty over it. They have control of it - not you.
Try seceding.
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No it doesn't. Ownership doesn't mean totally exclusive control and totally independent freedom. You are changing the meaning of the word "ownership" to mean something it doesn't.
The real world is a lot more complex than these libertarian fantasies dream it could be.
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Depends on the land law in your particular juristiction. In England, the Queen owns all the land and you are granted a licence to occupy it in perpetuity. In Scotland, you own it. Although in reality it makes no practical difference either way.
I have to pay property tax in England even though I rent the place. My landlord doesn't have to pay property tax on it, because he has rented it out to me. The tax is payable for the benefit I receive from local services provided by the council, not "rent" for "o
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Ultimately, do you really own something if you have to pay to keep it? He obviously thinks not. You do.
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No, you own the land. But ownership of property doesn't mean unlimited, unencumbered control of it. You are using "own" to mean something it never means. The typical "libertarian" fantasy that is true only perhaps in Sim City, never in reality.
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If it was a true tech leader then I might agree but would never see them allowing a Meraki style grid network. However it looks like these particular Senators are being paid shills.
Snowe - 7th largest donor was Verizon [opensecrets.org]
Warner - 6th largest donor was Verizon [opensecrets.org]
America has the best government money can buy!
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Friggin EXTEND THE TAX CUTS, and STOP SPENDING more money.
Time is limited, and they are wasting it.
If federal buildings had good, consistent Wi-Fi coverage, they could switch over to using VoIP services on their smartphones.
This would let federal employees use less "plan minutes" from the government's contract with the wireless carrier, as well as not use their 3G network for data as much.
In the end, this means the government ultimately paying a smaller phone bill.
So, yes, this does result in them "STOP SPENDING more money."