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My building recently got wired up with a local ISP taht is offering gigabit fiber for... $25/month.

AT&T Fiber or Verizon Fios will tend to start at $60-90/month as an "introductory" price where your bill just keeps going up $10-20/months every yera unless you go through the dance of calling up and threatening to cancel every year. So you could be paying $140/month when a new customer is being charged half that.

Chattanooga, TN has long been known for its excellent and affordable fiber Internet [1].

We know what works: it's municipal broadband not national ISPs. We've known this for a long time but we somehow refuse to recognize it, in part because national ISPs have successfully bought and paid for legislators to create a moat through things like onerous regulation or outright banning of building muncipal broadband.

But why is this so? It's economics and incredibly simple. You see when a town or city or county owns the Internet infrastructure, you've removed the profit motive. Put another way, the workers own the means of production.

When you have a national ISP, some pension funds and shareholders own the means of production. And what do they demand? Ever-increasing profits. And how do profits increase? By raising prices and cutting costs.

There is absolutely no reason Internet access should cost $100/month.

And we see this same pattern play out in every market. It's the end state of capitalism.

[1]: https://epb.com/fi-speed-internet/



I live in the SF Bay Area where Sonic offers 10Gbit connections for $60/month. They’re a medium sized local provider with excellent support and great prices, and they’re making money doing it. If “economy of scale” were uncapped, Comcast should be a fraction of that price.


I miss Sonic and DSLExtreme. There's only Spectrum (Charter) and GVEC here.


Did they raise prices or is it location based? I pay 50




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