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The Internet Network United States

ISPs Say US Should Force Big Tech Firms To Pay For Broadband Construction (arstechnica.com) 144

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Internet service providers in both the US and Europe are clamoring for new payments from Big Tech firms. European broadband providers are much closer to realizing the long-held goal of payments from tech companies, as the European Union government is holding an official consultation on the proposal. As the EU process unfolds, the telco lobby group USTelecom is hoping to push the US down a similar but not quite identical path. In a blog post on Friday, USTelecom CEO Jonathan Spalter argued that the biggest technology companies should contribute toward a fund that subsidizes the building of broadband networks. Spalter wrote that Amazon and similar Internet companies should fill what he called a "conspicuously empty seat at the collective table of global high-speed connectivity."

Given that "six companies account for half of all Internet traffic worldwide... Does it still make sense that the government and broadband providers alone fund this critical infrastructure? Is there no shared obligation from the primary financial beneficiaries of these networks -- the world's most powerful Internet companies?" Spalter wrote. "We need a modern reset that more equitably shares these financial obligations among those who benefit the most from these connections," he argued. USTelecom members include AT&T, Verizon, Lumen (formerly CenturyLink), Windstream, and other telcos. It's one of the biggest trade groups that lobbies for US-based Internet service providers.

[...] USTelecom pointed to the Biden administration's comments in its pitch to make Big Tech firms pay into a central fund like the existing Universal Service Fund (USF) managed by the Federal Communications Commission. "We concur with the US government's position that rather than the payments to broadband providers proposed in the EU, such 'publicly accountable funding mechanisms can better ensure that resources are devoted to key policy objectives, such as improving access and strengthening network security, while avoiding discriminatory measures that distort competition,'" Spalter wrote. The Biden administration's comments didn't call for tech companies to pay into a government-run fund, though. The document noted that the US "approach to financing improvements to broadband infrastructure involves private investments, a national Universal Service Fund, and significant public funding made from general appropriations," but didn't argue for any changes to who pays into the fund.

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ISPs Say US Should Force Big Tech Firms To Pay For Broadband Construction

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  • No (Score:5, Insightful)

    by HBI ( 10338492 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:05AM (#63620590)

    Mainly because such a position will be taken advantage of to become permanently entrenched like a utility. No one really wants that.

    • Re:No (Score:4, Insightful)

      by saloomy ( 2817221 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:20AM (#63620634)
      That, and why then would the networks the big tech firms pay for be given to ISPs? If Apple pays for a network, Spectrum sure as hell isnt going to own it.
      • Re:No (Score:5, Informative)

        by organgtool ( 966989 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @01:41PM (#63621560)

        That, and why then would the networks the big tech firms pay for be given to ISPs?

        Because the ISPs are entrenched in entitlement since they've spent decades sucking at governments' teats to pay for the expansion and upgrades of their networks rather than have to pay for it themselves like almost every other private company in existence. And none of those governments ever retained ownership of any of resources that were paid for by government subsidies (via our tax dollars). These companies are the epitome of socializing the costs and privatizing the profits. The idea of paying for something themselves isn't even a possibility in the minds of their executives.

    • Re:No (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:27AM (#63620664)

      That's actually not the worst idea. Create a new company that provides the cables to everyone at mandated equal rates. Comcast to any small mom'n'pop ISP.

      Wanna bet that suddenly the ISPs shut up about that idea pretty fucking quickly?

      • The public utility district does that here. The cables are theirs, then the customer calls up the actual ISP for the service.

        https://www.grantpud.org/getfi... [grantpud.org]

      • That will never happen because it would cause AT&T and Comcast to reduce their rates, and asking for less money isn't a thing they do. Ever.

      • They have already been given a massive amount of taxpayer funds to lay copper cables. And now the cables have been mostly ripped out, without returning the funds or even fully completing what was paid for.

      • That's actually not the worst idea. Create a new company that provides the cables to everyone at mandated equal rates. Comcast to any small mom'n'pop ISP.

        Wanna bet that suddenly the ISPs shut up about that idea pretty fucking quickly?

        They sure would. In the US, they fight to stop municipalities from deploying their own broadband. If they try to force big tech to pay they may find big tech building out their own networks, either with fiber or 5G.

      • Re:No (Score:4, Interesting)

        by pete6677 ( 681676 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @12:00PM (#63621270)

        That's exactly what should happen. Divestiture, like when Ma Bell was broken up. Separate the wireline business from the internet service and cable TV business.

        Monopoly provider gets to own and maintain the fiber/cable lines. They are regulated as a monopoly, and allowed to charge reasonable regulated fees for wireline installation and maintenance. Customer then chooses their provider for services such as internet access, TV, phone, security, whatever. All recognized telecom service providers are able to access the monopoly's cable plant to deliver service to their end users. This would solve so many problems related to last-mile access in the US.

        • Re:No (Score:5, Insightful)

          by MachineShedFred ( 621896 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @12:13PM (#63621314) Journal

          Unfortunately for the ISPs though, it creates one big problem for them: it turns off the fire hose of money being pointed at their front door. They will spend billions in lobbying to prevent such a change, because Big ISP is booking $3B+ in earnings per quarter with the current scheme, and still trying to chisel more out of anyone else but themselves for maintenance and expansion.

          They can go fuck themselves. Finance building your product with your revenue, like literally every other business on the planet.

    • Re: No (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Z00L00K ( 682162 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:52AM (#63620748) Homepage Journal

      All the traffic the ISPs sees from the media providers is generated by the customers to the ISP.

      It's all about increasing profit and nothing else.

      • Yep. We revisit this argument every few years. The ISPs are largely telcos in this case, already a set of monopolies.

        Actual ISPs get a lot of hosting revenue, services, multi-homing fees, backup and reliability gear/plans, and much more.

        Somebody needs a raise to report to Wall Street.

        Nothing to see here. Move along.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The EU is pushing for this because to moves the cost away from consumers. ISPs often only have the monthly fee as income. There isn't much appetite from consumers for ad supported ISPs either.

      The big tech companies make a lot of money, and most of it from ads, so getting them to pay for it instead of the consumer is a consumer friendly thing to do.

      Some will argue that the tech companies will just throw more ads at us or increase costs elsewhere, but worst case you only end up paying for what you would have

      • Re:No (Score:5, Insightful)

        by tragedy ( 27079 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @12:27PM (#63621342)

        The EU is pushing for this because to moves the cost away from consumers

        I'm confused, how does this move the cost away from consumers? The ISPs aren't going to charge any less if they get more money from other sources. They'll just report record profits and give their senior executives huge bonuses.

        ISPs often only have the monthly fee as income. There isn't much appetite from consumers for ad supported ISPs either.

        I know that I definitely pay more to my ISP per month than I provide in profit to any of the big tech companies. Comcast's revenue in 2022 was $121 billion. Facebook's revenue was $116 billion. Roughly comparable.

        Ultimately, this seems like a ridiculous idea to me. All the players using the Internet get on the Internet through an Internet Service Provider, who they pay some sort of subscription fee to. Home users do and the big tech companies do. There should not be special mandated fees paid to the ISPs beyond that. If they want to have a tax scheme where they tax the big tech companies to cover infrastructure costs, I suppose they can do that, but taxes that go directly to private companies or indirectly by paying for infrastructure than then gets handed to those private companies is just wrong. If they tax the big tech companies to build out Internet infrastructure, that infrastructure should belong to the public with equal access to anyone who wants it.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          There are functional markets for ISPs in the EU, so yes they will charge less.

          Many countries have local loop unbundling, so the owner of the lines has to sell access to all ISPs at the same price. No local monopoly like the US.

          • No, the ISPs will charge "Big Tech" more money, and "Big Tech" will pass the savings on to the ISP subscribers. Regardless of your market, that's just how Capitalism works.

            Where the EU might differ from the US however is the fact that once the EU subscribers wake up and realize they are being charged twice for the same product they'll demand their legislators stop the price hikes. The US subscribers will simply rollover and start crying about "inflation" again....
      • Re:No (Score:5, Informative)

        by organgtool ( 966989 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @01:45PM (#63621568)

        The EU is pushing for this because to moves the cost away from consumers

        The EU is pushing for this because many of the companies that would have to pay up are outside of the EU.

      • The EU is pushing for this because to moves the cost away from consumers.

        No, the EU *was* pushing for this because it is not immune from stupid lobbying. Nothing more, nothing less. But in any case the EU didn't push anything one way or the other. The EU got lobbied, started a consultation process, and the EU's own telecom regulator come out against the proposal. It is all but dead.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. For society to work well, transporting data packets must be a commodity, no matter where they eventually go.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:09AM (#63620604)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:What about "No" (Score:5, Insightful)

      by garcia ( 6573 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:27AM (#63620662)

      They're called taxes and infrastructure subsidies. The problem here, oversimplified, are twofold:

      1. We already paid "Big Telco" billions for infrastructure and they pissed it away.

      2. We allow all companies to not pay their fair share and thus the revenues are down.

      Governing and taxation are broken.

      • Right, let's first demand the billions from 1. to be returned (as the infrastructure hasn't been delivered fully nor up to spec), then let's ask the ISPs about double dipping.

    • ISP should not own content like Comcast that also have cable TV.
      Comcast caps are in part to make people buy there cable tv vs getting an IPTV service.

    • bullshit forcing everyone to be dependent upon Google for email

      Don't tie your email to your ISP, that's just stupid. Otherwise whenever you move you lose your email address. Email never should have been tied to ISPs to begin with.

      • by narcc ( 412956 )

        Don't tie your email to your ISP, that's just stupid.

        Thanks for the absurdly outdated advice. That hasn't been a problem for ages, thanks in no small part to early webmail services like Hotmail and Yahoo Mail and the realization that it's better to let your users keep their email than holding it hostage in an attempt to keep them from changing providers. While most ISPs still offer email, the vast majority will let you keep your address after you cancel service. Though I can't imagine anyone under 40 even being aware that their ISP provides email, let alone

  • by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:15AM (#63620622)

    It's hard to see how any of this really matters, since it's merely about the swirls and eddies and temporary re-distributions of wealth at the top of the economic pyramid. In the end it all comes from us folks lower down in the hierarchy.

    The only sense in which it's in any way significant, is in the number of "frictional losses" as the money moves through more hands and longer paths. In both electrical and mechanical systems we try to minimize parasitic losses when moving energy from one place to another. By contrast, the economy seems to be founded on the principal of generating as much waste "heat" as possible as money moves from one place to another. The economy as we know it is largely predicated on parasitic losses.

    • by logicnazi ( 169418 ) <gerdes&invariant,org> on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @11:14AM (#63621126) Homepage

      It matters because how we resolve issues like this affects how much economic benefit consumers receive.

      Yes, economic inequality matters but so too does the size of the pie. It's a fuckton better to be relatively low on the economic hierarchy in 2023 than it was in 1923 or 1823. And, as we saw with the soviet union, not all economic rules produce the same degree of economic growth.

      I want a world where I get to benefit from neat new websites and services which make my life better. If you burden these new technologies with all sorts of extra fees that the ISPs will use to pad their own pockets then we're less likely to get these improvements in our lives.

      • It matters because how we resolve issues like this affects how much economic benefit consumers receive.

        Yes, economic inequality matters but so too does the size of the pie. It's a fuckton better to be relatively low on the economic hierarchy in 2023 than it was in 1923 or 1823. And, as we saw with the soviet union, not all economic rules produce the same degree of economic growth.

        Good point - thanks.

        I want a world where I get to benefit from neat new websites and services which make my life better. If you burden these new technologies with all sorts of extra fees that the ISPs will use to pad their own pockets then we're less likely to get these improvements in our lives.

        Also a good point. It reminds me of my belief that ISP's and the like are essential infrastructure and ought to be nationalized. That would massively reduce the 'frictional loss' associated with their gouging and deceptive pricing.

        BTW, I visited your blog and found only a blank page. Is that a demonstration of "rejecting reality", or is something amiss? I suppose the two aren't mutually exclusive...

  • Charge them by how much bandwidth they use, so places like YouTube, Netflix and others that pump gigs of data everyday pay more than some websites that only push a few kilos or a few megs
    • by olmsfam ( 1399493 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:33AM (#63620686)
      I think that's just called an internet subscription. I, the CONSUMER, pay for (weirdly enough) what i CONSUME. The speed i want, and have a data cap. Maybe they are just being greedy and double dipping. I don't want to have to watch more Ads so big tech can pay ISPs for the privileges' of giving me stuff. In fact ISPs should have to pay Big tech a licence for their content, as without them I would have no reason to pay the ISP for internet! (just to be devils advocate)
      • by RegistrationIsDumb83 ( 6517138 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:39AM (#63620710)
        They are absolutely double dipping, if not triple dipping. I pay my internet subscription, and in past even had to pay a 'network investment ' fee on another provider. Then they're also getting grant money from government. And now they want money from the websites too. We should be able to slap companies when they get too greedy like this.
      • Once telco/ISPs attach to the Big Tech teat, it's all over for net neutrality. You will never ween ISPs off that money stream and then big tech will use their foot in the door to leverage it open more and more until they own the ISPs, if not outright, then by threat of restricting the money hose.

        This is such a bad road to go down, I can't even believe that anyone thinks it is a good idea.

        It's almost transparently a play by Big Tech to own the pipe.

    • Charge them by how much bandwidth they use,

      That is already a thing. Look into peering pricing. Anything else you want that's already happening?

    • Split the cost between the consumer and the content providers 50/50
      • by racermd ( 314140 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @09:30AM (#63620820)

        They... already are.

        Everyone pays for their internet connection - both the content provider and the content consumer. The ISPs pay each other for peering with each other, as well. There is literally nothing about the current connectivity schema between content provider to content consumer that isn't already monetized at every step. The consumer-side ISPs are just getting greedy. If they're not getting paid enough to maintain connectivity between the providers' networks and their consuming customers, they need to adjust rates they charge either side. Getting a 3rd party (read: content providers) to pay for some portion of the consumer-side networks makes zero sense.

        "Hey, there, retail stores! This is the local, municipal government from the next town over, here. We noticed an 'excessive' amount of traffic from our citizens going to/from your stores and want you to pay part of the upkeep on the residential roads in our town. Yeah, we know you don't have a presence out this way, but it's all your fault our roads are more travelled than we planned for. We simply cannot cover these costs. Wait... You say you pay the taxes imposed by your local, municipal government already and you want US to charge our residents more taxes, instead? We can't do that - they'd leave us for a different town! Oh, wait. No they won't - we're the only residential neighborhood around. In fact, we CAN do that, ARE doing that, AND we still want to charge you because, we feel, it's still all your fault so we can get some extra money."

        • It's far worse than that. Mainly the telco providers are upset that upgrading and maintaining infrastructure is expensive and cuts into their >90% profit margins, therefore they want someone else to pay it because costs aren't something they feel obligated to pay. Trying to force a subsidy from other companies only distantly related to them is simply the only revenue model they haven't tapped yet.

    • > Charge them by how much bandwidth they use

      YouTube's and Netflix's ISPs almost certainly do exactly that. Commercial ISPs usually charge in either or both of two ways: A guaranteed rate and burst rate, and/or the "lowest 95%" of actual usage. It's only residential ISPs that pull shenanigans like "up to" rates (which you'll only ever actually see at 3am on xmas or New Years day.) over provisioning, and slowdowns after you hit a (sometimes invisible) cap.

      Even if you accept this notion that client ISPs

  • by OfMiceAndMenus ( 4553885 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:31AM (#63620678)
    Absolutely not. Under no circumstances should the users of a service (utility, really) who already pay the quoted subscription charge for their connection be required to fund the expansion or upkeep of the infrastructure of the supplying company. That's what the subscription fees from those companies and end users are for.

    Pay for your own fucking install and maintenance. You already try to charge homeowners thousands of dollars to run 30ft of coax into their house. You already charge *insane* rates to run a junction box into a subdivision. Fuck off and fix your own business model, it's not your customers job to pay more so you can keep your business running.

    Also, as long as Comcast is paying their CEO $32m annually, they shouldn't receive a cent of expansion funds or subsidies from the government. They should also be taken to task by the courts for lying to the FCC about supply coverage areas to get more of said subsidies and future spectrum allocations.
  • Yes (Score:5, Informative)

    by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:33AM (#63620682)

    But hear me out.

    Back when our phone company was privatized, what they did was they split infrastructure from the "business end", i.e. they split the "cable company" from the "phone service" part. And the "cables", since we all already paid for them with our taxes, went into a tightly regulated company that now has to provide those cables to any company wanting to provide telephone (and in extension, ISP) services to anyone. And while they were at it, they did something very similar with the radio spectrum and the cell towers.

    The result is that in this rather small country (about the size of South Carolina) we have (IIRC) 5 cell providers and more ISPs than I can name. Off the top of my head, I know at least 4, with a LOT of local providers that provide services for a few provinces.

    The reason was simply that the biggest required investment, i.e. cable infrastructure, vanished. You could open up an ISP and rent the cables from the "cable company" at exactly the same rate as any other ISP. Moreover, at a rate that was so damn cheap that even wanting to put your own cables down was financial suicide.

    I kinda doubt this is what the ISPs of the USA have in mind, though...

    • Sounds like Sweden.

    • by davidwr ( 791652 )

      You could open up an ISP and rent the cables from the "cable company" at exactly the same rate as any other ISP.

      20-25 years ago, back in the days of DSL internet+phone lines, it worked this way in some parts of the United States. The incumbent telephone company, which was usually a corporate descendant of the old "Ma Bell" (AT&T up to 1984), owned the infrastructure from your house to the "phone company switching office." But anyone could rent space in the switching office to put in their own equipment and connect it (almost) directly to the phone company's equipment.

      There weren't "more ISPs than [a person] cou

      • by Zak3056 ( 69287 )

        20-25 years ago, back in the days of DSL internet+phone lines, it worked this way in some parts of the United States.

        Actually, not "some" but "all" parts of the US--the relevant law was the Telecommunications Act of 1996 which required local loop unbundling. This state of affairs persisted until 2005, when the FCC changed the rules about which types of lines needed to be unbundled, at which point the vast majority of non-ILEC DSL providers died out pretty much overnight.

  • by dave314159259 ( 1107469 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:34AM (#63620688)

    Restaurants Say US Should Force Large Dinner Parties to Pay for New Ovens
    Supermarkets Say US Should Force People Buying for Large Cookouts to Pay for New Freezers, Shelving, and Cash Registers
    Car Manufacturers Say US Should Force Fleet Buyers to Pay for New Dealership Construction

    Seriously... the cost of providing service should be covered by what you charge for the service. If you can't do that, you deserve to fail.

    Don't get me started on the dishonesty using 'tips' and 'employee health insurance fees' as a substitute for printing the honest price for the meal and service (which includes all employee pay and benefits) on the menu.

    • Nuclear power was a government initiative. Lots of companies need that now. I think your analogy is not entirely honest. But yes... what is.
    • Seriously... the cost of providing service should be covered by what you charge for the service.

      The difference that these ISPs, who already charge home users for the service of connection to large tech companies and others, want to additionally charge large tech companies for the service of connection to home users.

      • They already do that.

        You think Google, Apple, Facebook, Microsoft, AWS, Netflix, etc. get the connections to their data centers for free?

        They already pay. A lot.

        This is just a grasping middle-man leech attempt to grasp for even more.

  • Two ends (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Meneth ( 872868 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:37AM (#63620698)

    The telco complaint assumes there's only one originator of traffic, only one endpoint. This is, of course, false. The other one is often called "the consumer" or "the customer".

    In a normal market, if there's more demand than supply (as the telcos imply here), then suppliers would make investments to increase supply, and raise prices to pay for it. What's preventing that from happening here?

    • by sirket ( 60694 )

      Exactly. It's not solely Big Tech firms who are responsible for 50% of all Internet traffic, it's ISP customers requesting that traffic and they are already charging them.

      ISPs just want to be able to double dip.

    • What's preventing that from happening here is that under normal circumstances, this would mean the ISPs with all the heavily asymmetric connections would be paying their peering connections and other websites through the nose just to allow their customers to access things, because they've designed their network around the idea that not only do customers contribute almost no value, but that it should be prohibitively expensive for the customers to actually contribute value to the internet if not downright im

  • I say... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by GigaplexNZ ( 1233886 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:43AM (#63620720)
    I say ISPs should invest in broadband construction. Because, you know, they own it and make money off it.
  • Already have (Score:4, Informative)

    by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @08:44AM (#63620722)

    Tech companies pay taxes (a little). Taxes were earmarked for investing in national broadband. ISPs pissed away the money and now are complaining they are broke.

    I'd play them a violin but really they don't deserve even that.

  • The only people who contribute to USF are voice telephone customers. The ISPs Internet services are exempted and these clowns want information services providers to pay something they themselves (the actual telecommunications service provider) does not even pay?

    Are ISP lobbying groups proposing ISPs be required to pay additional USF taxes for their Internet services? Somehow I doubt it. If they did the Google's of the world could be paying into it like everyone else when they foot the bill for their upst

  • This question presumes Big Telco does the funding today. If you look closely you see the government subsidies pay for this and Big Telco fails to deliver on every deal.
  • by snowshovelboy ( 242280 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @09:01AM (#63620764)

    Big tech already pays them. What the ISPs and telcos are asking for is another "government fee" that they can put on their bill to obfuscate their billing.

  • IPTV needs to have multicast. I can see NFLST being an big shit show this year with people who don't have good ISP really seeing an big down grade from the satellite service.

  • The broadband companies have plenty of money to pay for infrastructure; they simply need to stop overpaying their CEOs, and stop asking for handouts.

    • They don't even need to do that. The guys crying the loudest all book $3B+ in profit a quarter.

      They need to use that first before they start asking anybody for (more) handouts. Fuck them.

  • The best answer here is stop selling unlimited when its not really unlimited. Its not really unlimited there is a capacity. Make it all metered, but on the sending side. Big tech and big telco both already got what they wanted turning the internet from a network of hosts to a network of clients an servers.

    Both groups suck, and I am happy to play them against each other as a consumer. I would strongly encourage IPS and telcos to charge by the byte SENT (pushed onto their network).

    Big tech with its deep po

  • It's simply amazing that these guys would rather pull a full-on Ferris Bueller rather than just get the job done. This has been going on for decades now with ISPs? I'm still without fiber after 2 money programs that I know of and I'm on a coast not 20 miles from a city. I know this because they send people out after each and then never again. It's like getting your hopes all up and bam, yeah, just not enough interest. The copper wire's been sold and moldered. Run by slumlords with clowncar customer service.
  • by radarskiy ( 2874255 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @10:34AM (#63621018)

    "Big Tech" companies already pay ISPs for their connectivity. I pay an ISP for my connectivity. We're all already paying.

    A "Big Tech" company that I connect to doesn't have a business relationship with my ISP just because I made that connection, nor does their ISP have a business relationship with me. If they have no business relationship, there's no avenue to demand payment.

  • by Pseudonymous Powers ( 4097097 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @10:38AM (#63621032)
    If only there were some kind of public policy in place that dictated that users of a network, or "net", if you will, were required to offer the same terms to each and every user of their network, so that each user would pay their fair share, regardless of their size, income, status, history, or clout. "Neutrality", if you will.
  • The big tech places are building global networks that rival any of the telco backbones. They have points-of-presense everywhere so that they're close to the users. Last mile has been the problem and still is. It actually seems to be getting better, by far. And realistically... I don't need more bandwidth. Even rural America is getting addressed and it is happening through very intelligent means. You have the electric utilities that are using their existing right-of-way to become fiber providers. You

  • by awwshit ( 6214476 ) on Wednesday June 21, 2023 @10:39AM (#63621038)

    Telcos need to check their business plans, they are in the business of providing service to paying customers. Their customers are paying to access "Big Tech". "Big Tech" pays for its own internet access. If ISPs need more money to invest in their future then they can charge their already paying customers more.

    In the old days of POTS phone service, when long distance calls cost a lot per minute, the Telco charged the Calling party and did Called party just had to have its own service but the Called party did not participate in the per-minute fee even though both ends were using the connection. It is the same situation now with Internet access, Big Tech is the Called party and the access is already paid for.

  • How about this? Before you start trying to reach into anyone else's pockets to build your product, why don't you reach into your own 12-figure [cnbc.com] quarterly [charter.com] earnings [usnews.com] instead? Or, if you really need government help building out your networks, why don't you stop your false advertising of "unlimited" when you are oversubscribing and capping unless people pay even more ridiculous prices than we already are? Or stop doing everything you can to prevent people from running their own private servers out of their hou

  • The ISPs need to decide if they are in a for profit business or are offering some kind of public good.

    If you are offering a for profit product you don't get to argue that other people should pay for it because they benefit. OTOH, if you want to argue that internet access is some kind of public good that warrants asking other people for funding then you shouldn't get to claim ownership of the result. It should be owned by the public as a public utility.

    ISPs want to have it both ways.

  • Just a handful of ISPs are responsible for the majority of all internet traffic to major web properties. If the customers of the ISPs weren't so greedy, the big web properties would have significantly lower expenses. It just isn't fair to those web properties that the ISPs are letting their users access the web sites for free.

  • Exactly as we *should* have done with the rails, then let companies rent trackage rights and compete.

    Oh, you libertarians are screaming... then why do you drive on roads built by the government, where trucking companies pay road taxes and compete?

    Explain the difference.

  • The idea that tech companies should pay for ISPs to build bigger pipes would be like saying to the car makers that because they are now building bigger cars, they should be the ones paying for bigger roads to accommodate those bigger cars.

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