FCC Has Obtained Detailed Broadband Maps From ISPs for the First Time Ever (arstechnica.com) 18
The Federal Communications Commission has collected precise broadband availability information from Internet service providers for the first time and aims to release a first draft of a new broadband map in November, FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel wrote Friday. From a report: The FCC last week "completed the first filing window for submitting data on where broadband service is and is not available," a milestone in the years-long process of creating an accurate US broadband map, she wrote. "For the first time ever, we have collected extensive location-by-location data on precisely where broadband services are available, and now we are ready to get to work and start developing new and improved broadband maps."
The resulting map should show whether fixed broadband service is available at each residence or business location. The FCC's inaccurate broadband maps have long made it difficult to distribute deployment grants where they're needed most. Current maps are based on the Form 477 data-collection program in which ISPs report whether they offer service in each census block, which essentially lets ISPs count an entire census block as served even if it can serve just one home in the area. The new, more accurate maps will be used to help distribute $42.45 billion from the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment program created by Congress in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
The resulting map should show whether fixed broadband service is available at each residence or business location. The FCC's inaccurate broadband maps have long made it difficult to distribute deployment grants where they're needed most. Current maps are based on the Form 477 data-collection program in which ISPs report whether they offer service in each census block, which essentially lets ISPs count an entire census block as served even if it can serve just one home in the area. The new, more accurate maps will be used to help distribute $42.45 billion from the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment program created by Congress in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
Re: Shit I could have done this in 10 minutes (Score:2)
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Geolocation services are not nearly accurate enough for this, and your approach would only recognize locations that already have some form of active Internet at the ping moment. It would also not account for Internet speeds. There may be other issues I can't think of, but trying to automate something like this is doomed to fail. A manual survey is needed.
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Re:Shit I could have done this in 10 minutes (Score:5, Interesting)
1a) Does this address have access to a connection?
1b) Does this address have access to a broadband connection?
2a) Does this address have a connection?
2b) Does this address have a broadband connection?
3a) Who provides connections at this address?
3b) Who provides broadband connections at this address?
3c) How many companies provide connections at this address?
3d) How many companies provide broadband connections at this address?
4) What tiers of service are available at this address?
5) What types of connections (e.g. landline, cellular, satellite) are available at this address?
Your data set would be able to do a lousy job at answering question 2a above, and that's about it. Your data has gaps where service is unavailable, which are precisely the gaps we want to fill. Your data is biased towards affluent households (i.e. those who can afford connections). Your data fails to reliably distinguish between one household and a thousand households (e.g. you don't account for NAT and its ongoing use in apartment complexes). Your data has significant geographic error due to outdated or missing geolocation data (e.g. it's been two months since my ISP redistributed IP addresses and retailers are still suggesting that I should drive 150+ miles to reach the "nearby" store, rather than going to the one that is just down the street).
I know it's fun to suggest that complex problems are so trite you can solve them with a quick shell script or a few minutes in Excel, but sometimes they actually aren't so simple, especially if you want to do the job well...such as when trying to gather data so you can make fact-based policy decisions that affect hundreds of millions of people, many of whom have been crying for years that they've been underserved as a result of the poor data gathered by previous administrations.
Re: They didn't have this info already? (Score:4, Interesting)
Form 477 (Score:3, Interesting)
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Fiber to 5G (Score:1)
From the big guys maybe (Score:4, Insightful)
I'll be looking (Score:2)
I'll be looking to see if Comcast says they service my current address. The last time I asked them for service availability they said they had service here and then wanted $8500 to install it. (Residential service)
That doesn't really meet my definition of "available".