ISP Lobbying Group: What Rural Broadband Problem?Move along folks, there's nothing to see here... ( old news - 09:17AM Thursday Mar 06 2008) tags: legal · coverage · business · Op/Ed · PoliticsThose of you in rural America who can't get broadband have simply miscalculated, according to the US Internet Industry Association, a Washington lobbying organization for ISPs and Internet industry. "The accepted political dogma that America has in some way failed in its efforts to deploy broadband is based on a series of miscalculations," insists USIAA CEO David McClure in a new report. Chock full of industry think-tank science, the report seems little more than an effort to blow smoke up consumers' collective ethernet ports: Certainly, there is still work to be done in closing the digital divides in America. Equally clearly, however, this work should be based not on continuing efforts to pursue such unhelpful policies as open access, common carriage laws for broadband networks, municipal networking or network neutrality legislation. Yes. Who wants application and device-agnostic networks and cities and towns allowed to run their own broadband? Crazy people -- That's who. And rural users who thought they couldn't get broadband because ISPs deem vast stretches of rural America unprofitable (and successfully lobby to ban those towns from deploying broadband themselves)? You apparently just need to go back and check your math. The accepted political dogma that America has in some way failed in its efforts to deploy broadband is based on a series of miscalculations. -USIIA CEO David McClure |
The report insists that a lack of broadband isn't the ISPs fault as much as it is that people are, well, poor. The group throws their weight behind the already dubious Connected Nation model, a group that's been recently criticized as an incumbent lobbying group dressed up as a rural broadband mapping & deployment project. Reading the report this morning while nursing a head cold got us thinking. How about this as the first step in the development of a real, useful national broadband policy: Stop letting industry lobbyists and marketing departments pretend they produce useful "science." It's also time to extinguish the fallacy that lobbyists, paid to have only one, permanently static viewpoint, are interested in having a legitimate discussion on broadband deployment, network neutrality, or any other topic. Does a television commercial ever see the flaws in its arguments and change its position? Do open forums with said television commercials produce substantive change? The goal is profit, not philanthropy, and data is manipulated and twisted until it serves that singular, unwavering goal. This is not objective analysis. It is not science. It is advertising. Can you have a debate with advertising? Sure. But we're tired of trying and life is too short. Every time we de-construct the skewed data and farmed science in lobbyist reports, the same false arguments re-appear the next month. It's like playing whack-a-mole with a financially-conflicted R2-D2. So instead of wasting our time: If you want to see if rural America has a broadband problem, ask the people who live there -- not the lobbyists trying to convince lawmakers that the problem doesn't exist and/or isn't their fault. For those who think rural broadband coverage gaps are a "miscalculation," our users will be happy to provide tours. Related:- FTTH Council Wants 100Mbps For All
- Scott Cleland: Google Using 21x The Bandwidth They Pay For
- Consumer Group Wants $44 Billion For U.S. Broadband
- Verizon's Open Development Initiative? So Far It's A Joke
- Let's Be Clear: ISPs Don't Want Accurate Public Broadband Data
- Keep Connected Nation Far Away From Stimulus Money
- Here Comes The Connected Nation Sales Pitch
- Verizon Continues Proud History Of Denial
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 wentlanc You Can't Fix Dumb..
join:2003-07-30 Maineville, OH
| Non profit networking.... Remove the transport from greedy corporations, and let them really compete for access. This would be revolutionary for the American consumer. It would also erode the pockets of the ISP's who rely on milking their infrastructure to make their profits. That's why they want closed networks. That's why they want full control. And that's why the want to avoid neutrality. | |
|  |  patcat88
join:2002-04-05 Jamaica, NY
| Re: Non profit networking.... 1984 deregulation (or reregulation if you want to call it that) worked very well. No player can offer the functions/services that its competitor offers. IE, ILEC can only offer copper loop, only ISP can offer DSL, only local exchange CLEC can offer intra-LATA, and only long distence can offer inter-LATA. When no players can control more than 1 part of the service, there will be competition | |
|  |  |   ajkvndgtsdreyegs
@omcastbusiness.net
| Re: Non profit networking.... Wrong! If you want competition and the best possible service for the lowest price. totally deregulate everything. any ISP has the right to come into any town so long as the citizens of the town have a chance to vote the ok that so called applying provider is allowed to run lines into the town to provide a service. It is called free market capitalism. as long as each provider applies to the town and the town votes to allow another ISP to come in then you will have the best possible rates. for those that vote no then no lines can or will be run through their premises for a said period of time. so they either have a choice to not get the service and vote no ro they get the service possibilities and say yay. to hell with regulation in all shapes and form this is what hurts the consumer in price economics. | |
|  |  |  |  joker5656
join:2006-06-23 Greenville, SC
·Charter Pipeline
| Re: Non profit networking.... you make since but since there is never a vote for the people to decide i see this a moot point. the company's go to the top level of gov in that town and sign exclusive deals. there is no vote. Only politicians that think they know what there doing is the only vote. that's why most cities/town don't have two or more companies competing in the same area. imagine if you could choose between two or more cable company's, its a dream waiting to be had. a choice between cable, dsl, wireless, and satellite Internet is not competition since there speeds differ greatly in a given area. very few cities/towns get any competition between the 4 and usually there in huge cities. | |
|  |  |  |  |   batageek Slave To The Duopoly Premium join:2003-01-25
| Re: Non profit networking.... I CALL B.S.
The only thing stopping multiple builds is the lack of payback in the private sector business model to do so.
The "crooked politician" arguments don't hold weight. Blocking a cable build by an "exclusive" agreement is against the law.
See: »www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/uscod···00-.html -- »www.tricitybroadband.com | |
|  |  |  |  |  |   hjkjshjkhkashk
@verizon.net
| Re: Non profit networking.... really. I have personally tried to get fiber from another cable company 10 miles away for a great price because a cable company (suscom) was going to allow this however suscom was bought out by comcast and comcast will not allow mediacom to run fiber to our buisness. whether its against the law or not i dont know but i do know that we are not going to pay a bunch of lawyers to find out. but this is the exact statement given to me from mediacom and they are and were very serious about getting our buisness for the next three years by running fiber to 6 different sites but no, freemarket ISP doesnt exist in my neighborhood | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  jaminus
join:2004-10-14 Arlington, VA
| That law you cite does ban exclusive franchises, but in practice it does nothing to stop them. Sure, in *theory* the startup can get a franchise. But only if they hand over 5 percent of revenue to the city, promise to offer service in low-income areas with low adoption rates, and in the case of TV grant a channel devoted to city council meetings that barely anyone actually watches.
Yes, in some cases private investment payoff is too low to justify building a network if there's already one in place. But if you really think the huge burdens of franchise agreements do not discourage broadband choice, then I advise you to search DSLReports news about the obstacles FiOS and U-Verse have dealt with for the past couple years. | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |   batageek Slave To The Duopoly Premium join:2003-01-25
| Re: Non profit networking.... it's a level playing field argument. You can't expect one provider to get one deal and another provider a different one.
From the city's point of view, it would dump them into a legal quagmire. The city, as it should, is looking to serve all its citizens with the same service and should be looking to get something out of the deal for its citizens.
As to the huge burdens, it's no different than what the cable cos are existing under presently. Cable cos have (in most places) universal buildout clauses for a franchise area (where local franchising has not been replaced with statewide franchising). Cities are typically trying to require the same of the bells when they begin offering video services. -- »www.tricitybroadband.com | |
|  |  |  |  patcat88
join:2002-04-05 Jamaica, NY | Deregulation = allowing anti-competitive practices | |
|  |   LiamJunket Premium join:2002-03-03 Ocean City, NJ
·Comcast
| said by wentlanc :Remove the transport from greedy corporations, and let them really compete for access. Confiscation? That is your solution? Nationalizing an industry is the favorite tactic of socialist dictators everywhere. Let's turn the US in to Cuba or Venezuela. -- My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page | |
|  |  |   elios
join:2005-11-15 Springfield, MO | Re: Non profit networking.... really? seems to working well in UT UTOPIA seems to be doing well and this is pretty much what the OP is saying
and imo id take UTOPIA over FiOS any day | |
|  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| Re: Non profit networking.... said by elios :really? seems to working well in UT UTOPIA seems to be doing well and this is pretty much what the OP is saying Last we checked, UTOPIA was $98 million in the hole. The taxpayers are on the hook for this. At least if a private company wasted that kind of cash, the general public would not be on the hook for anything. -- This isn't fair! I was only supposed to hate just ONE presidential candidate! | |
|  |  |  |  |   jhboricua ExMod 2000-01 join:2000-06-06 Minneapolis, MN clubs:
| Re: Non profit networking.... said by pnh102 :At least if a private company wasted that kind of cash, the general public would not be on the hook for anything. Really? I call bs on that statement. Northwest Airlines has been bailed twice by MN taxpayers with little to show for it. The Savings & Loans crisis of the 80's and 90's cost the US taxpayers $124.6 billion. The current subprime mortgage crisis IS costing taxpayers everywhere. These are just a few examples. -- "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." - Albert Einstein Jose A. Hernandez * System Admin * MPLS, Minnesota, USA * | |
|  |  |  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| Re: Non profit networking.... said by jhboricua :Northwest Airlines has been bailed twice by MN taxpayers with little to show for it. The Savings & Loans crisis of the 80's and 90's cost the US taxpayers $124.6 billion. The current subprime mortgage crisis IS costing taxpayers everywhere. These are just a few examples. So you are proving that government bailouts are bad. Why should we allow for more to occur? -- This isn't fair! I was only supposed to hate just ONE presidential candidate! | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |   jhboricua ExMod 2000-01 join:2000-06-06 Minneapolis, MN clubs: 1 edit | Re: Non profit networking.... Nice way of trying to twist my response. I expected nothing less from a shill. | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| Re: Non profit networking.... said by jhboricua :Nice way of trying to twist my response. Glad you see my point. -- This isn't fair! I was only supposed to hate just ONE presidential candidate! | |
|  |  |  |  |  axus
join:2001-06-18 Washington, DC
·Verizon Online DSL
·Cox HSI
| I'm always interested in how they are doing, I think its up to taxpayers if they want to go forward with these things. I think they will keep voting for it, even if it costs money in the short term.
Can you provide a link with their financial status that isn't a message-board post? | |
|  |  |  |  |  Skippy25
join:2000-09-13 Hazelwood, MO
| Did you expect them to be way ahead in less then 5 years?
Over time, UTOPIA will prove to be the way EVERY community should go. Futher more, I think UTOPIA will show this nation needs 1 fiber network to every person/business that any provider can provide any service to any customer anywhere in the nation that wants that service.
I strongely disagree that every business that wants to provide service should have to build their own network throughout my neighborhood/city. That is not in the best interest of the consumer's nor the citizens. It is only in the best interest of the companies that continue to try to monopolies the industry. | |
|  |  |  |  viperlmw Premium join:2005-01-25
·Qwest.net
| UTOPIA would be considered an overbuild. Other infrastructure already exists (twisted pair copper (Qwest) and coax (whoever the cable provider is)). While it is a municipal build, it's still an overbuild. Anyone can do that if they can figure out how to pay for it. | |
|  |  |  wentlanc You Can't Fix Dumb..
join:2003-07-30 Maineville, OH
| Whatever works.....
Paint the picture of doom and gloom, and fear monger as much as you like. If it makes the broadband landscape in the US better, I'm for it. I don't have any allegiance to any corporations pocketbook, so I'm actually open to suggestions. | |
|  |  MyDogHsFleas Premium join:2007-08-15 Austin, TX
·AT&T U-Verse
·AT&T Southwest
1 edit | Whenever people suggest to me that the government take over something because it'd be run better/more fairly/more cheaply/whatever, I always ask them if they enjoyed their last visit to the Motor Vehicle Department, Post Office, Courthouse, Tax Assessor's Office, Social Security Office, etc. Not to mention TSA at the airport.
These are perfect example of government-run services. They very obviously could care less about their customers. It's all about their employees, their rules, and their convenience. They literally have zero incentive to satisfy your particular needs.
Do big companies suck? Yes, in many ways. But, to me, big government takes suck to a whole new level. And, there are no checks and balances to stop them, really. At least with big corporations you have SOME level of choice (let the bitching about "there's no real competition" begin... but it's better than literally none except the Government). | |
|  |  |  axus
join:2001-06-18 Washington, DC | Re: Non profit networking.... Heh I usually have a good time at the Post Office, it is not government run. I have had poor mail carriers. | |
|  |  |  |  MyDogHsFleas Premium join:2007-08-15 Austin, TX
·AT&T U-Verse
·AT&T Southwest
1 edit | Re: Non profit networking.... said by axus :Heh I usually have a good time at the Post Office, it is not government run. I have had poor mail carriers. It's true they are not literally government-run, but they certainly have that legacy and mindset. And they are (mostly) a monopoly, so they don't have the incentive to improve, really.
You are lucky. I'm in Austin, TX. All the post offices around here are severely understaffed, or should I say "under-worked". They build these beautiful new post office buildings, set up like 8 counters, and you never see more than 2 or 3 of them manned. The rest of the workers are on break or wandering around doing whatever. 30-minute waits for service are not uncommon. I avoid them like the plague. I use package services like DHL/FedEx whenever I can. | |
|  |  |   KrK Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy Premium join:2000-01-17 Tulsa, OK | The Post Office has been getting better and better. More services, online automation, good service.
Course it's a quasi-government operation. | |
|  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| Nothing Stopping Private Citizens While local governments can and should be banned from rolling their own networks, there is nothing stopping private citizens from investing their own resources and setting up their own network, even as a non-profit venture.
Whatever happened to that "can-do" spirit? -- This isn't fair! I was only supposed to hate just ONE presidential candidate! | |
|  |   gaforces United We Stand, Divided We Fall
join:2002-04-07 Santa Cruz, CA | Re: Nothing Stopping Private Citizens Successful broadband deployment has been a combination of private and public resources teaming up. THAT is can-do spirit! -- Vista ~ Less functional every day! | |
|  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| Re: Nothing Stopping Private Citizens said by gaforces :Successful broadband deployment has been a combination of private and public resources teaming up. THAT is can-do spirit! "I'm from the government and I am here to help."
*shudder*
If what you say is true, then why is it always the government holding back private broadband deployments? We see examples shown on this website everyday. A company like Verizon wants to run FIOS to some town somewhere, but the town won't let them because some local politician wants a new pool or some BS like that. Lather, rinse and repeat. The same story is repeated all over the country. Government, especially local government, has done more to hobble private broadband deployment than any "market forces." -- This isn't fair! I was only supposed to hate just ONE presidential candidate! | |
|  |  |  |   gaforces United We Stand, Divided We Fall
join:2002-04-07 Santa Cruz, CA
·Cruzio Internet
| Re: Nothing Stopping Private Citizens Maybe because the private entity's are cherry picking, leaving huge swaths of the country unserved. Let there be CAKE, but only to those they consider profitable of course!
The only way unserved area's will be deployed to is to have private and public cooperation, or twisting of arms like for instance, Boston. If they want to deploy in the profitable areas they should have to also deploy in the rest of the state where the ROI is lower.
Private entity's are holding up deployment squabbling and holding back deployment with all kinds of excuses and bribing till they get to cherry pick what they wish and screw the rest. -- Vista ~ Less functional every day! | |
|  |  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| Re: Nothing Stopping Private Citizens said by gaforces :Maybe because the private entity's are cherry picking, leaving huge swaths of the country unserved. So what if they are cherry picking? Last I checked companies like Verizon, Comcast and AT&T are not charities. They have an obligation to their shareholders to be profitable.
said by gaforces :If they want to deploy in the profitable areas they should have to also deploy in the rest of the state where the ROI is lower. We've seen this before. The end result of this is everyone does get equal service. That is, none whatsoever. -- This isn't fair! I was only supposed to hate just ONE presidential candidate! | |
|  |  |  |  |  |   gaforces United We Stand, Divided We Fall
join:2002-04-07 Santa Cruz, CA
·Cruzio Internet
| Re: Nothing Stopping Private Citizens said by pnh102 :said by gaforces :Maybe because the private entity's are cherry picking, leaving huge swaths of the country unserved. So what if they are cherry picking? Last I checked companies like Verizon, Comcast and AT&T are not charities. They have an obligation to their shareholders to be profitable. said by gaforces :If they want to deploy in the profitable areas they should have to also deploy in the rest of the state where the ROI is lower. We've seen this before. The end result of this is everyone does get equal service. That is, none whatsoever. Lies from the ILEC's and their stockholders. -- Vista ~ Less functional every day! | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| Re: Nothing Stopping Private Citizens said by gaforces : Lies from the ILEC's and their stockholders. How is it a lie?
I am not sure how you can disprove that companies like Verizon, AT&T and Comcast are in the business to make money.
As for companies not providing service due to objections by the local government, this is true. How can a company offer service when a local government doesn't allow them to operate? -- This isn't fair! I was only supposed to hate just ONE presidential candidate! | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   jhboricua ExMod 2000-01 join:2000-06-06 Minneapolis, MN clubs:
| Re: Nothing Stopping Private Citizens The local government are not preventing them to operate. That is a lie too. The problem is that companies such as Verizon, AT&T and Comcast want to have their cake and eat it.
There's nothing to stop them from providing services. -- "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." - Albert Einstein Jose A. Hernandez * System Admin * MPLS, Minnesota, USA * | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| Re: Nothing Stopping Private Citizens said by jhboricua :The local government are not preventing them to operate. How? When the local government explicitly tells an ISP that it cannot make a deployment, that is pretty cut and dried to me. I don't see how you can spin this. -- This isn't fair! I was only supposed to hate just ONE presidential candidate! | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  jaminus
join:2004-10-14 Arlington, VA
| Cherry-Picking is a good thing. Wealthy areas get new stuff first, because they're more likely to subscribe. Initial deployments are typically more expensive than later ones, so it makes sense that ISPs pick the places with high adoption rates for the newest tech. Then, as costs go down, middle class and eventually lower class areas get service too.
If your goal for everybody to have equally mediocre service, then regulate the hell out of broadband companies. But if you want broadband to constantly evolve like it has in the US over the past 10 year, then companies need to have an incentive to invest in long-term capital projects like FiOS, DOCSIS 3.0, or VDSL. Who want to spend billions on big projects if you have to cover poor areas where not many people even subscribe to $50/month internet? Profit is what drives technology forward, and profit is why mobile broadband, computer processors, and flash memory are so affordable and advanced nowadays. | |
|  |  |  |  Talis
join:2001-06-21 Houston, TX
| said by pnh102 :A company like Verizon wants to run FIOS to some town somewhere, but the town won't let them because some local politician wants a new pool or some BS like that. Lather, rinse and repeat. The same story is repeated all over the country. Government, especially local government, has done more to hobble private broadband deployment than any "market forces." I totally disagree with this statement. It's corporate greed that has done more to hobble broadband deployment.
Isn't it the business of local government to look out for the interests of the citizens? If a corporation comes into any town asking for special access (monopoly right-of-way privileges) in order to offer a service, it SHOULD be the governments job to make sure that ALL citizens will benefit from that transaction. Your attempts to spin this into some sort of corruption scam is truly shudder-worthy.
Local government should be free to say "go away" to anyone that can't or won't provide universal service, and should then be free to provide the service themselves if they so choose. | |
|  |  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| Re: Nothing Stopping Private Citizens said by Talis :It's corporate greed that has done more to hobble broadband deployment. If that was true we'd have no private broadband anywhere. -- This isn't fair! I was only supposed to hate just ONE presidential candidate! | |
|  |  openbox9
join:2004-01-26 Alexandria, VA
·AT&T Southeast
| Small clarification. Government shouldn't be allowed to roll their own network to unfairly compete with private industry. There is nothing wrong with govt rolling their own network for govt use, e.g. municipality network to support municipal government, state wide network to support state government, etc. | |
|  |  Nuts
join:2006-04-27 Forest, OH | Should they be banned from building and maintaining roads also. | |
|  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| Re: Nothing Stopping Private Citizens said by Nuts :Should they be banned from building and maintaining roads also. No. -- This isn't fair! I was only supposed to hate just ONE presidential candidate! | |
|  |  |  |  Nuts
join:2006-04-27 Forest, OH
| Re: Nothing Stopping Private Citizens Then whats the difference with building a fiber and or copper infrastructure, and then turn around and let anyone that wants to use it to provide service to use those lines.
I agree with you that the government should not be an ISP, cable provider, telco. | |
|  |  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| Re: Nothing Stopping Private Citizens said by Nuts :Then whats the difference with building a fiber and or copper infrastructure, and then turn around and let anyone that wants to use it to provide service to use those lines. The difference is that no one is forced to pay for roads. People who do not drive do not pay gas taxes, car registration fees, tolls, or other fees that are used for highway maintenance.
In every single government-provided broadband boondoggle project, either taxpayer money is used, or money is siphoned off from some other government-provided service to pay for the costs of broadband. This not only confirms the un-profitability argument, but further screws taxpayers and ratepayers for unrelated services. -- This isn't fair! I was only supposed to hate just ONE presidential candidate! | |
|  |  |  |  |  |   en102 Canadian, eh?
join:2001-01-26 Valencia, CA | Re: Nothing Stopping Private Citizens Many that live in the southwest do not pay car registration fees, have a license or insurance either... but they still drive the roads -- Canada = Hollywood North | |
|  |  |  |   AnonGuy
| said by pnh102 :said by Nuts :Should they be banned from building and maintaining roads also. No. Why? | |
|  |  |  See 12 replies to this post | |
  Cerabus12 Dial-up 4 Life
join:2005-08-09 Brooker, FL 1 edit | I'm Done I'm Done I"m going to Canada where I can get some broadband later | |
|  lvlorpheus
join:2008-02-17 Eureka Springs, AR
| In the big picture it effects the urban areas phone co.'s The cable co.'s have built there profits on what they built and have now, and really have nothing to lose. The phone co.'s on the other hand a good portion of there profits come from rural phone customers. With cell phone becoming more affordable and more competitive it is just a matter of time before more and more revenue is lost from rural phone lines. Guess what the big phone co.'s don't want to make less money. So, as they lose more and more rural phone customers where are they going to recoup that revenue from? Existing customers in urban areas. So, either way the urban areas are going to pay. Either they pay for nothing or they pay and then they can communicate with family and friends in rural areas and have access to broadband when they travel to other parts of the country. I really don't see what all the fussing and arguing is about. Either come together and pay for something, or stay divided and pay for nothing, but either way there will be paying involved. | |
|  |  See 9 replies to this post | |
  Transmaster Don't Blame Me I Voted For Bill and Opus
join:2001-06-20 Cheyenne, WY
·Qwest.net
| I will say it yet one more time What is needed in this country is something like the REA, The Rural Electric Association. The REA brought electricity to the country side and this investment has paid off in a big way. An RBA, Rural Broadband Association could mean the same thing to rural areas, and I have no doubt the economic boost would be just as large. -- Send a prayer to Allah, eat Beans. | |
|  MyDogHsFleas Premium join:2007-08-15 Austin, TX
·AT&T U-Verse
·AT&T Southwest
| So where's the actual refutation of the paper? All I see are sarcastic remarks and the usual "let's just give everything to the government and let them run it because corporations are evil" threads.
If you read the paper, it actually draws some conclusions based on data.
I think the paper wins so far. | |
|  |   powerhog Stinkin' up the joint Premium join:2000-12-14 Owasso, OK
·AtlasOK
| Re: So where's the actual refutation of the paper? You think that report is good?
It starts off by slamming contrary reports for not "normalizing" data and making comparisons to population density, etc. then it goes on to give broad statistics like miles of fibre in Montana without giving any information on WHERE those miles are being deployed. And where (and what kind) of deployments are being planned for the other locations? Are they RURAL locations or are the ISPs just upgrading (aka deploying) existing systems?
Sorry, that report fails on every level. | |
|  |  |  MyDogHsFleas Premium join:2007-08-15 Austin, TX
·AT&T U-Verse
·AT&T Southwest
| Re: So where's the actual refutation of the paper? said by powerhog :You think that report is good? Sorry, that report fails on every level. You misread my post. I did not say the report was good. I said it draws conclusions based on data, which is more than I see here. Therefore the report wins by default (in my view anyway).
I am seriously not trying to take a position either way. I'd love to be shown the refutation. I'd find that interesting.
I'm suspicious, however, that there is no such refutation, and this is simply another "the telco/cable big corporations are evil and all their pipes should be given to the government" attitude around here. Which is, frankly, an uninteresting, predictable discussion. I get nothing out of that. | |
|  |  |  |   powerhog Stinkin' up the joint Premium join:2000-12-14 Owasso, OK
·AtlasOK
| Re: So where's the actual refutation of the paper? Data as it exists out of context is useless. Let's talk about this piece of data: quote: The National Telecommunications Cooperative Association (NTCA) the "voice of rural telecommunications" -- reported in September of 2007 that "ninety-nine percent of the 2007 survey respondents offer broadband to some part of their customer base.
OK, fine. Some parts of 99% of the telco regions have access to broadband. But let's look at what they aren't telling us:
The ILEC for my area is a member of the NTCA so I'm sure they happily responded to this survey. They do offer DSL to those who live in 'town'... which has a population of about 800. For the thousands (far more than live IN town) of us who live outside of town, we do not have DSL or cable service. So, while 800 have DSL, thousands go without. But they can truthfully claim that some part of their customer base is served.
But let's also look at the author's other argument... "adoption". How many people actually purchase the broadband our loving telcos have graciously provided for us. From this link: »totelcsi.net/800/index800.html quote: Lite $27.00 Speeds up to 64k - dial up equivalent Basic $32.00 Speeds up to 256k - up to 8 times faster than normal dial-up. Standard $42.75 Speeds up to 384k - up to 12 times faster than normal dial-up. Premium 512k $54.00 Speeds up to 512k - up to 16 times faster than normal dial-up. Premium 1Meg $73.80 Speeds up to 1 Meg - *Business Customers only. Premium 3Meg $165.60 Speeds up to 3 Meg - *Business Customers only
But let's not forget the "additional costs": quote: Additional Costs Price Description Lite Installation $50.00 Fee includes a modem and DSL jack installation. Basic, Standard, or Premium Installation $100.00 Fee includes a modem and DSL jack installation. Upgrade Charge $50.00 Fee for upgrading to a faster DSL speed from Lite DSL. Service Order Charge $50.00 Fee for move/change/additional DSL jack. Modem Maintenance $3.25/mo. Covers modem malfunction. Includes surge repel device.
At those prices, I think it's pretty obvious why adoption rates may not match those in urban areas.
Of course, we are lucky to have a competetive market. Check out the rates charged by my WISP. Many urban people would choke at having to pay those too. But, compared to DSL (if it were even available), the WISP is cheap! | |
|  |  |  |  |  MyDogHsFleas Premium join:2007-08-15 Austin, TX | Re: So where's the actual refutation of the paper? Good info, thanks. You've educated me.
I wonder if the solution to this high-cost situation that will come the soonest is 3G/4G wireless cellular? | |
|  |  |  |  |  |   powerhog Stinkin' up the joint Premium join:2000-12-14 Owasso, OK | Re: So where's the actual refutation of the paper? Cellular may be the most promising solution; but even it has a ways to go. I live 20 miles (by roads) north of Tulsa and can't even get Sprint/Nextel or Verizon voice service. | |
|   Dave McClure
@direcpc.com
| Read The Report For Yourself Karl's post is a nice screed, but it doesn't accurately report what the study shows, who I am, what I believe or what the USIIA has stood for over the past 15 years. The comments pretty badly misrepresent the paper's intent, facts, statements and conclusions.
You may want to take his comments with a large grain of salt -- or better yet, read the report yourself before taking such comments at face value. It's fairly short and succinct, even with citations and footnotes. A copy of it can be found on our site at »www.usiia.org.
The report notes that we have a tendency to mix and confuse deployment data with adoption data, and use unverified data, use obsolete data, and selectively quote from data in order to obscure the facts.
It also notes that no matter how successful we are at deployment of the technology, there are still significant hurdles to its adoption. And that until we begin to address these issues, which include literacy, computing skills and costs, we are going to be stuck at an adoption rate far less than we want or need.
As for the policy points the paper proposes, they are pretty simple:
1) Regulation of networks will not be successful in increasing adoption rates for broadband. 2) More and better data is needed. 3) Federal programs should focus on supporting state and local initiatives. 5) Investment in broadband infrastructure will still be critical. 6) We will continue to need broadband policy support for urban and suburban areas as well as rural.
Where I live, in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, I was unable to get broadband a year ago. Today, the neighbors on either side of me are using optical wireless coneections, another neighbor uses an EVDO connection, I use satellite...and the cable trucks have begun laying cable down our country road. That kind of deployment is happening nationwide, and while the results are not yet perfect, they are rapidly improving.
As for labeling me a lobbyist, I can live with that. It has been an honor to represent ISPs for the past 15 years, and to ensure that members of our Internet industry are accorded their due rights under the First Amendment to "...petition the government for a redress of grievances."
Dave McClure President and CEO US Internet Industry Association
Author of "Deployment of Broadband to Rural America" | |
|  |  nasadude
join:2001-10-05 Rockville, MD
·Comcast
| Re: Read The Report For Yourself You are quoted in an online article saying:
"The accepted political dogma that America has in some way failed in its efforts to deploy broadband is based on a series of miscalculations," McClure said. There are three issues that contribute to these miscalculations:
- Too often the level of Internet deployment is confused with the level of adoption. - Data from America is compared with data from other countries, without regard for factors such as population density or percentage of rural versus suburban or urban areas. - The data that does exist is presented in ways intended to support a specific policy or political view rather than allowing the data to speak to itself."
if you would like us to believe you, you could start by not trotting out the disproven assertion in bold above.
The OECD has collected and reported data that shows population density/size have no relationship to broadband deployment.
with regard to deployment and adoption, we would all be much less confused if broadband providers would release this data, which the incumbents adamantly refuse to do.
I used to think it was because they had something to hide - the sorry state of broadband deployment and uptake in the U.S.; apparently however, they refuse to release the information to protect us from terrorists
»If Comcast Shares Broadband Deployment Data, The Terrorists Win | |
|  |  |  |  |  Warmachine99
join:2006-03-20 Pleasant Prairie, WI
·RoadRunner Cable
| Re: Read The Report For Yourself My Brother in law lives out in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Love the view from his place, but hate the internet connection he has. I was out there for a week, and the best dial up connection he could get was 9.4K. Attempting to talk on the land line phone is next to impossible due to all the static on the line. Cell phones work great at his house due to all of the cell towers on the big mountain to the south of his house.
At his house he can not get DSL (distance to closest DSLAM is 64,000 ft), he can not get cable TV (closest home to him that has cable is 15 miles away), or OTA TV signal for that matter. His only choice is satellite for TV (which he says is bad (fuzzy, static) most of the time. He tried a Wireless internet company, which was decent for a while but quickly got oversold, and became as bad as his dial up.
Point is: If you are not 'in town' you dont count.
I live just south of Kenosha, Wi. When I moved in, I wanted to have AT&T phone and DSL at my house. Phone I could get, but I am a little over 5K feet too far away to get DSL. The local phone node is not equipped for a DSLAM, nor can it be equipped without significant upgrades to the building. My area has had a 500% increase of population density in the last 2 years, but we are still considered second class citizens when it comes to DSL. Thank God that Time Warner has a good, fiber based connection to my complex. -- I've discovered that I often visit the state of confusion, and I know my way around pretty well. | |
|  |   fuziwuzi Not born yesterday Premium join:2005-07-01 Atlanta, GA
| said by Dave McClure :
Where I live, in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, I was unable to get broadband a year ago. Today, the neighbors on either side of me are using optical wireless coneections, another neighbor uses an EVDO connection, I use satellite...and the cable trucks have begun laying cable down our country road. That kind of deployment is happening nationwide, and while the results are not yet perfect, they are rapidly improving.
As for labeling me a lobbyist, I can live with that. It has been an honor to represent ISPs for the past 15 years, and to ensure that members of our Internet industry are accorded their due rights under the First Amendment to "...petition the government for a redress of grievances."
Dave McClure President and CEO US Internet Industry Association
Author of "Deployment of Broadband to Rural America" At least you're honest about being a shill. My family also lives in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. There is no cable tv or internet, no DSL. While satellite for TV is great, for internet access it is an expensive joke (it isn't broadband). Even dialup is physically limited by the phone system to a maximum 24kbps modem connection and that is on a good day. And this doesn't cover just a couple of houses out in the woods, but entire neighborhoods with hundreds of homes. Even getting a second phone line to a house is nearly impossible, my parents had to wait over a year to get a second line because the phone company said there just wasn't any available. A neighbor built a new house and couldn't get a phone because there were no available lines for six months. There is also no more cellular service in the neighborhood since the analog system was cut off and you must drive about 10 miles away to get even 1 bar of digital signal.
When a group of residents investigated starting their own cable service, they were told that the only cable company in the entire county had exclusive access to the entire county. That cable company, however, only serves a tiny portion of the only town in the county, the rest of the county is unserved and there are no plans to expand. The local phone company says there are no plans to upgrade the phone system, it physically cannot support DSL. And how is anyone supposed to start their own ISP of any kind if they can't get a high-speed link to a backbone? They can't even get a regular POTS line, much less anything faster.
So, people like you are part of the problem, not a solution. You only make things worse for everyone else by saying that the status quo is acceptable. | |
|  |   a333 A hot cup of integrals please
join:2007-06-12 Corona, NY | said by Dave McClure :
Today, the neighbors on either side of me are using optical wireless coneections Excuse me, but what the ruddy hell is "optical wireless"? | |
|  |  |  decifal
join:2007-03-10 Bon Aqua, TN | Re: Need I say more? lol... i'm suprised that hasn't happened here yet! (( no not by me... tempting to tape a sign to mine, but...))) | |
|  Grafton
join:2006-08-26 Morgantown, WV
·Comcast
| my rural life i live in morgantown in west virginia and have a love/hate relationship with my comcast back when i lived on the family farm the only options were a $3k cable line from the bottom of the hill ~300 yards ran by the cable company that just in the past few years has Internet (roadrunner) been possible down there, dial up ( had and hate) or satellite brother in law has it 1500ms ping wtf so i would think that nice broadband has not penetrated that well | |
|  fgoldstein
join:2003-01-21 Newton Highlands, MA
·RCN CABLE
| USIIA is a Bell lobby group, not an ISP group Dave McClure is a Verizon and ATT lobbyist. He calls himself USIIA but it's a bit like the Southern Baptist ministry called "Jews for Jesus". It fools the dumb-ass press but not people who actually pay attention.
Bells can call themselves "ISPs" for the purpose of controlling USIIA, but their agenda is to put independent ISPs out of business. | |
|   asdfdfdfdfdfdf
@Level3.net
| To continue on the track powerhog started... The report complains that we confuse deployment data and adoption data and then proceeds to do exactly the same thing, throwing out bits and pieces of data from different studies, some of which involve adoption, some deployment. There is NEVER a clear definition of broadband given, though it appears that satellite is included, which is always a giveaway as to intent since its inclusion always allows one to claim almost 100% US deployment.
They do have the decency to mention, in one sentence quote: Collection of useful data on deployment has been made difficult by...the need to keep proprietary corporate information and strategies confidential.
It was kind of them to mention it in passing since it is the heart of the problem as to why we "confuse" adoption with deployment. In short the companies provide no cooperation on deployment data and the government shows no interest in systematically trying to determine actual deployment so we are left having to do what this report, as well as everyone else, does, namely guess.
Nevertheless their insistence that we don't have good data and need more data hasn't kept them from making a slew of claims that everything is fine and:
quote: Clearly, however, this work should be based not on continuing efforts to pursue such unhelpful policies as open access, common carriage laws for broadband networks, municipal networking or network neutrality legislation. It should rather be based on the work over the past decade that has already proven successful in healing the digital divides.
It's amazing how a lack of information condemns their enemies while miraculously providing clear eyed certainty as to the righteousness of their own agenda.
They don't begin to prove that "the deployment gap is closing rapidly".
The real agenda is to focus on adoption. This provides a number of advantages. 1. We can focus on the old argument that the real problem is the poor who, as always, drag everyone else down. The poor F#$K up everything. 2. We can focus not on communications companies spending to increase deployment but on government spending more to educate the poor. In other words more needs to come out of our pockets, not out of their pockets. (BTW I'm not arguing against spending on the poor, I'm just pointing up their misdirection)
Actually, what we need is to:
1. Actually determine what the hell is going on with broadband deployment.
2. realize that deployment, not adoption should be the key concern from a public policy standpoint.
Certainly companies have to worry about adoption rates. The government though needs to worry about whether people can buy it if they want to(availability), not whether those who can get it freely choose to buy or not to buy(adoption).
quote: Federal programs should focus on supporting state and local efforts. Broadband deployment is a local investment issue, and broadband adoption is largely a local education issue. The best and most effective federal programs are therefore more likely to be those that support efforts that can be tailored to the unique needs of each community rather than a single, one-size-fits-all national program. Appropriate programs would thereby include federal grants and loans for
Since last mile access is controlled by companies with a presence over many states(in fact companies with global reach in some cases) and since the behavior of these companies is heavily tied to federal lobbying efforts in washington why should the response be local? Perhaps what they mean is that we should stay at home and mind our own business while they are playing big boy games where the real power is in washington? | |
|   KirkOh
| Options I finally got cellular INTERNET to my country home. Right now its 40 bucks a month unlimited for a 21.5kbps connection. I would rather have fios but its better then the dial up Ive been on since the INTERNET was conceived.
We a world leader yet we have worse rural coverage then that of some barren nations. Cellular INTERNET can do data at serious speeds yet i must ask if why every body has a cell phone even rural communities. WHY cant cellular data reach these homes that desire broadband?
Its not just lobbyists.. Its also incompetents at all levels of government federal, state and local levels. Its also companies. Laying cable isn't that expensive to rural areas when you consider the amount of money you will generate over time. Regardless i would like to see our governments or even just state level step up and be a leader and say that we have 100% broadband coverage in our state. It wouldn't be hard to achieve and i suspect not that costly since like i said cell phones cover most of the US.
Wired is not the future, Wireless is the way of the future. Thats where the providers need to be focusing there attention because, in a few years companies that used to survive on land based phone lines will soon vanish because people are using cells and don't even have local phone service at all. I don't!
I believe that anybody willing to invest in a community should be allowed to. Its called free enterprise and thats what America is built on. Our government is anti free enterprise as well as the majority of paid of lobbyist like the one juicing this thread with. | |
|   linicx Caveat Emptor Premium join:2002-12-03 United State
·CenturyTel Inc.
| Bah Humbug Telco is going to continue to do what it wants. It always has, it always will. It is not profiitable to buy and isntall extra modems for a few people in a small twon. If they do, you can depend upon a bundled cost of about $100. Telco will not provide naked broadband in most areas.
Even China is betterr connected than us. -- Mac: No windows, No gates, Apple inside | |
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