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FCC To Eliminate Gigabit Speed Goal, Scrap Analysis of Broadband Prices (arstechnica.com) 59

FCC Chairman Brendan Carr is proposing (PDF) to roll back key Biden-era broadband policies, scrapping the long-term gigabit speed goal, halting analysis of broadband affordability, and reinterpreting deployment standards in a way that favors industry metrics over consumer access. The proposal, which is scheduled for a vote on August 7, narrows the scope of Section 706 evaluations to focus on whether broadband is being deployed rather than whether it's affordable or universally accessible. Ars Technica reports: The changes will make it easier for the FCC to give the broadband industry a passing grade in an annual progress report. FCC Chairman Brendan Carr's proposal would give the industry a thumbs-up even if it falls short of 100 percent deployment, eliminate a long-term goal of gigabit broadband speeds, and abandon a new effort to track the affordability of broadband.

Section 706 of the Telecommunications Act requires the FCC to determine whether broadband is being deployed "on a reasonable and timely basis" to all Americans. If the answer is no, the US law says the FCC must "take immediate action to accelerate deployment of such capability by removing barriers to infrastructure investment and by promoting competition in the telecommunications market."

Generally, Democratic-led commissions have found that the industry isn't doing enough to make broadband universally available, while Republican-led commissions have found the opposite. Democratic-led commissions have also periodically increased the speeds used to determine whether advanced telecommunications capabilities are widely available, while Republican-led commissioners have kept the speed standards the same.

FCC To Eliminate Gigabit Speed Goal, Scrap Analysis of Broadband Prices

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  • No shit, Sherlock (Score:5, Insightful)

    by zooblethorpe ( 686757 ) on Monday July 21, 2025 @09:04PM (#65535794)

    Given the goals of Project 2025 and the expressed intent of effectively gutting any service provided by the federal government to the population at large, this scrapping of FCC policy goals meant to aid the public by constraining corporations from offering the bare minimum of service for the maximum of money, without regard for any other goals whatsoever, falls firmly into the "No shit, Sherlock" category of disappointing but unsurprising news.

    • Re:No shit, Sherlock (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Monday July 21, 2025 @09:23PM (#65535812)

      Orange Jesus: Slow internet is good!

      MAGA: Slow internet is good!

      • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Monday July 21, 2025 @09:52PM (#65535868)

        Orange Jesus: Slow brainz is good!

        MAGA: Slow brainz is good!

        Orange Jesus: I be very stable geeniuz!

        FTFY

      • Maybe he thinks fast internet connections are like dolls, we should get less and pay more.

        “Well, maybe the children will have two dolls instead of 30 dolls. And maybe the two dolls will cost a couple bucks more than they would normally. All I’m saying is that a young lady, a 10-year-old girl, nine-year-old girl, 15-year-old girl, doesn’t need 37 dolls,” he told reporters. “She could be very happy with two or three or four or five.”

        Just s/dolls/megabits/ and I'm sure you

      • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Tuesday July 22, 2025 @01:25AM (#65536112)

        Orange Jesus: Slow internet is good!

        MAGA: Slow internet is good!

        It helps keep the people poorly educated and Trump loves the poorly educated [youtube.com] -- which, ironically, he literally next goes on to say, "we're the smartest people".

      • Sorry kamala lost, my little farm town in southern Kansas with only 2000 people has fiber to every house.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        Orange Jesus: Slow internet is good!

        MAGA: Slow internet is good!

        Slow internet IS good.

        Remember a key Project 2025 goal is to ban pornography. What use is high speed internet but a way to consume more and more pornography? Thus, slowing down the internet is a great way to restrict the use of porn - first by getting rid of videos, then they'll bring us back to the wonderful world of dialup where even images were minutes to disappointment.

        Considering how a key part of Project 2025 wasn't even close to being ac

    • Re:No shit, Sherlock (Score:5, Informative)

      by FudRucker ( 866063 ) on Monday July 21, 2025 @09:27PM (#65535816)
      Yup, enshitification is making great progress since the orange man took power,
    • So.. Are we supposed surprised by this? Why the fuck should we think Trump of all people would care about the internet speeds of little people? A group of CEOs pinch him and says "YO! need you to do this for us we got your back" and that is all the fuck that matters. He will do what they want in turn for them to do something for him personally that is it.
    • Given the goals of Project 2025 and the expressed intent of effectively gutting any service provided by the federal government to the population at large, this scrapping of FCC policy goals meant to aid the public by constraining corporations from offering the bare minimum of service for the maximum of money, without regard for any other goals whatsoever, falls firmly into the "No shit, Sherlock" category of disappointing but unsurprising news.

      Based on how many times taxpayers have paid for a broadband rollout initiative for all, this likely has fuck all to do with Project 2025 and far more to do with cutting funding that ends up in executive pockets instead of broadband connections.

      Stop it. Stop funding ALL of it until the fucking corruption stops. We’ve been watching providers lie to the FCC and take taxpayer money for literally decades. Keep up the Us vs. Them political shitslinging, and idiot voters will give the politicians enough t

    • Any public service that can be privatized and profited-from, they seek to privatize. Regulations that hinder profit, are being eliminated. Good for the business-owner class, not so much for the consumer.

      "If money is speech, the wealthy have a lot more of it than you."

      I think Citizens United was a disastrous decision. Instead of saying only physical persons could contribute to politicians, they went the opposite direction and said any logical construct, union or business, could contribute. Perhaps it was con

      • Most regulation does not accomplish what you think it does. Most government regulation of industry helps protect the existing, large incumbents and places hefty barriers of entry to new comers. While the regulation has some benefits to consumers, it ultimately serves to protect the entrenched, slows innovation, and ultimately stagnates or increases prices because new competition does not enter the market and create either surplus or price pressures.

        I'm not wanting zero regulation, but there's a turning po

        • I'm not wanting zero regulation, but there's a turning point of negative return

          And in between these two points is every regulation that has ever existed.

          Case by case, no more broad strokes "regulations good or bad". Most regulations exist for a reason, you change them without eliminating them.

          have to hire entire teams of lawyers and accountants to understand and audit regulations

          They're likely to get involved in your system as well but for different reasons.

  • https://kdwalmsley.substack.co... [substack.com]

    The first countries to commercialize 6G will enjoy overwhelming advantages over those who are left on 5G protocols and technologies.

    6G represents a 1000-times increase in transmission speeds, with latency falling by similar orders of magnitude. . .

    Much of the developed world is on 5G telecommunications networks, and the race is on now to build 6G. The difference between 5G and 6, is orders of magnitude increases in speed and applications. 1 terabyte per second is a thousand

    • by MpVpRb ( 1423381 )

      Wireless is NOT the answer
      We need fiber

      • by madbrain ( 11432 )

        We definitely need something wired, and if any new investment is going to be made in 2025, it should be nothing less than fiber.

      • Wireless is NOT the answer
        We need fiber

        I can agree with that.

        Wireless communications means being line-of-sight, open to easy interception, greater vulnerability to weather such as towers blown over or hit with lightning, more easily jammed or spoofed, and limited by the available RF spectrum in the area.

      • Why? My house has no fiber. I use 5G Home Internet. It's not perfect; I'd love a faster upload speed. But it works well enough for video calls and streaming. And it will only get better.
    • 5G still delivers only 0.2 Mbps where I live. Will 6G do any better in non-urban environments? I have my doubts. I would take a few Mbps over what 5G can do today, though. Without a wired connection and Wifi AP, I cannot even make any calls. Cell network is unsuitable, as my phone constantly switches between 4G and 5G every few seconds.

    • Porn downloads 1000x faster. Hurray!

    • by Bumbul ( 7920730 )

      I hope you realize that what you quoted from the article is mostly rubbish regarding the technology improvements 6G is bringing? For example latency, 5G has that already well below 10ms (in some applications closer to 1ms to the tower), and now 6G promises several orders of magnitude better?

      Furthermore most of internet latency (tens of milliseconds) comes from the fact that the server you are connecting to is NOT in that cell tower, but far, far away, and in any case, that traffic is going over the fiber b

  • by MpVpRb ( 1423381 ) on Monday July 21, 2025 @09:37PM (#65535832)

    Available is
    Our local ISP tried for years to install fiber in our area and was blocked by the telcos
    They didn't serve out area, but used every dirty trick in the book to make sure that nobody else could serve us
    We don't need any government rules except one. The rule that telcos can't block private efforts to install fiber

    • by madbrain ( 11432 )

      It's not just other telcos. Also electric companies, or whoever owns the poles, or dug the trenches. The regulations we do have are just insufficient. The Telecommunications act of 1996 is very outdated. It was OK for sharing DSLAMs with the ILEC, and not much else.

      • It's the actual regulations that are preventing new providers. The issue is over regulation which protects the incumbents.

    • I'll just leave this here. https://arstechnica.com/tech-p... [arstechnica.com]

    • by Gavino ( 560149 )

      Our local ISP tried for years to install fiber in our area and was blocked by the telcos

      Bespoke fiber is the very definition of vendor lock-in, and should be banned. The last mile should be government-run, and then the telcos attach to standard points of interconnect, and compete together on a level playing field with equal access. This is what they do in Australia, and it has vastly improved telco competition, and eliminated unnecessary and expensive last-mile fibre runs.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday July 21, 2025 @09:59PM (#65535876)
    So that they don't have to think about or confront the consequences of their actions. You can always count on a republican to go running to a safe space whenever they're preconceived notions are challenged.

    Because, and here's the trick, if they don't go running the safe spaces they stop being Republicans.
  • by Mspangler ( 770054 ) on Monday July 21, 2025 @11:08PM (#65535976)

    I'm paying for 100 Mbit, and am getting 90 up and down at 8 PM, (I just checked). When things are draggy it's the server at the other end. What advantage would I get from faster? I have one TV and it's not 4K.

    • by Nkwe ( 604125 )

      I'm paying for 100 Mbit, and am getting 90 up and down at 8 PM, (I just checked). When things are draggy it's the server at the other end. What advantage would I get from faster? I have one TV and it's not 4K.

      We probably don't need gigabit, but we do need a reasonable lower limit to officially be "broadband" and to measure what counts as "Internet being available to everyone". I have a house where the best internet you can get is a dual bonded DSL connection that totals 12MB down and 2MB up. I don't count that as broadband as while its okay for basic video consumption when I am there, it's not enough for video conferencing, and it is certainly not enough for remote security cameras. There are lots of folks where

    • Working from home, as a contractor, so always connected to client via VPN. A contract could be done with a 1MB link because there is about no comm needed, another contract for a broadcasting company required downloading/uploading gigs and gigs of video per day and the gigabit link makes a big difference here.
  • Making America Gre##!!! **@@..... carrier lost

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