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story category FCC Broadband Stats: Junk?
Critics claim data is skewed at industry's behest
(old news - 11:13AM Tuesday Jul 26 2005)
tags: fcc · Op/Ed · stats
While most of the media took the recent FCC broadband penetration statistics as gospel (hey, Uncle Sam doesn't tinker with data & science!), a number of critics wonder whether their statistics are accurate, or worse, being manipulated to justify hands-off policies beneficial to industry, but not the unwired... .

In a recent Wall Street Journal editorial, FCC chief Kevin Martin praised his own policies, claiming that America "leads the world in the total number of broadband connections with 38 million subscribers," and that we were "well on our way to accomplishing the president's goal of universal, affordable access to broadband by 2007."

Maybe, but as telecom critic Bruce Kushnick points out, the FCC reclassified anything over 200kbps as broadband, making such a claim considerably easier.

How many of you would consider a 200kbps asymmetrical connection true broadband?

Penetration data methodology is worse. The FCC considers one wired home in a zip-code to indicate that zip code is broadband enabled. The FCC doesn't release individual penetration data for each zip-code, something Harvard consultant and number cruncher Scott Bradner suggests obfuscates deployment failure.

The exact kind of failure we recently outlined in Shutesbury & Leverett, Massachusetts. They're 300 feet from getting DSL. Verizon doesn't deem them profitable to serve. Verizon also works to pass laws banning towns like this from serving themselves.

"All of the statistics in the FCC report are "up and to the right" and thus look good," states Bradner in a recent Network World article. "It's too bad that it actually does not tell us all that much about Internet service...Maybe someday we will find out, but maybe not from the FCC."

Even FCC Commissioners have found fault with the FCC's penetration methodology. "Finding one high-speed subscriber in a zip code and counting it as service available throughout is not a credible way to proceed," stated Commissioner Copps in 2003 (he also takes issue with the 200kbps classification).

Yet proceed they did, and not much has changed in two years, while a culture of deregulation has thrived. Bradner's 2005 article mirrors the same concerns from a 2003 piece. Corporate think tanks, critical of municipal broadband for bottom line reasons, use incorrect FCC statistics to "prove" things are going so well, there's no need for community broadband.

These reports were required as part of the 1996 Telecom act. If they show penetration issues (to say oh, rural America) the FCC is expected to "take immediate action to accelerate deployment of such capability." With a looming Telecom Act rewrite, it should prove interesting to see if the reports aren't eliminated altogether.

Related:
  1. If FCC Broadband Data is Wrong...
  2. Surprise: More Criticism of FCC Broadband Data
  3. Congress Realizes Broadband Data Sucks
  4. 5 Signs Our Broadband Plan May Already Be In Trouble
  5. What Does Copyright Have To Do With Improving Broadband?
  6. What Network Neutrality Is REALLY About
  7. Cable Industry: Shucks, Guess Nobody Wants CableCARDs
  8. FCC Study: Open Access Lowers Prices, Improves Competition
Forums » FCC Broadband Stats: Junk?
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Post a:
Cloud Strife

join:2003-09-10
Ironton, OH

hmmmm

Conspiracy theorists take your free shot...

Minister

join:2002-01-02
Fleeting

Re: hmmmm

Oh yes. Data Integrity is priority number one to politicians these days.

The idea Uncle Sam would doll up data to support pro-corporate policies is just oh-so totally crazy. Like oh, crop circles!

MacGyver
Bell Sucks
Premium,ExMod 2003-05
join:2001-10-14
Orleans, ON

Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics

.
moonpuppy

join:2000-08-21
Glen Burnie, MD

Re: Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics

Figures don't lie.......but you can lie with figures.
PDXPLT

join:2003-12-04
Banks, OR

Re: hmmmm

said by Cloud Strife See Profile:

Conspiracy theorists take your free shot...
No conspiracy theories. But I'm sure will get the usual litany of responses along the lines that all regulations are bad, anything Corporate America does is wonderful and sucessful, and if the FCC has to rely on bogus statistics such as zip code penetration to make it appear so, then so be it.

And anyone who disagrees is a liberal-commie-pinko-godless-gun-hating-Clinton-lover. And if you want broadband so bad, just move.

LoneGreyWolf
Premium
join:2002-09-09
Bath, NY
clubs:

Re: hmmmm

"And if you want broadband so bad, just move."

Don't you just love that statement? Just move huh? They act like everyone in the world can just pack up there things and move as it were just as easy as going down to the corner store.

I know you didn't actually say this PDXPLT, and that it was just sarcasm, but I had to comment on it... lol!
Skippy25

join:2000-09-13
Hazelwood, MO

Re: hmmmm

Your home doesnt have wheels? I thought all homes were like mine. They are in my neck of the wood.
donaldk
Premium
join:2000-10-19
Thunder Bay, ON
Since when is anything said by the FCC (re: broadband) taken with a grain of salt.
deadzoned
Premium
join:2005-04-13
Baton Rouge, LA
·Cox HSI

Heh

There is no conspiracy theory. It's all fact and it's right there for you to read. It's sad that people can't see the big picture here. The bottom line is that Big Business will continue to hinder any effort to deploy real broadband unless we play by their rules. If they ever do deploy we will pay for it, probably many times over.

Like there ever was a doubt that they were not skewed...Everything can be bought if the price is right. You just have to find the magical sweet spot.

klubbz

@verizon.ne

true broadband

"How many of you would consider a 200kbps asymmetrical connection true broadband?"

what else would you call it? Dial-Up?

packetscan
Premium
join:2004-10-19
Bridgeport, CT
clubs:

Re: true broadband

i call it "getting ripped off"!

FTCXtreme

join:2005-03-14
New Braintree, MA
I consider it, Xbox live. 200k means Xbox live to me. If I had 200k I'd become a hobbit.

IT Guy
Ow, My Balls
Premium
join:2004-07-29
Las Cruces, NM
clubs:
I'd call it a step higher than an ISDN connection.

dsl_joe

@ipltin.ameritech

thumbs down from:
John Galt See Profile

Obvious

FCC under RNC control?

That's right the White House is a
propaganda machine so having the FCC
under its control would be logical.

Only a Republican Robot would think otherwise.
bogey780

join:2004-03-19
Here

200kbs

Some people don't want 1.5-6 megs of service. They want the cheapest connection possible even if it's only 4-5 times faster than dial-up.

But if you want to get technical on what constitutes broadband then you have to go back to the drawingboard since broadband technically means something other than what a lot of people use it to mean.
PDXPLT

join:2003-12-04
Banks, OR

Universal access by 2007?

OK, I've finally realized how this is going to be "accomplished". The FCC will just continue to rely on the zip code metric: once every zip code contains at least once household with broadband availability, they will consider broadband to be "universally available". Never mind that there will be many zip codes like mine, where most of the area is unserved. The FCC will declare victory, and most mainstream media journalists will just take it at face value.

pnh102
Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty
Premium
join:2002-05-02
Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast

ZIP Code metric not unreasonable

The FCC's ZIP Code metric wasn't an accurate way of measuring broadband availability before cellular providers could offer usable connection speeds though their phones. However, with more providers (Sprint and Verizon) offering higher speed wireless connections, it might now be possible to say if one person in a ZIP Code could get such service, then all people could.
--
Rove / Rumsfeld 2008!

Minister

join:2002-01-02
Fleeting

Re: ZIP Code metric not unreasonable

3G wireless technologies are only just now being deployed, and only in major markets. Sprint's EVDO technology is barely launched. Unlimited data plans cost in excess of $80. Rural or even secondary urban markets will not be served any-time soon.
quote:
it might now be possible to say if one person in a ZIP Code could get such service, then all people could.
It's also possible to say dumptrucks have feelings. That wouldn't make it true.
haplo2112

join:2003-05-12
Charlton, MA

True Broadband is a moving target

At this point I would consider anything below a 3/512 connection "True" broadband. Charter Communications are you listening.

By this time next year 5/1
In two years 7/2
In three years 10/5
In Ten years 1000/1000
btpull
Premium
join:2004-04-27

Let Technology Solve the Problem

The roll of government is to provide and protect public goods. Broadband is Not a public good. With that out of the way the broadband penetration issue will be easily solved by allowing the up and coming technologies to develop and prosper.

These technologies include Mesh networks, WiMax, Satellite, power lines, and EV-DO. If the government interferes the margins for implementing these technologies will shrink and kill the new markets; sticking us with slow DSL and cable options forever.

FTCXtreme

join:2005-03-14
New Braintree, MA

200k is Broadband to me.

I'd love to get 200k, I'd love to be able to get any type of broadband. Why dont you guys do a report on New Braintree, MA? sure a few people can get DSL, but most of us are fu*ked. I want DSL.

plk
bo may sleep in loft
Premium
join:2002-04-20
Ogden, IA

Just wondering......

I'm just wondering how affordable Broadband is defined. Satellite Broadband has been around for several years in every zipcode. Am I wrong here?
So the goal is moot.

The goal of 200kbps isn't fast enough to stream video. In any other situation it would be raised, but we know this would lower the count and not serve the FCC.

Didn't I read one town in Eastern LA just got phone service last year? How long have we been paying USF?
--
Thermaltake 2000a/Asus P4C-e/p4 3.4/ocz3500 2x512/WD.2x200g/raptor2x74 raid 0/ATI 9600/APC sua 1500/Logitech z-680/ Samsung 213t LCD/MX 1000

nekote

join:2000-12-16
Hopkinton, MA

Limit FCC to 200K

Limit the FCC and commisioners to 200K.

Cut their existing connect speeds in half, each week.
Until they either get to 200K, or cry uncle and quit.

The quiting point would speak volumes as to what reasonable "broadband" is.
--
Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all other forms of government. - Winston Churchill

kamm

join:2001-02-14
Brooklyn, NY

Disband the FCC...

it's not doing its job for long time now, it became a lobbyist for big corporations - it should be disbanded.
Forums » FCC Broadband Stats: Junk?


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