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The Internet Communications Network

Engineer Gets Tired Of Waiting For Telecom Companies To Wire His town -- So He Does It Himself (backchannel.com) 106

Gurb, 75 kilometers north of Barcelona, is a quiet farming community of 2,500. It has suddenly become a popular place, thanks to being the birthplace of Guifi.net, one of the world's "most important experiments in telecommunications." It was built by an engineer who got tired of waiting for Telefonica, the Spanish telecom giant, to provide internet access to the people of his community. At first he wanted an internet access for himself, but it soon became clear that he also wanted to help his neighbors. Guifi has grown from a single wifi node in 2004, to 30,000 working nodes today, including some fiber connections, with thousands more in the planning stages. An article on Backchannel today documents the tale of Guifi. From the article: The project is a testament to tireless efforts -- in governance, not just in adding hardware and software -- by Ramon Roca (the engineer who started it) and his colleagues. They've been unwavering in their commitment to open access, community control, network neutrality, and sustainability. In 2004, he bought some Linksys WiFI hackable routers with a mission to get himself and his neighbors connected to the Internet. This is how he did it: Roca turned on a router with a directional antenna he'd installed at the top of a tall building near the local government headquarters, the only place in town with Internet access -- a DSL line Telefonica had run to municipal governments throughout the region. The antenna was aimed, line of sight, toward Roca's home about six kilometers away. Soon, neighbors started asking for connections, and neighbors of neighbors, and so on. Beyond the cost of the router, access was free. Some nodes were turned into "supernodes" -- banks of routers in certain locations, or dedicated gear that accomplishes the same thing -- that could handle much more traffic in more robust ways. The network connected to high-capacity fiber optic lines, to handle the growing demand, and later connected to a major "peering" connection to the global Internet backbone that provides massive bandwidth. Guifi grew, and grew, and grew. But soon it became clear that connecting more and more nodes wasn't enough, so he created a not-for-profit entity, the Guifi.net Foundation. The foundation, thanks to its cause and a cheerful community, has received over a million Euros to date -- from various sources including several levels of government. But as the article notes, a million Euros is a drop in the bucket next to the lavish subsidies and favors that state-approved monopolies such as Telefonica have enjoyed for decades. The article adds: The Guifi Foundation isn't the paid provider of most Internet service to end-user (home and business) customers. That role falls to more than 20 for-profit internet service providers that operate on the overall platform. The ISPs share infrastructure costs according to how much demand they put on the overall system. They pay fees to the foundation for its services -- a key source of funding for the overall project. Then they offer various kinds of services to end users, such as installing connections -- lately they've been install fiber-optic access in some communities -- managing traffic flows, offering email, handling customer and technical support, and so on. The prices these ISPs charge are, to this American (Editor's note: the author is referring to himself) who's accustomed to broadband-cartel greed, staggeringly inexpensive: 18 to 35 Euros (currently about $26-$37) a month for gigabit fiber, and much less for slower WiFi. Community ownership and ISP competition does wonders for affordability. Contrast this with the U.S. broadband system, where competitive dial-up phone access -- phone companies were obliged to let all ISPs use the lines as the early commercial Internet flourished in the 1990s -- gave way to a cartel of DSL and cable providers. Except in a few places where there's actual competition, we pay way more for much less.Read the story in its entirety here.
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Engineer Gets Tired Of Waiting For Telecom Companies To Wire His town -- So He Does It Himself

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Telecoms for prison. They betray their customers by charging high prices, and their incompetence murders packets from video streaming providers. Let's dismantle them.

    Make internet open again!

  • Impressive (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Fire_Wraith ( 1460385 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @03:10PM (#52549253)
    Lucky for him he doesn't live in the USA, though, where the major telecom companies probably would've gotten the state legislature to outlaw it.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by mi ( 197448 )

      probably would've gotten the state legislature to outlaw it.

      False. What telecoms — correctly — object to, are efforts by local governments to compete with them. Private businesses, individuals, or non-profits are fine...

      • Re:Impressive (Score:5, Interesting)

        by sjames ( 1099 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @03:25PM (#52549327) Homepage Journal

        Local governments, you must mean those things made up of the people in the community joined together ( in theory) for the common good? A sort of co-op like thingy?

        Actually, they'd have lawyered him to death over right of way as soon as the first cable appeared. That is if they didn't beat him to death with franchise agreements first.

        • by mi ( 197448 )

          Local governments, you must mean those things made up of the people in the community joined together ( in theory) for the common good? A sort of co-op like thingy?

          I mean the city hall, however you want to spin it.

          And, before you ask, it is those pillars of the community you suddenly love and respect so much, who are responsible for shortage of Internet-service options in most locales in the US [wired.com], where competing providers want your money.

          • by thule ( 9041 )
            It almost reads like a conspiracy. :) First the local government only allows a couple of companies to provide services. Next make upgrading services as difficult as possible with plenty of regulation. Create a huge incentive for lobbying and corruption. Then when people get upset, the government offers to take over the service themselves for the good of the people. Next up we are shocked, shocked to find that the government is misusing the information against their citizens or political opponents that try t
          • by sjames ( 1099 )

            Apparently not. Even where freely permitted, ISPs have been shown to carefully divide things up down to the level of which side of the street you live on.

            Also making crooked deals with apartment and condo complexes.

            Not to mention making it clear to townships that they had no plans to provide high-speed internet but then suing when the township decides to do it for themselves after a democratic referendum. Then they lobbied hard to get states to ban municipal internet even when the people voted for it direct

            • by mi ( 197448 )
              Ah, so many accusations and not one citation... Really sad...
              • by sjames ( 1099 )

                I figured since you are here on /., you might have read the several articles documenting that. I cannot be responsible for your failing memory. You might want to see a doctor, it may still be reversible.

            • by GNious ( 953874 )

              Apparently not. Even where freely permitted, ISPs have been shown to carefully divide things up down to the level of which side of the street you live on.

              Just in case anyone wondered, have seen these exact things in a few European countries ...

        • by tomhath ( 637240 )

          A sort of co-op like thingy?

          No, government is not a co-op.

          The Guifi Foundation sounds like a co-op though. They work fine here in the US too; my electricity supplier is a rural electric co-op. [nreca.coop] Maybe you should start something similar for internet.

      • Telecoms object to competition. The fact that local governments are involved gets the anarchists happy as a side effect. When a telecom has effectively nullified all private competition then it is the job of government to step in. Everyone should like seeing small local democratically elected governmenst being allowed to make decisions that their citizens ask for, except for some radical anti-government kooks.

        • by mi ( 197448 )

          Telecoms object to competition.

          Everybody objects to competition. That's a meaningless truism.

          But in this case telecoms have a legal point — nobody should be getting preferential treatment from the city hall.

          local democratically elected governmenst being allowed to make decisions that their citizens ask for

          You mean, like the poisoning of Socrates? That's your "democracy in action"...

          Sorry, but I'd like to keep the country, where guarantees given to an Individual, however obnoxious and cantankerous,

          • No, the citizens have decided to elect people to try and get competion, reversing the mistakes in the past that gave the telecoms preferential treatments. Governments give preferential treatmeans all the damn time - from trade deals with foreign nations, to tariffs, sole supplier agreements with defense contractors, to deciding who's going to be the asshole cable company that gets the monopoly, etc. If preferential treatments are bad then there are much bigger fish to fry than with city hall being asked t

            • In most cases, monopolies are established by the government. Removing the government restrictions instead of setting up the government as a competitor is usually a better solution.

              "The needs of the people" is a remarkably plastic concept, showing little agreement between different people. Someone claiming to know (and to provide) "the needs of the people" is likely to be a fraud or worse.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        What telecoms — correctly — object to, are efforts by local governments to compete with them.

        You are wrong. We have the right to make the government serve us, instead of protecting their buddies' monopoly/duopolies. Competition is the only way to keep them honest.

      • by rbrander ( 73222 )

        > What telecoms — correctly — object to, are efforts by local governments to compete with them. ...yeah, they don't permit competition from their subsidiaries.

        If that were something besides pro-telecom BS, there would be more than two competing businesses, individuals, or non-profits in most American markets. America's the Land of Entrepreneurs - you don't think anybody in America had this guy's idea? Those folks were almost all shut down, generally by clubbing them with a compliant govern

        • So we always have just the two offerings, who have, mysteriously, the same price, though they use completely different infrastructures. Just like TV happens to cost the same whether delivered by cables that were paid off by the early 90s, or satellites 40,000km overhead. What are the odds such different technologies would cost exactly the same to the consumer?

          You betray an utter lack of understanding of economics in general and business in particular.

          The price is not a function of costs, as you mistakenly believe, but of the balance between supply and demand.

          • What are the odds such different technologies would cost exactly the same to the consumer?

            The price is not a function of costs, as you mistakenly believe, but of the balance between supply and demand.

            Price is a function of supply and demand, so if you artificially restrict the supply, then you can raise price arbitrarily high without affecting the cost. This is how you profit. In an actual, free market, a large difference between market price and cost of service should attract new businesses until the market price is close to the cost of service. This is known as an efficient market. The US telecom market is horribly inefficient, as witnessed by cable providers gross profit margin of 97% [huffingtonpost.com].

      • False. What telecoms â" correctly â" object to, are efforts by local governments to compete with them. Private businesses, individuals, or non-profits are fine...

        No, they use the regulators to "deny" pole access to startups that could fleetly compete.

        Yes, you "can" get pole access, but it'll cost you a quarter million dollars in legal fees. That ensures that the big boys can play but not anything like the ISP in TFS or anybody who could really compete on cost structure.

      • >False. What telecoms â" correctly â" object to, are efforts by local governments to compete with them. Private businesses, individuals, or non-profits are fine...

        No. They lock up the last mile and do everything they can to stop private competition as well. If you're lucky enough to live in a densely populated and affluent area, you might be able to get high speed internet through microwave (the pricing is actually pretty competitive), otherwise you're going to be stuck choosing between the two

      • by Alumoi ( 1321661 )

        probably would've gotten the state legislature to outlaw it.

        False. What telecoms — correctly — object to, are efforts by local governments to compete with them. Private businesses, individuals, or non-profits are fine...

        As long as the private businesses are part of the cartel.

  • Is it just me, or is a "summary" that spans two full pages a bit much?

    • by msmash ( 4491995 ) Works for Slashdot
      I admit it's too long, but the story seemed too important and there were just too many things that I wanted to highlight. Be rest assured that we will only have big summaries every few months. Thanks!
    • You get to know the story without RTFA!

      • by PCM2 ( 4486 )

        If this keeps up, we'll have to only RTFA from now long! /. will be turned on its head!

      • So now to remain ignorant, we have to RTFT(itle) as if you RTFS you learn too much?
    • by cvdwl ( 642180 )
      It's just you, and everyone else who thinks that anything less than 1600 pixels with a readable font size of 12 is enough resolution in the vertical. Fits my screen with room to spare! :-) {Insert rant about useless netbooks and web pages with WAYY too much frippery here; mutter, mutter, mutter}
  • what about DMCA calms / child porn / other stuff? that he could of faced back when was not listed as an ISP?

  • by foxalopex ( 522681 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @03:35PM (#52549395)

    I work for a small city Telco (Tbaytel) in Canada. We're one of the few left in Canada created when the original founders of our city ended up disliking Bell and ended up covering a large area of NorthWest Ontario. Internet here is actually pretty good at reasonable rates and completely without download or upload limits. The only real limitation is speed depending on service but otherwise it's a reasonably good service. The competition between Tbaytel and the National Telco's is fierce but it has resulted in better services and savings I believe. The city owns the telco so a fair chunk of profits goes back to our community. So yes, it isn't impossible to have a provider that's partially government / commercial that isn't a complete rip-off to consumers.

  • ... of course, they were only dealing with 9600 baud at first, but then again, it was the 1970s:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    There were other WISPs in the US ... I know West Virginia, where it was easier to use line-of-sight radio to a mountaintop antenna than try to string cable. But there was no WiFi standard back then ... you had to use WaveLAN or other proprietary standards (so you had to buy both ends of the link from the same company).

  • by thule ( 9041 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @03:45PM (#52549443) Homepage
    This is how it is done. Stop complaining about Internet service and build one! There is one in SoCal made by and for ham radio people that is finally getting some momentum. It will connect San Diego to Ventura and Riverside soon. This particular project doesn't connect to the Internet, but it is an example of what can be done with volunteers and without any revenue.
    • I'm aware that ham communications can be "wormholed" through the Internet, but is it legal now for hams to operate as a public ISP?

      • by thule ( 9041 )
        It is an example of how to do it, I didn't say that the particular network could work as an ISP. In fact, the network doesn't offer Internet access.
    • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )

      This particular project doesn't connect to the Internet, but it is an example of what can be done with volunteers and without any revenue.

      There are other hams that have created broadband mesh networks using Ubiquiti equipment (can use high power, some slivers of the 2.4GHz for just amateur radio, and cannot encrypt), some groups have a port to connect to internet. But that port is tightly controlled as don't want to be "surfing the web" visiting sites with data (smut and business) not allowed on amateur radio. I like to get in on this action, I've seen some of these places where hams set up a county wide network including VOIP phones. And th

  • And I thought Comcast was bad.
  • by robi5 ( 1261542 ) on Wednesday July 20, 2016 @06:51PM (#52550545)

    1. so there WAS internet to begin with (in the gov't building)
    2. he installed a pringles can type directional wifi antenna, like my father and thousands elsewhere
    3. he worked out some network for further sharing
    4. pirating, etc. source known?
    5. somehow fiber optics then just appered and later on some T1? How is this *not* being served by telecom, and who absorbs network usage costs?

  • Back in the 70s I lived on an island which had community built, public access cable TV and water supply.
    The shared water supply is still operating.

On a clear disk you can seek forever. -- P. Denning

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