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The Internet Government

20 More Cities Want To Join the Fight Against Big Telecom's Broadband Monopolies 97

Jason Koebler writes At least 20 additional American cities have expressed a formal interest in joining a coalition that's dedicated to bringing gigabit internet speeds to their residents by any means necessary—even if it means building the infrastructure themselves. The Next Centuries Cities coalition launched last week with an impressive list of 32 cities in 19 states who recognize that fast internet speeds unencumbered by fast lanes or other tiered systems are necessary to keep residents and businesses happy. That launch was so successful that 20 other cities have expressed formal interest in joining, according to the group's executive director.
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20 More Cities Want To Join the Fight Against Big Telecom's Broadband Monopolies

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  • if i voted (Score:5, Insightful)

    by dasacc22 ( 1830082 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @04:34PM (#48245615)
    this would be one of those times id actually go and vote if moving forward required consensus of the locals.
    • Re:if i voted (Score:5, Insightful)

      by kharchenko ( 303729 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @04:58PM (#48245831)

      Sure, monopoly is bad, but I'd much rather have a monopoly that has to listen to the votes rather the one that doesn't.

    • ...and if "voting" actually provided a way to override the will of the telecom giants. Believing that constituent voices will override telecom campaign donations and lobbyists is adorable, but not very effective.

      • > Believing that constituent voices will override telecom campaign donations and lobbyists is adorable isn't it? I must get my adorable feelings from my 3 year old.
      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        What is basically happening is the Telecoms are vested in controlling Federal and State government and they only have influence at local city level where their headquarters and regional headquarters are. This means that all the other businesses by far the majority of campaign contributors have far greater influence on local cities. So feeding the greed of a handful of companies at the expense of hundreds of thousands of companies falls over that the local level with the influence of those hundreds of thous

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I'll start paying attention when, at a state level, they start declaring utility franchise agreements illegal.

  • Google Fiber seems to be rolling along in KCMO, and is expanding out into the metro area. Short of building their own networks, the cities should cut the red tape to make fiber installation as easy as possible. The $ cost should be technical, not wasting it on legal fees. Although they need to safeguard against evil companies (i.e. Comcast and Time-Warner). Still yet unknown if Google Fiber turns evil. They will be in my area (Overland Park, KS) soon.
    • by rfengr ( 910026 )
      I should also point out, I could not get an answer out of the Google Fiber lady, at an IEEE meeting, what they mean by "no servers". She danced around the question. I asked her if I can continue to run my torrent server; no answer? I do know they won't assign static IPs, which is what I have now.
  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @05:04PM (#48245891)
    Expect to see the gloves come off for this fight.

    The Telecoms absolutely will throw a Godzilla sized tantrum since the high density metropolitan areas are their biggest cash cows they have. They would give two shits about losing some barely on the map town in the middle of nowhere, but you're talking about where the big $$$$ live now.

    There will be lobbying, crying, arguments, pleading, secret back-room deals, and just mass hysteria for all the Telecoms. Hell, they might even get off their ass and start doing something now that they see a very frightening possibility of real competition to their profits starting to rear its head.

    It will be glorious :D
  • Socialism (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 27, 2014 @05:12PM (#48245955)

    That is just so damn Un-American not letting Corporate monopolies rip you off

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I live in Provo and they created the iProvo network. It didn't go so well and we ended up paying for it through the energy bills. On the bright side, Google bought it and now the companies here are actually competing. So if the cities mean build a network and have google take over, then I'm all for that.

  • by trout007 ( 975317 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @05:36PM (#48246183)

    Most of these companies are local monopolies because the local politicians were bribed to give them a monopoly. You don't have to build your own just get rid of the monopoly.

  • Wish I could see a list of the 20 additional cities. I doubt any of those are in FL either...the entrenched good ol' boy network down here would never let that fly.

  • by ErikTheRed ( 162431 ) on Monday October 27, 2014 @06:00PM (#48246343) Homepage

    OK, let's say for sake of argument you bring gigabit to every doorstep. Or heck, even 1% of doorsteps. All of your uplinks are going to be so massively oversubscribed that it's essentially meaningless, except for content that's hosted on local caching servers. This is great for things like Netflix, but even ultra-high quality 4K video with uncompressed multichannel audio isn't going to consume that much bandwidth. 40Gbit connections are standard on the largest backbones, with 100 Gbit coming on-line, but that's some awfully expensive hardware right now.

    So my question would be: what added benefit you expect to get with a gigabit local loop when it's still going into the same sort of congestion limits? i don't mean to sound like a curmudgeonly old bastard, but this sounds more like a marketing gimmick. Even governments aren't immune from spreading marketing bullshit; in fact it's sometimes easier when you know you won't be held accountable (advertising fraud vs political promises) and it's all other people's money anyway.

    • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
      Nope. "oversubscribed" doesn't mean bad service. people don't use much more when they have higher speeds. 10G can hold 100+ 1G customers without a problem. 100:1 over-subscription on DSL would be horrible. The bandwidth out is relatively cheap, about 10% of a plan price. Most of the rest is people and depreciation.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Most outgoing pipes are over subscribed anyway. Put the gigabit in place and let the markets sort out the demands on bandwidth for outgoing/incoming pipes. In the meantime, let the local markets invent and invest in providing content. Image all of your favorite local TV channels streaming live or 2way interactive class rooms from your local college. Enter into negotiations with Netfliks to franchise a local streaming data center. Start a new Wifi-cell phone service. There are thousands of ideas

    • by fredan ( 54788 )

      http://www.toecdn.org/ [toecdn.org] TOECDN will help you to cache all the static content, locally. This should bring your congestion down, depending of course how much of the data is static in the first place.

    • So I'm looking at it a slightly different way. The municipality runs the "last-mile" fiber, then they aggregate the links at some level (larger than neighborhood, smaller than city, preferably with minimal over-subscription). For each ISP who wishes to provide service, they co-locate in said facility and plug in to the aggregation layer, you can use things like MPLS for example to segregate the links. At this point, it's up to the ISP to decide 1) who they want to peer with, 2) where they want their connect

    • You're line of thinking here is pretty solid.

      I had another thought on the entire matter as well in that even if the municipalities manage to pull this off, at some point they still have to hand the traffic over to one of the big boys on the block ( eg, the telecoms ) for it to be useful since they own all the long haul lines. Unless Google steps in and offers their " services ". :D

      Why does Google remind me of the Mafia . . . . lol

      I would suspect they'll use that as leverage in the upcoming discussions abou
  • "...fast internet speeds unencumbered by fast lanes or other tiered systems are necessary to keep residents and businesses happy."

    just like rest of infrastructure in the city. Need good roads, schools, water, etc.
  • Awesome! So which cities are among the 20?

    Socia wouldn't tell me what cities have expressed interest, because they haven't formally joined yet.

    So there's no news here, and this is just a pointer back to Vice's previous article.

  • My city is taking subscribers for gigabit service starting next week, and it's not on the list.

  • That in NC TimeWarner's service level has fallen off a cliff and prices jacked 20% and they are laughing at you.

    • by suman28 ( 558822 )
      Everyone who lives in these 32 cities must be blessed. The state of Georgia was not in the 20 initial cities, and I know Georgia is typically last in such advancements or ground breaking news.
  • to forward this information to the mayor of my small town. Then I found out that he is a retired VP from Verizon. He would simply shitcan the idea.

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