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Forums » Broadband Policy: No, We Can't All Just Get Along » Karl is right
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Therein lies the rub »
« From under the Banyan tree  

TKJunkMail
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Re: Karl is right

said by nasadude See Profile :

the only way broadband in this country will get better is if there is real competition; the only way we will get real competition is if the government steps in to make it happen.
Yes to "competition is the key." And NO to the suggestion that government must make it happen. Government intervention won't make competition happen. All it will do is add another layer of cost with bureaucrats siphoning off their percentage of the action. And maybe switching the advantage to someone other than than current dominant players.
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digitalfreak

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1 edit

Re: Karl is right

You know, but choose to ignore as usual, that REAL broadband competition will never happen in the current environment.
PDXPLT

join:2003-12-04
Banks, OR

said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

And NO to the suggestion that government must make it happen.
Nonsense. Government always is essential to making it happen. Government provides a monetary system, so that value can be easily exchanged. Government enforces the rule of law (or is supposed to), so that contracts can be enforced (which makes entities willing to enter into contracts in the first place). Government controls access to resources owned by the American people that are needed by businesses (e.g., radio spectrum). In short, government sets the ground rules and provides the playing field and the tools in which competition takes place. It can do it badly, or do it well.

Now, as some have argued here, perhaps broadband isn't really very important. It's useful to provide access to porn, to allow college students to steal music, and not much else. It's not much more than a frivolous luxury. If that's the case, then BB policy isn't very important. If the only criteria used to set the rules is that which maximizes value to ISP shareholders, fine.

However, U.S. government policy, as defined by Congress in the 1996 Telecomm Act, says something different. Broadband is considered such a driver of growth and so imprtant to citizens, that it is U.S. policy that it made available to all, in a timely manner and at reasonable cost. Specifically, the FCC was tasked with seeing to it that this happens, and with tweaking the playing field to deal with any instances where market failure prevents that goal from being acheived for certain portions of the citizenry.
Skippy25

join:2000-09-13
Hazelwood, MO

So tell us, who is going to make that happen? Over the last 100 years for telecom and a few decades for cable why has that not already happened?

Oh that's right... because we are dealing with a "resource" that is monopolistic by nature and that at best has a duopoly in major cities. The incumbents have had control of the transport for decades. They have control of regulation for the most part and are dominant in a field that is impossible for someone to enter into and truly compete with them.

Besides that I as a property owner have absolutely no desire to have multiple "carriers" come in and tear up my yard or string dozens of lines everytime they need to get their services to me or one of my neighbors. There should be one nationwide network, PERIOD. Everyone else should simply be service providers and that includes AT&T and Comcast if that is what they want.

huntml

join:2002-01-23
Mullica Hill, NJ
OK. So what is *your* suggesting for fostering competition in the telecom industries?

TKJunkMail
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1 edit

Re: Karl is right

said by huntml See Profile :

OK. So what is *your* suggesting for fostering competition in the telecom industries?
1st of all, I think we have competition now in most areas.

2nd, give smaller players a holiday from regulations, especially by state and local governments. No build out requirements; no reporting requirements; no extra taxes like USF, local sales taxes, etc until a company reaches a certain size.

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1 edit

Re: Karl is right

said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

said by huntml See Profile :

OK. So what is *your* suggesting for fostering competition in the telecom industries?
1st of all, I think we have competition now in most areas.

2nd, give smaller players a holiday from regulations, especially by state and local governments. No build out requirements; no reporting requirements; no extra taxes like USF, local sales taxes, etc until a company reaches a certain size.

1. Certainly arguable.

2. Not a bad idea, but certainly to be lobbied hard against by the incumbents.

What happened to 3-5, TK? These were some very interesting ideas, and I was in the middle of replying to tell you I thought so when they evaporated.

Too far off the party line, maybe? Some of the things you proposed were things I think would help, but they aren't the kind of things I've ever seen put forward by the GOP. Restriction of localities' ability to refuse to allow easements? Patent reform? Really, TK.

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said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

1st of all, I think we have competition now in most areas.
Please say more about this competition that we have in most areas.
Forums » Broadband Policy: No, We Can't All Just Get AlongTherein lies the rub »
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