11-12-2014, 02:22 PM | #151 |
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Great post, Steve!
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11-12-2014, 02:26 PM | #152 | |
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Why can't Comcast, or a road owner, charge everyone who is using that road? You and the content provider are both using the road. You pay for access to the road and the content provider pays for moving their product along the road, no? A toll may be getting paid, but it may not be the toll that Comcast wants. The way to potentially reduce the toll while improving service is likely doing things that get some more competition, rather than saying you can't take toll.
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11-12-2014, 02:28 PM | #153 | |
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Because the way the Internet is made, you aren't guaranteed to take the same route every time between two points. That's been the way it has been since the beginning.
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11-12-2014, 02:33 PM | #154 |
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No, you aren't. But it's the best analogy in my POV.
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11-12-2014, 02:42 PM | #155 | ||
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1. In the minority of cases where there is exclusivity...that exclusivity was negotiated for as a tradeoff for giving fiber backbones to municipalities and the like. You might be surprised to know the levels of "gimme this, gimme that" when many franchise agreements were initially negotiated. 2. Where exclusivity couldn't be attained (which is the majority), incumbent land-based network owners certainly don't like the idea that they had to give a bag of goodies to be first, only to watch a competitor come in and be given carte blanche. But is that really something unexpected in any industry? And what markets was a 3rd entrant denied access in some major way? (i.e. I'm not talking about some random schmuck requesting easement access for his own neighborhood pet project) Quote:
I know of countless municipal systems throughout the country that have gone up in the past 20+ years...most of which failed & liquidated to a cable or telco because they weren't able to keep up with the rate of change. But I think we're at a point where the rate of change is more manageable for a new entrant using a fiber to the home approach. Its relatively easy & affordable these days to do it as well compared to older technologies involving copper. But make no mistake, its still extremely expensive where most of the cost is really the labor to run and splice the fiber. Thats why I think Google is doing what they are doing, and I fully expect them to liquidate their systems at some point (perhaps it could take 10+ years though). |
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11-12-2014, 02:50 PM | #156 | |
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Certain companies are more vocal about lobbying the states they operate in to make it illegal, many times because they had actually built out large fiber networks for the states/municipalities, etc. for the right to even operate initially. Maybe they are still jerks for advocating to make it illegal but its not entirely without some merit. |
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11-12-2014, 03:10 PM | #157 |
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What's your background Steve? You speak like you've got some sort of background in the industry or something.
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11-12-2014, 03:22 PM | #158 | |
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Apparently the list of states with restrictions is 20 states and growing, as of early 2014. Not all of those are outright bans but they have a complete list and explain that almost every state that doesn't ban it outright but has unrealistic hurdles for naming somewhere as unserved or for much too accelerated profitability requirements. Unsurprisingly, most of these bills were done by ALEC. ISP lobby has already won limits on public broadband in 20 states | Ars Technica SI
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11-12-2014, 03:53 PM | #159 | |
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This isn't true. Taxpayers have given enormous grants and subsidies to build the infrastructure. We handed hundreds of billions over in the 90's to build this out and they pocketed most of it. You'll see almost daily local and state governments handing out money to build out new infrastructure for these companies. I just don't know how people can be fine with our current internet situation. We get our ass kicked by most 1st world countries. We have slower internet speeds than countries like Estonia. South Korea and Japan make a mockery of us. Why are we cool with not only that but letting it get worse? |
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11-12-2014, 03:56 PM | #160 | |
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You can have internet that's built fast, runs good, and is cheap. Pick 0. SI
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11-12-2014, 04:03 PM | #161 |
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That's where I think the utilities analogy could fit better. The customer not only paid for the road (transmission and distribution line) but also the machine to generate the traffic (plants and substations). So after all of that, the customer has to pay every time they use that road and if that road gets jammed, they can't use the road.
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11-12-2014, 04:11 PM | #162 | |
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How much and what was the deal?
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11-12-2014, 04:15 PM | #163 | |
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Mmmm....more ALEC goodness. |
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11-12-2014, 04:24 PM | #164 | |
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But many of those restrictions are around the way the municipality is allowed to offer the service (where service can be telecom, broadband or video), and the ability to go into debt for it and how they can package or bundle it. I would be curious when most of those restrictions came into play as a lot of municipalities had tried to do it in the late 90s & early 00s, and failed quite miserably at it. My gut tells me some of those restrictions (especially how they are worded) is around the idea that the states don't want to "bailout" those crazy municipalities that get in over their heads. No evidence for that, as I said you'd have to investigate each one and their approx legislative dates, but I'd bet money that is the motivation for some of those states' restrictions. |
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11-12-2014, 04:39 PM | #165 | |
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Happy to PM more info privately but will say that yes, I have some insight into these topics. And while I guess it should go without saying, I try to put out my own opinion as opposed to what my company or the industry in general might argue. But naturally, with that insight could be a level of bias that is at least worth pointing out the possibility of (though I try to be as objective as I can be). And I'm especially careful of not divulging things that aren't public knowledge (or could get me fired). |
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11-12-2014, 04:50 PM | #166 |
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That's fine - no real need for more info, was just curious.
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11-12-2014, 04:51 PM | #167 | |
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Not at all. There are people who will pay $1 less to get utter garbage.
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11-12-2014, 05:00 PM | #168 |
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The Telecommunications Act of 1996 had a lot of money in it. It was given to states who doled it out. I think some have pegged it at $200 billion. I, Cringely . The Pulpit . The $200 Billion Rip-Off | PBS There's a ton of smaller ones though that pop-up from time to time. Decades Of Failed Promises From Verizon: It Promises Fiber To Get Tax Breaks... Then Never Delivers | Techdirt And of course the Universal Service Fund which we all pay into that goes back to the telecoms with little to no regulation. It's a tax we pay the government that funds the telecoms. While Google Fiber is praised in Kansas City, they did receive some breaks too. Taxpayers subsidizing Google Fiber project | Computerworld Basically the idea that these companies built the infrastructure on their own is false. Taxpayers funded and continue to fund large swaths of it. |
11-12-2014, 05:06 PM | #169 | |||
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From the article: Quote:
Quote:
This seems to talk about fiber networks, working with phone companies. Not cable broadband. As do the rest of your links as well.
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11-12-2014, 05:15 PM | #170 | |
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I've got no problem with the tax breaks that Google Fiber is getting from our city. The product they are delivering is more than worth it as opposed to many other tax breaks that never benefit the community and only benefit the business. |
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11-12-2014, 06:55 PM | #171 | |
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Fixed.
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11-13-2014, 07:16 PM | #172 | |
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The point is having big gov run your internet would be great until about a year later when you need faster internet. Who's paying for that upgrade? Not the government based on everything else they've ever run. The internet is different from a typical utility in that it requires constant innovation. I'm not saying the existing duopoly is the answer, but thinking our governments would do a better job in the long run is laughable. If they want to enter as a competing party, then sure, why not? Last edited by Desnudo : 11-13-2014 at 07:18 PM. |
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11-13-2014, 07:20 PM | #173 |
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As long as you tax exempt the existing private entities from paying into their own competition.
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11-13-2014, 08:37 PM | #174 | |
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The backbone networking part (which is the part we're talking about)? Yes, it's more complex than water & sewer, but I'm not sure how much more complex it is than the electric grid, tbh. |
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11-13-2014, 09:20 PM | #175 |
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The electric distribution system has not changed in 50 years. What has changed is how we monitor, regulate and control the juice (e.g., much more real-time than ever before).
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11-14-2014, 08:08 AM | #176 |
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Exactly, there's been, and continues to be, plenty of innovation in the provision of electricity. The Internet backbone isn't unique in this regard. That's all I was saying.
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11-15-2014, 11:54 AM | #177 | |
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Consumers always pay, if Netflix is charged the price of Netflix goes up, if data is capped the end user pays for bandwidth . The legally responsible practice is content providers pay for content and users pay for data usage. It should be illegal to sniff traffic and deliberately sabotage it or create a private preferred network, but now it is. The moral hazards are much higher this way, whereas straight up charging the customer for a bigger data pipe is more equitable and efficient. Say Netflix comes up with a brilliant traffic optimization solution tomorrow that let's them cut backbone net usage by two thirds. Problem solved world peace in our time, except now the bandwidth is throttled at the last hop from the ISP to the consumer and all that brilliance still looks like a shitty slow connection. This pattern is bad, it lets companies with a vested interest in seeing netflix fail charge an arbitrary toll on that company. Five years later we are all joking about how anyone who is cool uses the slightly expensive comcast virtual cable service instead of lame, slow, content barren Antiquities like Netflix or hulu. Charging netflix lets comcast get rich making netflix look bad, charging customers lets comcast get rich making itself look bad. In the second course customers will be more likely to vote for increased competition in the bandwidth market, either overturning bad state laws or taking their money to alternatives. |
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11-15-2014, 01:19 PM | #178 |
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When did this become a partisan political issue? Was it the minute that Obama came out in support of it, because my feed is getting blown up with partisans taking their sides. I thought that this was a topic that had lots of support from both sides?
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11-15-2014, 01:28 PM | #179 | |
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It does and should but as been said, it's the implementation that ruins it. Also, I believe the utilities quip was probably not a good analogy. |
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11-15-2014, 01:56 PM | #180 |
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But it does make sense, in that this is a technology that should be available to everybody. Yes, it started out as a luxury, but so did indoor plumbing, electricity, radio, telephone, television. I think we've reached a point though - in saturation numbers and cultural reliance - where connectivity should be considered a basic service.
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null Last edited by cuervo72 : 11-15-2014 at 01:56 PM. |
11-15-2014, 06:38 PM | #181 | |
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The minute internet providers started heavily funding the campaigns of politicians. |
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11-16-2014, 12:52 AM | #182 | |
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As far as I know, it does. I dislike most of Obama's positions, but I was the one that posted this one because I'm behind him totally on this issue. |
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11-17-2014, 09:23 AM | #183 |
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11-17-2014, 10:50 AM | #184 |
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Obama must have a Playstation or something
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11-17-2014, 03:14 PM | #185 |
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11-17-2014, 03:34 PM | #186 |
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I'm not entirely sure you'll necessarily like what President Obama or his supporters consider to be 'common sense decisions' . Besides, he's been for net neutrality for a few years now.
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11-17-2014, 07:24 PM | #187 |
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So, I just have to laugh at the stupidity of AT&T sometimes. A couple of years ago with their idiotic leaks regarding their proposed acquisition of T-Mobile (i.e. we'll just remove a competitor & milk it) and now their CEO sticks his foot in his mouth by publicly proclaiming the discussions around Net Neutrality are causing so much uncertainty that they will not be inclined to invest in fiber to the home. Not smart to do when you have a pending mega merger on the table.
Now the FCC is calling them out on their "concerns" & likely to make life miserable for a few people that have to scramble & respond to the FCC's inquiry. The FCC Responds To AT&T’s Net Neutrality Saber Rattling | TechCrunch Probably won't make much of a difference in the end. AT&T will do damage control but really, really stupid to make those types of statements (or incredibly bad timing if nothing else). |
01-29-2015, 01:55 PM | #188 |
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The FCC changed the definition of what can be called broadband from 4Mb down/1Mb up to 25Mb down/3Mb up.
Broadband Internet Definition Changed | Ubergizmo
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01-29-2015, 02:00 PM | #189 |
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It's a fairly big move. Having the right to call your service broadband is very important to cable companies (and their potential customers). Wonder if it will spur some price changes to allow for most customers to have 'broadband' - for promotional reasons and for preventing folks with lower than that calling up and complaining that they don't have "broadband" reasons.
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01-30-2015, 10:48 AM | #190 |
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Where I live AT&T is the only option.
Our Uverse route says Broadband all over it. They have never managed to get me to 1MB up...now I will have an even better argument. Lol not like they will care. |
02-26-2015, 01:18 PM | #191 |
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02-26-2015, 01:37 PM | #192 |
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VICTORY!
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02-26-2015, 01:50 PM | #193 |
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And here comes metered usage (well provided the lawsuits fail) .
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11-21-2017, 01:43 PM | #194 |
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At long last, here we are. The new America first Trump FCC. Fuck the people, it's all about the businesses.
FCC unveils plan to repeal net neutrality rules - The Washington Post The headline reads: FCC plan would give Internet providers power to choose the sites customers see and use It's going to be so awesome. How has malaise about this gotten so damn low. I guess it's being choked out by everything else. I mean I could post something like this every day each a different policy decision.
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11-21-2017, 02:05 PM | #195 |
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I'm sure we'll eventually get around to making the ISPs repay the billions in free infrastructure they received from taxpayers in the creation of our internet.
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11-21-2017, 02:11 PM | #196 |
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It's a bit of shame that very few people are signing up for Google Fiber. Technically I'm in the Atlanta metro region they are ultimately expanding to, but I have serious doubts as to whether they'll ever reach me.
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11-21-2017, 02:25 PM | #197 | |
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They've made it too hard to enter the market. Lot of good lobbying by the only ISPs in existence to prevent Google from ever getting a foothold. |
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11-21-2017, 02:33 PM | #198 | |
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I agree it'll never get to my house. In fact, by a weird fluke of where my house is and the fact that all the "ports" or whatever on the nearest Comcast box are all used up, my only current internet option is AT&T DSL despite the fact that my next door neighbors all have their choice of Comcast Xfinity or Uverse. According to both Comcast and AT&T, it isn't worth their money to lay a line for me. And AT&T is trying to kill off the DSL stuff. Should be fun. Oh, and I live in the heart of Roswell. |
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11-21-2017, 11:37 PM | #199 |
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Should probably check out the front page of reddit.
Everyone needs to do this. Resistbot Contact your Congressmen, they are the only hope to help keep this from happening.
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11-22-2017, 01:00 AM | #200 | |
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I just moved to Midtown and was really excited that I was in a Google Fiber area. Signed up immediately.
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