How AT&T and Verizon Rip Off DSL Customers (arstechnica.com) 217
A new white paper written by the National Digital Inclusion Alliance finds that AT&T and Verizon are selling slow DSL internet to tens of millions of customers for the same price as fiber customers. These customers have no choice but to pay the rate AT&T and Verizon give them because no other service is offered in their area. Ars Technica reports: AT&T has been charging $60 a month to DSL customers for service between 6 and 10Mbps downstream and 0.6Mbps to 1Mbps upstream, the white paper notes, citing AT&T's advertised prices from July 2018. AT&T also charges $60 a month for 50Mbps and 75Mbps download tiers and even for fiber service with symmetrical upload and download speeds of 100Mbps. These are the regular rates after first-year discounts end, before any extra fees and taxes. Verizon similarly charges $65 a month for 100Mbps fiber service (including a $10 router charge), and $63 or $64 a month for DSL service that provides download speeds between 1.5Mbps and 15Mbps, the white paper says. The price is this high partly "because Verizon ADSL service at any speed requires paying separately for a landline telephone account." [...] The NDIA calls the practice of charging identical prices for wildly different speeds "tier flattening." It affects both urban and rural customers who live in areas where AT&T and Verizon haven't upgraded networks because they face no competition, because the upgrades wouldn't result in higher profits, or both. These customers end up using "the oldest, slowest legacy infrastructure," while paying much higher per-megabit prices than other Internet users.
Meanwhile in Finland... (Score:5, Interesting)
...a country with less people than an average US city spread over quite large land area, three different providers are competing who gets to offer gigabit fiber for your street / condo - because whoever gets to build the fiber "last mile" for your area gets money from all those customers going forward as it is unlikely multiple providers build it for same building and "wholesale" prices - using one provider's physical fiber to use another provider's ISP services is not really price competitive at the moment, tho there are regulatory talk about making this happen, so say Telia builds fiber to a condo, Elisa or DNA could still offer ISP services to everyone in that condo while paying "wholesale" cost of operating the underying fiber to Telia.
DSL is something you use only if you live in a sad place where fiber hasn't quite gotten to yet (getting rarer every year). Copper wiring is actively being dismantled and replaced by fiber in most places and by LTE in really remote places (think individual houses or small groups of houses built miles from anything else and any summer cottages in the forest)
Actual "trunk" fiber networks are effectively triple-built - Elisa, Telia and DNA all have their own fiber networks across the country and they are busy covering even suburb houses, street by street. Sure, the initial build-out to an individual house costs a bit (gotta have that backhoe to set the fiber from the street to the building) but it is an one-time fee and probably improves the value of the property at least as much as it costs.
I'm paying 39e/ month for 1000Mbit down, 100Mbit up.
Competition is good.
So, lul DSL for $60.
Re:Meanwhile in Finland... (Score:5, Informative)
Even in second-world Spain I have 300Mbit up/down for 30 Euros/month.
Re:Meanwhile in Finland... (Score:5, Interesting)
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In third world Bulgaria we have 1Gbps for 46 EUR/month (200Mbps is 14EUR/month).
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in third world estonia we have 500/50 for around 35 eur
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DSL can be great. I've got 50Mb down/7Mb up DSL, they offer 150Mb here as well.
As much as I hate US telecoms, the article completely fails to mention how DSL is cheaper to deploy and maintain than fiber. At the amount consumers use, data is free, a couple of cents a GB. All of their costs are maintenance and customer support. I somehow doubt that support is cheaper to provide for DSL vs. fiber.
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Copper is cheaper than fiber? Since most all DSL is digital from the CO to the SLIC, it's the literal last mile/hundreds of feet, but that copper is the most expensive connection by foot. Sure, it was installed by Bell himself, but it's either on a pole or most likely down to the ground-level SLIC, up to a pole, down to a cross connect which is rotting off at the base, thence to the house where it's painted over, bumped into, and insulted regularly. Copper is the worst. FTTH is expensive to install, but us
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But don't come crying when they clamp down... (Score:1)
Yeah, and what will happen, when that one company *does* own your last mile? Guess what...
Yeah... have fun with your very individualized monopolies!
There are only two groups that should own the last mile:
You...
Or your city.
In Germany, we had the problem, that the last mile was owned by the ex-state Telekom, which got "privatized" (which is another word for what Mussolini originally coined as "fascism"). So to avoid a monopoly, they forced the Telekom to pass competitors' data through at the net cost price.
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In the US this requirement to carry at wholesale cost gave birth to the CLECs. Go look that up, and then look up ILECS, which is what Telekom was in Germany.
And in the US this was caused not by data, but by competitive long distance services, more than a decade earlier in some cases.
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Is it true outside of Helsinki? Just being curious.
Because what you describe is what happened in France during early fiber deployment. Companies competed to install fiber in the most profitable areas, sometimes with several carriers putting their own fiber on the same building. In contrast, other areas got nothing. In order to put a stop to that madness, the government forced carriers to rent their lines for a reasonable price to other carriers after 6 months.
For consumers, there is almost no difference in
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Look at the Finnish guy who thinks his country is big and sparse. New Mexico has about the same area of Finland, but has 2 million people as opposed to 5.5 million people. The population of South Finland where Helsinki is located is about 2 million in an area of about 1/10 the size of the country.
I'm not saying that the population or density is the reason for the bad prices, it's still no excuse, especially since the US experiences bad internet speeds even in cities, but your example of Finland doesn't ex
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But can you carry a gun in Finland? Or ... umm... well... I guess that's the one freedom left in the US, or did I miss something?
Guns and moonshine. All the rest doesn't matter. As long as we have guns and moonshine the US of A will stand.
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Regulation against bundling was attempted but overturned. Currently a lot of providers just make bundled and unbundled either cost the same amount or make phoneless DSL cost more. That way, the bundling isn't forced, just preferable pricewise (before taxes).
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Have you tried any of the other ISPs? TekSavvy [teksavvy.com] has been really good. You will continue to use the wires you already have. The difference is that from the first opportunity your data moves onto TekSavvy's network and off of Bell's or Rogers' (or whatever cable company it is). Worst cast is that you might save some money.
The lowest DSL they offer is 6Mbps down/ 800 Kbps up, 200GB / month, modem included, $30/month for 12 months and then $35.
Next up is 15/1-10 Unlimited for $40 going up to to $46.
how telecoms rip off customers (Score:2)
Why wouldn't they? (Score:2)
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Any company that does DSL right has remote DSLAMs that are not in the CO. They run fiber out to remote DSLAM nodes and copper for the last mile. Frontier was doing this even in extremely rural areas of Southern Illinois until a couple of years ago. And it's step one of an all-fiber network anyway, so it's not even a bad long-term strategy.
This is why monopolism is a crime. (Score:1)
And so-called "governments" ... which are actually corporate oligarchy traitors in "for the people" skin ... are criminals too, if they allow it.
That's the one thing every libertarian needs to remember: When corporations talk about "freedom", they talk about their freedom to take away the freedom of the market, turn it into a monopoly, and take away your freedom with it. And if they don't, they'll be driven off the market by the corporation that does. ... we
We all love freedom; yes, communist socialists too
It's not the bandwidth, but the infrastructure. (Score:1)
The issue is bandwidth is dirt cheap. Go sign up for any VPN provider where you end up paying $3-5 a month for unlimited transfers. That tells you EXACTLY how much the bandwidth actually costs. Everything else in the cost of a service like cable/dsl. is the cost of doing business and the cost of maintaining the last mile(s) infrastructure.
I currently have an account with private internet access and tunnel all of my home connection though it. I paid for two years up front and my 100% unlimited transfers thou
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Number from a large European peering point from a few years back: 1Gbps peering $200/month, unlimited traffic.
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And here in the first world... (Score:2)
... I pay $70 for 1Gbps symmetrical. It is really staggering how countries like the US or Germany are unable to get reasonably fast Internet to everybody at a reasonable price. Apparently, everybody there is so convinced they are firmly in the leadership position, that they will not wake up until it is far too late to salvage anything of their former position.
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Here in the United States, I also pay $70/month for 1Gbps symmetrical.
The issue is that not every place in the U.S. is the same, nor has the same geography, nor the same population density, nor the same local laws, nor the same local telecom and cable TV history. So what you can get varies by the realities of the specific situation. I have multiple providers for DSL, cable, fixed wireless and fiber. Some other locations, it just isn't worth to pay the money it would take (i.e. the resources it would take) t
Costs (Score:5, Insightful)
The backhaul bandwidth is only a tiny fraction of the cost to provide service, most of the cost is providing and maintaining the physical line so it doesn't cost significantly less for an ISP to provide a 2mb DSL service than it does to provide fibre assuming the infrastructure is already in place.
If anything, providing DSL might cost more because the infrastructure is older and more likely to suffer problems.
Re:Costs (Score:5, Insightful)
I was about to same the same thing, I hate advocating for ATT/Verizon but the actual speed is meaningless as far as cost. This is why most internet speed packages are close to each other in price ($50,60,70,80 etc..). The real cost is maintenance, which in parts and labor are not any less than fiber(probably more). Customer service, these people do not call in any less than fiber customers(again probably more). Yet these areas are probably rural or have some barrier that makes it more expensive to maintain/upgrade than they can pull in with reasonable monthly rates.
In fact I would propose a counter argument, they should be charging their "upgraded" customers LESS as as it is usually very cheap per person to service heavy pop areas and most of that "cost" is paid for by their other products such as TV/phone that use the same lines.
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The kicker here is that while this is happening, a not-insignificant number of customers are cutting the cord and moving entirely to cellular LTE. It's not everyone or even a majority, but enough that it significantly erodes the profitability of a landline operation.
Sure, it makes sense to invest in laying new cables and upgrading when you can count on
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A not-insignificant number of people would blow through today's LTE plans in a day or two.
I would definitely prefer LTE, it would be 5x my home service (FTTN) download speed and 16x upload. But I work from home and use about 20x the standard "unlimited" data allowance for LTE, so there's no way it would be an effective replacement.
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Also once a lot of people move to LTE, it will slow down significantly...
If everyone has their own last mile, it's relatively easy to upgrade the backhaul from the exchange but with LTE the last mile is shared between all users in an area and cannot be easily upgraded.
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Oh no doubt. LTE isn't good enough to replace a landline for more than a small segment of the population. However it's just good enough to undermine the kind of critical mass required for major infrastructure projects. Which is exactly why Google has given up on fiber and is focusing on wireless instead. Everyone has a cell phone, even if they already have a landline.
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We paid the telcos billions to build out the last mile and deliver 10+Mbps to every subscriber. They didn't do that. They are all thieves and liars. That goes double and triple for ATT and Vz.
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Of course, I've lived places where AT&T didn't offer anything over 6Mbps as recently as 2015, so they're not even technically complying.
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No, "we" didn't pay the telcos billions to build out the last mile.
Some politicians and government bureaucrats chose to take some people's money and mostly waste it on overhead while benefiting their "friends", the same thing which usually happens when government decides to "fix" something like that. You have to start with the people and the heavily regulated telecom system which make the whole thing possible.
Instead, lots of people will turn around and decide the solution is to give those same people more
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Fair enough, but it doesn't cost $60 a customer, at least not for urban customers. You can get DSL for a third of that in suburbia or cities where there is competition, and these other companies aren't going broke
Same Problem but with Century Link (Score:1)
They (Score:2)
don't tell the truth. Even worse they don't tell the sales personal that they are doing the lying.
I don't think this is accurate (Score:2)
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For what it's worth, I pay about $105/month for gigabit fiber from Verizon It technically has $20/month in credits I believe that expire after 2 years, but apparently they will re-issue those credits to get you to sign another 2 year contract. I'm pretty sure 150/150 service is about $75/month with no credits (or that might be the 50/50 tier).
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Currently, Verizon offers fiber internet with no phone for $40 a month plus $10 for a modem, plus unspecified fees and taxes, so let's say $60, but that's only for 1 year, after which they won't tell you what it costs even in the fine print!
I think my first question would be what a "modem" is in fiber optic service. Terminate to Ethernet and get out of my way.
where is the "ripoff"? (Score:2)
So? Why do you assume that Internet access prices should be somehow related to rate? There are plenty of good reasons why Internet access through DSL might actually be more expensive than fiber access.
No phoneline needed! (Score:2)
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Back in the real world (Score:2)
I pay $40/month for 25/2 from AT&T (DSL), cancel at the end of the 1-year agreement, then $30/month (after fees) for 25/5 from Comcast (Cable) for a year and cycle back and forth between the two each year. They both suck but there are zero competitors in Northern Illinois. The only actual hope for a competitor will be 5G from a cellular data provider, assuming they charge a reasonable fee (LOL.)
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For comparison I'm paying US$23.12 for 50/10 DSL in Canada.
certainly true around here. (Score:2)
It's not a rip off (Score:2)
The reason they are comparable is because the value of the line is fixed. The bulk of the cost is in the sales/support/line maintenance and generally speaking it's a lot cheaper to maintain a brand new fiber network than an aging copper one. It's a rip off in that it's too much for internet overall but not if you're comparing them to each other.
I'm in this boat (Score:2)
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AT&T is doing this across even the country's largest cities, even in densely populated majority Democratic voting areas. The very premise of the story you're telling yourself to feel better is entirely false.
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Please do tell me about all the numerous locations you're deploying broadband capable of greater than 1 megabit upload speed or 18 megabit download. Please also note any new fiber deployments whatsoever.
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This one should be easy: anywhere in the US, in any of the 20 largest cities, point out a single new residential fiber deployment.
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Yep. Some people seem to think they can have EVERYTHING.
Nope.
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I am not sure that is an accurate statement, most of the Republican areas are rural (by USA landmass) and served by DSL. Think farmers and small town American. States like North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Montana, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kentucky, Tennessee, etc....
Trump tried to help rural Republicans with broadband, but only has so much power:
https://motherboard.vice.com/e... [vice.com]
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Population overdensity is just stupid on all levels. Fiber is our way out of this mess by de-centralizing a lot of our employment. It's cheaper for everyone. Digging in the dirt is cheaper than pounding concrete to upgrade lines.
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"Republitards don't have to live in the boonies. I"
Wow. Just wow.
Let's see if Band 71 solves any of this.
Re:Broadband Push by the Luminati (Score:5, Funny)
If the world is round how come satellite signals are always available? Shouldn't they go in and out of visibility if the world was round? My satellite TV always works as does my so called GPS. Explain that!
Wake up you sheep.
We know the planet is round because FSM created it in the shape of a holy meatball, all hail his noodly appendage.
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If the world is round how come satellite signals are always available? Shouldn't they go in and out of visibility if the world was round? My satellite TV always works as does my so called GPS. Explain that!
Wake up you sheep.
We know the planet is round because FSM created it in the shape of a holy meatball, all hail his noodly appendage.
Exactly, you've never seen a perfectly round meatball, which is why his divine pastaness made the earth an oblate spheroid.
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If the world is round how come satellite signals are always available? Shouldn't they go in and out of visibility if the world was round? My satellite TV always works as does my so called GPS. Explain that!
Wake up you sheep.
We know the planet is round because FSM created it in the shape of a holy meatball, all hail his noodly appendage.
Exactly, you've never seen a perfectly round meatball, which is why his divine pastaness made the earth an oblate spheroid.
There exists the holiest of holy meatballs whos bumps and ridges match exactly that of the earth. When this is found surely it will usher in a new age of tomato based sauces for our glorious meatballs.
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https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/b... [nasa.gov]
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Plenty of us here know about Betteridge's Law and Godwin's Law, but not as many recall Poe's Law [wikipedia.org], which most certainly applies to this situation.
Re: Broadband Push by the Luminati (Score:1)
Of course it's a joke. The fuck is wrong with you? /. Is an island of sanity? Ok, that's what's wrong with you.
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Watch a few YouTube videos. Take you favorite conspiracy theory as the topic. Then come again and tell me that it should be taken as granted that anything that's completely insane can only be meant as a joke.
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We're actually post-post-modern now. I think just calling it post-truth will suffice, as facts (relative or otherwise) are no longer important to a large number of people.
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This is indistinguishable from believing that socialism works to the benefit of the worker class.
ps -- Alex Jones is entertaining for short periods of time, just like CNN, for the same reasons, though the content varies.
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Steam is awesome, they always have games on sale!
Re:This article doesnâ(TM)t make sense (Score:5, Informative)
Because it costs a metric ton of money to start a new ISP when you have to lay down cable as well. If you are allowed to at all, that depends on the local government, which curiously often thinks that one provider is enough and that they don't want many cables in their ground. The cynic in me would say that the campaign contributions of certain ISPs have something to do with it. You might have heard about communities that tried to establish a WiFi based alternative, only to have it shot down by the local government.
So, there's no need to get government involved. It already is.
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That's ... basically what I said?
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Because ISPs sign exclusivity agreements for an area. You can't even legally compete against them.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:This article doesnâ(TM)t make sense (Score:5, Informative)
No, this is not true at all. Major cities have those two options. Smaller cities/towns do not have cable (people get satellite TV, and yes they could get satellite internet if they want to pay even more for high latency and slower speeds but that's not real broadband).
And even where there ought to be two options, often there isn't. The last place I lived -- which was actually a fairly dense suburb of the capitol of California -- Comcast was my only option because AT&T declared the neighborhood oversubscribed and refused to offer DSL service. And where I currently live, also, Comcast is my only option -- AT&T doesn't explain why, but I just checked their website and verified they still won't offer me DSL.
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yep, I live in a small town 1 ISP $130 for 50mbs.
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Not only that, but not all Internet access is made the same. Even among homes that have both cable and telephone lines, that doesn't mean broadband is available.
Part of the issue here is the FCC's ridiculous method for measuring broadband penetration (in fairness, this method pre-dates Pai, so I can't lay it at his feet). Rather than extrapolating from a representative, random sampling of homes or doing a full survey for each home address, ISPs self-report, on a per-county basis, where they provide broadban
Re:This article doesnâ(TM)t make sense (Score:4, Informative)
The vast majority of the countty (land-wise, not necessarily population-wise) only has DSL, if there is even that available. Indeed, where I live I only have CenturyLink DSL available. My vacation home also has CenturyLink DSL available, and the network there is oversaturated, leaving me with sub-1.5-megabit service with no other options. And guess what? The 10-megabit service and the service below 1.5 megabit cost the same.
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What exactly did these people expect living away from cities/hubs/high pop areas?
I'm sure they thought that the government funding that was given to the telcos to build out their networks and provide broadband (by the FCC's definition) in rural areas would have been used to... well.. provide broadband (by the FCC's definition) in rural areas.
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At this point I'd settle for CenturyLink improving its own network. Right now they have so many subscribers that they aren't accepting more, and aren't upgrading existing customers. That's the sort of situation where, if there weren't a monopoly in the region, that a company would actually invest to fill the void. But there is a monopoly in the region and the company has done the math. It's more cost-effective to invest nothing (beyond occasional maintenance when something breaks) than to put in the mon
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both already have infrastructure, whereas any new ISP is going to have to lay cable.
It's worse than that. Any large enough ISP can just undercut them on price and force the new provider out of business. Then they can buy up all the new infrastructure that was built for way below cost in the bankruptcy sale.
And as long as that "free market" option is open to big companies that can afford to bleed money in one area to preserve profits overall, there will never be competition.
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And as long as that "free market" option is open to big companies that can afford to bleed money in one area to preserve profits overall, there will never be competition.
That "free market" option is illegal, and has been for very nearly 130 years. The Sherman Antitrust Act has been the law of the land since 1890, and reducing prices specifically to drive out a competitor is explicitly illegal.
Now if only the US Federal judiciary wasn't full of craven cowards for District Attorneys...
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It's one of those things where there could always be an alternate explanation that would hold up in a weak court.
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Fail. Markets do not work when there are high obstacles to entry. In that case, they devolve into monopolies, as the example at hand nicely shows. Capitalism has to be regulated, because it rewards those of unlimited egoism, and they are destroyers, not builders.
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The EU is a lot more likely to stop big companies from putting pressure to squeeze out the little guy. If I went and started laying fiber in my town, the incumbent ISPs would price me out of the market until I went under. They are so large that they can afford to.
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Neither. Conditions in Finland are very different. There are no high obstacles to entry into this market there, for one thing.
But you seem to be pretty full of it, come to think of it, since you cannot see the obvious.
Re:This article doesnâ(TM)t make sense (Score:5, Insightful)
If these providers were really treating me so incredibly unfairly, why wouldnâ(TM)t another option naturally emerge?
In a perfect market yes. Internet service providers are not a perfect market. In fact they are usually a text book example of an imperfect market created through a process of public spending and government granted oligopolies. That's if you're lucky. Quite often you're faced with an outright monopoly.
Hasnt that always been the cycle of technology? Someone does something poorly and then someone else can do it better and make lots of money.
Someone tried. Look how much Google fibre spent only to achieve nothing. This isn't some startup creating an app.
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how it works here is that no ISP owns the cable or does the cable work. it is another company that takes care of the cables and ISPs can then use these cables to provide internet to their customers, ofcourse ISPs need to pay the cable company for using it.
same story for electricity etc.
Re:This article doesnt make sense (Score:2)
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That's Belgium, but i'm sure other EU countries have the same model.
Re:This article doesnâ(TM)t make sense (Score:5, Interesting)
If these providers were really treating me so incredibly unfairly, why wouldn't another option naturally emerge?
Because even if a competitor could get permits, the moment they announced plans for a roll-out your speeds would go up, prices go down, the network would start getting upgrades and by the time the new network was ready most people would be too lazy to switch so the imagined profits wouldn't be there anymore. Basically people aren't spiteful enough to switch over past poor price-performance and reward the company who (re-)booted the competition. And the competitors knows this, so they don't try in the first place. Also they have high-profit areas of their own, basically if you start killing my profits in one area I'll start killing your profits in some other area. So there's a high incentive to come to some sort of informal understanding.
That's why most threats to them come from outside players that don't have a market to lose like municipal broadband, Starlink etc. otherwise they're happy to serve you slow DSL until the cows come home. The other big incentive would be government bids, but I've read a surprisingly large number of "we gave the ISPs money, but they didn't roll out broadband like they're supposed to" stories that to me makes no sense. It's not hard to create "no cure, no pay" contracts, daily fines for non-compliance and yet it seems no agreement has teeth and whoever wrote them is either incompetent or corrupt. Maybe if New York kicks Charter out for real it'll get better, but why go the nuclear option and get a new deal that won't be honored when you could have had a running financial penalty.
The county my cabin is in here in Norway made a rather simple bid: Fiber available to all permanent residents in the county, cabins are optional, what's your bid? It took three years, 120 km worth of digs and now it's done, from no cable, no fiber just shitty DSL to 70%+ signing up for fiber. Population density of county is ~35/km^2 same as Alabama or Missouri, nothing that qualifies as a town just rural population and yet the fiber roll-out is done. Median speed here in Norway is now 45.8 Mbit and up 45.4% YoY due to small revolutions like these. Granted, fiber doesn't work everywhere but it can work many places if you just make the jump. It's a lot more profitable to just cash in on old copper though...
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Well, given that Alabama is 312 KM wide by 436 KM long, and Missouri is, oh, 441 by 453, both very rough approximations, but still, population density is meaningless without also knowing total area.
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In this case, the invalid assumption is that there is no significant barrier to entry.
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You can't have a free market in telecom due to the countless number of government regulations - from restrictions in frequencies, to regulation on how to install cables under the road, and so on and so on. The few telecom providers out there have profited big from relations with the government and those regulations are making sure nobody can challenge their position. Obviously, those companies have nothing against government regulation when it suits them, but they will invoke the free market each time a reg
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How would VZ go bankrupt? They have a true national fiber network, best cellular network and a big B2B business providing corporate networking and internet access. All a potential competitor has to do is spend the $200 billion or whatever VZW spent over the years to build this network up. They started as one of the baby bells in NY, bought the rest out and then bought most of MCI/Worldcom in bankruptcy.
They were smarter than the other guy
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Calling bullshit. The cost of a mini dslam is lower than ever. The problem is that they will not spend money in advance of demand. I've been a sysadmin for a ISP for 11 years and before that worked at two others. I have to say we offer speeds in excess of anything the local telco does. Since their phone product is now voip they have no advantage over us at all. Their highest speed is slower than our lowest. They tell people around here the opposite. They will never be punished for it. If they didn
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Of course we didn't need a white paper to find this out. Are you new here?
But if this white paper convinces one legislator that something needs to change, then great... that's at least a small accomplishment, one that common sense has failed to provide.
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For similar reasons, I don't see a big need for 4k video either.
The biggest draw of UHD (e.g. 4K video) is dynamic range, not resolution. The difference between HDR and non-HDR video and images on an HDR display is noticeable from any reasonable distance, on any size display.
Your limited use case for internet blinds you to the realities of that market, as well.
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availability of adequate internet access a part of the lease
Lease. There's a part of your problem. It's going to be difficult to get a broadband provider to make investments to capture customers with a high turn over rate.
But it's not a bad idea. In my neighborhood, we were facing a refusal by Verizon to run DSL. And they would screw with any CLECs trying to lease lines. Reason: They had a 'no compete' agreement with Comcast. Verizon didn't offer broadband and Comcast (although they offered in in a three-way package) would not provide phone service. And throttle Vo
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So your idea is to give more power and control to the politicians and bureaucrats who screwed it up the first few times, coincidentally benefiting their "friends" in the process.
Yeah, some people never learn, do they? Get back to us when Venezuela's experiment with nationalizing most of their major industries results in something other than destroying them and leaving people to starve.