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Communications

FCC Funding Aims To Guarantee 100 Mbps Internet Throughout Puerto Rico (engadget.com) 46

On Monday, the FCC's Wireless Competition Board announced that newly allocated financing part of Stage Two of the Uniendo a Puerto Rico fund will ensure that every location across Puerto Rico will have access to broadband internet with download speeds of at least 100 Mbps, with one-third of the territory getting 1 Gbps internet. From a report: The milestone will come from $127.1 million in funding the FCC will provide over 10 years to two firms: Liberty Communications and Claro Puerto Rico. Of that $127.1 million, $71.54 will go to Liberty Communications, which will take care of connecting 43 of Puerto Rico's 78 municipios -- the equivalent to counties on the mainland. The remaining $55.56 million will help Claro build out broadband connections in the other 35 municipios. All told, the approximately 1.2 million places across the territory will get some form of high-speed broadband access through the funding. In a previous stage of Uniendo a Puerto Rico fund announced in June, the FCC allocated $237.9 million through to 2022 to help AT&T, T-Mobile and Claro build out LTE and 5G networks across Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands.
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FCC Funding Aims To Guarantee 100 Mbps Internet Throughout Puerto Rico

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  • Oh? (Score:5, Funny)

    by jargonburn ( 1950578 ) on Monday November 02, 2020 @04:08PM (#60677300)
    And are there penalties stipulated for companies receiving this money if they don't manage to fulfill the pledged deployments/capacity in the allotted amount of funds?
    Maybe if this project succeeds, we could use it as a blueprint for a rollout of rural high-speed internet in the United States!
    • by marcle ( 1575627 )

      Exactery. This is right out of the standard telecom playbook. Promise the world, collect tons of cash, fail to deliver (or even try very hard), get a slap on the wrist if that. Meanwhile telecom execs (and captured regulators, and lawyers) laugh all the way to the bank.

  • Rural US (Score:5, Insightful)

    by lionchild ( 581331 ) on Monday November 02, 2020 @04:27PM (#60677382) Journal

    I 100% think it's great they're moving To Guarantee 100 Mbps Internet Throughout Puerto Rico.

    When can we expect the same guarantee to the Rural US?

    • Just rural?? I've lived in several apartment buildings with 10+ floors in the heart of big city downtowns that had at most 20 Mbps. It was so bad I had to resort to researching the internet service before moving.
      • by jjbenz ( 581536 )
        That sounds like my situation. I have 20Mbps service, but if I lived 150 feet away I could get 1Gbps service.
    • I 100% think it's great they're moving To Guarantee 100 Mbps Internet Throughout Puerto Rico.

      When can we expect the same guarantee to the Rural US?

      Yep...mainland first.

      Why aren't we guaranteeing this for the real states first?

    • No. The federal goverment needs to keep throwing some kind of bone to puertoricans now and then to keep their separatist movement in check.

    • Since rural places are economically inefficient, and less and less people live there, not to mention the prevailing political attitude is to reject all government help, maybe those rural places can just build their own? Last I checked, it works out fine for them, and they don't become a drain on urban taxpayers more then they already are.
      • I'm not sure that Rural America is currently in a mode of rejecting all government help. They've gotten 2, very sizeable, bail outs from the US Government currently, and they've been happy to take Government subsidies for decades to prop up the price of various crops. I'm not sure that's true.

    • Interestingly Puerto Rico is the opposite of rural, it has a higher population density than any US state, except New Jersey.
    • I wish we had that speed throughout Silicon Valley! I'm tired of being in a technological backwater here in San Jose California, and that San Jose Puerto Rico will have better internet.

  • ISPs being given money to improve coverage in the US usually results in the ISP just pocketing the money, and no improved connectivity.

    What is being done to prevent that in this case?

  • I thought that PR was still partially without power. Maybe we should fix that first.

    • > I thought that PR was still partially without power. Maybe we should fix that first.

      And everything is ridiculously expensive there because of the Jones Act blockade.

      I guess the FCC can't do anything about that, though.

  • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Monday November 02, 2020 @04:53PM (#60677502)
    Last I checked Puerto Rico wasn't a state. Why should the FCC care one way or the other?
    • Probably because if there is ever a 51st State, Puerto Rico would be it.
    • As a US territory, it still falls under FCC jurisdiction.
  • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

    That is great for Puerto Rico but why are they being given priority over the rest of the United States?

  • That money has been stolen already before the ink was dry. In classic Puerto Rican style, the next article will be "What happened to the money and 100Mbps access, residents still on dial up"
  • 1.2M drops for $120M dollars? No way can do they do it for that amount.

    Watch for a 10x on money requested.

  • Like, reliable electric service and other basic utilities?
    How about a non-corrupt-as-fuck local government?
    Last I heard they don't have those things. How are you even going to use the internet when you don't even have reliable electricity?
    For that matter how do you afford anything let alone internet when you can't find a job? Just checked and even pre-pandemic their unemployment was hovering around 9%, that's not so great.
    This all sounds like a scam to me. Someone is going to siphon off that money. Wond
  • What's needed for broadband in underdeveloped areas is not so much subsidies as it is regulatory and administrative leeway.
    Let multiple operators to put cables on poles. Ethernet cable and equipment is dirt cheap and can reach reasonable distances. Let several competitors build out networks. Some smaller will merge, but don't let them all merge together - have at least 3 or 4 operating over the same area. When their growth stabilizes, the presence of fast Internet will open up new business opportunities.
  • Maybe you should focus on the continental U.S. first...

  • And then, 4 years later, there will be an investigation into how all the funds disappeared and no network got built. PR is a corrupt third world country that for bizarre reasons happens to be part of the US.

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