Speaking as somebody on satellite, and not happy about it, there are two parts to this problem.
Part one is connecting fiber to every house back to some centralized switching station. This part can, and should, be financed and regulated by government in much the same way power lines are.
Part two is what happens at the switching stations -- who controls the service and bandwidth to the homes. This part should be as free and open as possible, and each home should have at least three available services competing for its business.
We seem to lump all of these problems together when we talk about the problem of internet connectivity. I don't know why. Maybe it's just easier that way. But it obfuscates certain parts of the discussion.
For instance, in this story things got very interesting once two suppliers were competing to connect fiber. Why? Because whoever connected the fiber would run the service, ie, have the business. It shows that as things stand, you physically have to be willing and able to take the fiber right into the house to make the current monopolistic providers increase their service.
Where I live we have it much like you describe it. I live in a suburb of Stockholm, Sweden.
I paid for the connection to the house from the street (US$2k). The fibre in the street is owned and operated by the municipality/local government. They also own the local multi-gigabit ring and provide redundant connections to the rest of the net.
Then we have four different ISPs offering IP on this fibre at reasonable prices for "home use":
They also offer commercial contracts. I am paying under $100/month for 10 mbps. You can also get VOIP from the same operators and cable TV over the fibre from four different operators.
I currently have 1x 10 mbps for the company, 1x 100 mpbs for everything else + TV and VOIP. A bunch of fixed IP addresses and capacity to add several more connections in the fibre modem.
I know this is not exactly a rural town, but having the local municipality build the IP infrastructure and let companies sell their services on it has been a great success. The local municipality also owns and operates the local roads, water and sewage system, district heating, waste, as well as the local electricity grid. I can choose who to buy IP and electricity from, but water, district heating and sewage has only one supplier.
That is very interesting, it probably works well for communities where minimal investment is needed (your 2000 US) but in many more rural towns it just falls under.
Such as for the house I am at right now, a well was dug for water a septic tank was dug for sewage power lines and phone lines were extended (most likely from nearby overhead lines) when the house was built. The problem is that fiber is not extended through overhead lines but dug in, and in a place where satellite is the only option I bet would be extremely expensive depending on how far apart houses are spread apart.
I lucked out that low quality dsl was available I don't think I could handle a sat connection.
I cannot disagree more with you. Why do most people only have one choice of cable provider? Because the government gave the cable providers local monopolies.
So we're stuck, until new technology is rolled out that hasn't been denoted to one company.
The best way to manage this problem would be to say that:
1. The individual owns the line from their house to the street (it is managed by their provider).
2. Any provider can run cables on the street (they must share access to telephone polls etc since they get a right of way from the government they must share.
The key is to always keep things free and competitive and not have bureaucrats making deals that hurt everyone in the long run.
That works in valueable markets that are cheap to build up infrastructure - almost everyone in the suburbs of large cities have a choice of DSL vs Cable at least. But it doesn't work in cities where there simply is not the room to let people run cable at will (in NYC it is BRUTAL to get internet installed even something like commercial ADSL or T1 lines are a bitch because of the massive amount of underground infrastructure already). And it doesn't work in areas where it is less profitable becuase the area is more rural. So the government is basically making it more expensive for people in the suburbs to support those in the rural areas so that the economy as a whole is more efficient since everyone will have better access to the internet.
The "bureaucrats making deals that hurt everyone" is a strawman. Why would anyone do something that hurts everyone? Underneith the surface there is a non-obvious reason for a lot of policies but when viewed on a macro scale make a lot of sense. I feel like a lot of anti-government arguements boil down to "I set the limits on the economic value of a government action solely on what it does to my direct taxation and fees", rather than looking at the whole picture. As a programmer is it better to pay a bit more for internet but have a larger market to sell to, or pay slightly less for internet but have significantly fewer customers?
The question becomes - how best can we provide the internet connection people demand in this country for the least amount of money? Somehow running fiber twice in one town and not at all in another doesn't seem like the best position. I think the solution is to make the system completely free market and competitive in a lot of areas where it works, and completely government subsidized areas where the market fails. Half and half in a patchwork fashion across the country is probably the least inefficient method that could possible be derived, yet that is what we have.
Often political decisions are driven by short term concerns with no real idea about the long term consequences and there is no way for an individual to opt out. If a company makes a bad deal, they will eventually go out of business or renegotiate the deal (the other party doesn't want them to go out of business). There is no such constraint on the government, you can see this in all sorts of decisions.
Some examples:
1. Burning crops while people starved during the great depression.
2. Printing tons of money, devaluing the currency.
3. Current Cable Monopolies.
4. Software Patents
5. Never ending copyrights
6. The war on drugs
7. Prohibition
8. All sorts of developing countries that take on massive debt.
9. Paying farmers not to produce
10. Minimum wage laws
11. Maximum hour laws (can only work 35 hours a week)
Just to name a few.
I understand the concept of network effects, but you have to remember to look at what else that money could be spent on -- that is what is truly hard. By subsidizing rural/suburban living we encourage it and thus people waste more time commuting, wasting fuel, increasing traffic, requiring more subsidies (larger roads) and so on.
People need to understand that the market is the worlds most powerful information system -- it instantly conveys the wants/desires/needs of every individual in the world.
By subsidizing rural/suburban living we encourage it and thus people waste more time commuting, wasting fuel, increasing traffic, requiring more subsidies (larger roads) and so on.
Interesting that you would pivot from a pro-market position into a social engineering one. Those two usually don't go together.
Look I've paid for the T-1 line to be ran 200 miles so I could have high-speed internet -- and I did this back when you could count the number of T-1s in my area on both hands. So I don't mind only having those who can afford it pay for it.
But I also understand that this country is huge, and spread out. And I don't want to encourage people to live anywhere. If you asked my druthers, I'd want them staying at home in rural America, on fiber, and living more of the agrarian life that the urban one. But that's not the point.
The point is that the community as a whole has a vested interest in infrastructure: roads, power lines, and communication. It's the same argument as national defense: government does really badly at some things, but there are some things that it's the only effective player to pool resources and common interests. That's not a license for socialism, that's just saying that a piece of wire to every home -- phone, power, or internet -- is a political issue much like how many aircraft carriers we need. If we left it up to individuals to decide the response wouldn't be uniform enough, and uniformity is the one requirement that these attributes need to have.
Communication and electric power aren't like pork bellies and automobiles -- they are extensions of our powers as individuals: our power to innovate, collaborate, discover, and create. Hell, it's more like gun ownership than buying pork-chops at the supermarket. They are a hell of a lot more critical than health care or consumer protection.
I'm absolutely for a maximized free market. But the argument here is that limited communication abilities reduces information in the market, stifles innovation, and limits choices. That's why I chose the greater freedom of universal high-speed connectivity -- not as a government bureaucracy, but as government defining the markets so that all the players meet all the needs.
I'm enjoying this conversation/debate :) Feel free to email me, if the reply delays get too long.
1. All interventions in the market are social engineering, it may not be intentional, but subsidizing/taxing certain behaviors encourages/discourages them.
2. I'm all for getting fiber to every door step. I'm just disagreeing with the approach. There is no reason that individuals couldn't form a co-op, or some other nonprofit, or even for profit company together to provide their internet.
3. I'm going to disagree with the national defense thing on two points.
A. The government's sole purpose is defend your rights, national defense is defending your rights from foreign enemies.
B. The government has a monopoly on force (except for certain self-defensive purposes).
The community has a vested interest in infrastructure, but if you actually look at what goes on with it is ridiculous. The mass pike was supposed to have tolls removed years ago, but through all sorts tricks they manage to keep the tolls. The big dig, also in boston, cost Billions of dollars for a tiny tunnel.
So my final points:
1. Without competition and voluntary interaction we don't actually know what the value of something is -- high speed is important to some, while for others 56k is enough for them.
2. For almost anything people propose the government should do, a private nonprofit could be created to carry out the same task.
3. Organizations and nonprofits are more driven by results than politicsl they don't want to merely show that they're taking action.
4. Nonprofits/Foundations deal with many critical issues that most people don't realize/know about. For example, the Ford Foundation with regards to Russian studies & American foreign policy/defense.
5. It is very hard to compete against the government since they don't have to make a profit, can alter rules to their advantage, and lastly they don't pay taxes :)
I think you're making a case against government intervention in the market, and my argument is that government has a role in defining the market. It's a different concept.
As for government protecting rights -- right on. But this gets to whether you view connectivity as an arbitrary service or product or something else. I think the problem we have is that the old metaphors are not descriptive enough. Access to the computer, the internet, and the electric grid are extensions of my person, not external entities. Of course the amount that I have of these things are dependent on my actions, but access to them should not be.
That's not an argument in favor of the government regulating or providing anything, btw. the market can and should provide value based on need -- once I have free and open access.
Computers and connectivity are extensions of our brains, and should not be controlled, even passively, by government. By ensuring connectivity and processing ability, the government is actually getting out of the way of citizens performing their daily lives, not intruding in on them.
We see the same "bad metaphor" problem with Digital Rights Management. If you view the computer as some sort of super record player that folks plays songs on, then perhaps the government has a say in what happens there? (because it is somewhat of a performance) But if you view computers as an extension to people's brains, as they surely are becoming, then controlling what goes on seems silly at best and evil at worst.
You're making a very common mistake here. If the barrier to entry in a new market is prohibitively expensive then there is no free market, just a de facto monopoly. By having the local government own the infrastructure and then lease the lines to ISPs who provide actual service, you get competitive rates in service while anyone and everyone can use the common lines.
I think there might be a slight miscommunication on time scales. I don't believe that any monopoly, except those granted by the government, can maintain its status as a monopoly forever. I believe that in 10 - 15 years the monopoly will lose its grip on the market. It may still be a major player, but it won't be calling the shots. So there is a barrier to entry, eventually someone will enter the market; unless of course the monopoly is losing money or was subsidized by some other entity in which case those using it are getting a good deal -- it cost more than they spent.
* Because the government gave the cable providers local monopolies.*
This is untrue. I'm not sure which "government" you are referring to.
In most parts of the US, an MSO negotiates with a community government to install and maintain a cable TV service. These contracts are generally NOT exclusive, or are not exclusive for a long period of time.
However, in most areas where the population density is low to moderate, there is not enough market base to support two MSO's in the same area. So while you may think there is an exclusive arrangement, there often is not. In fact, many cities want to lure in more operators to give the citizens better choices and encourage competitive pricing.
I've been personally involved in this sitting on the telecommunications board in previous city ~8 years ago. We had an agreement with Charter, and wanted to get another cable company into the city, but couldn't make it worth their while in any realistic manner.
And as I found out first hand, if the only internet provider in town starts to roll out bandwidth caps, just raise a ruckus until your senator drops legislation on the table banning caps, and then watch your ISP become a sour grape and refuse to roll out DOCSIS3 in retaliation...
Internet really needs to become a public utility operated by the city/state on cost, rather than to line the pockets of greedy corporations...
This argument between left and right often doesn't matter. A true public utility or a true commodity would both be great for the users of broadband. The problem is the corrupt center we have, where an open marketplace was ruined by corporate subsidies.
You don't need six lines connected to your house to deliver various services. It's a natural monopoly the same way having a single water connection is.
Because of that, the physical connection should be provided and managed by the government, or a designated government run corporation as a non-profit. The service carried on the hardware should be serviced by private companies with equal access to the hardware.
Except I am not sure it is destined to become a commodity in the near future because of the sky high capital expenditure required to roll out most forms of infrastructure in most places.
Then you make the last-mile infrastructure a public utility, but allow companies to compete by offering services over it. This sort of arrangement has worked well in other countries (generally with copper phone lines and DSL), and it really represents the best of both worlds. You take the part of being an ISP that's basically a "natural monopoly" (because of extremely high entrance costs and entrenchment) and operate it like a public good, while allowing the private sector innovate and compete over those lines.
The place it normally gets interesting with this approach is where exactly do you put the demark, especially in the FTTN world. Since you are going to most likely want the public utility to own the DSLAMs in areas with low/medium (eg, suburbs) population density, because the area covered by a cabinet is so small (because technologies like VDSL2+ have such a small optimal zone) and rack space in cabinets is normally at a high premium.
You are also going to most likely want the public utility to own the fibre backhaul from the cabinets to a central exchange. Because of port density constraints and the fact that the DSLAM is probably going to need to be managed by the public utility to stop access seekers doing silly things that affect other access seekers customers.
Now the public utility is also going to need some Ethernet switches to split this out to the various access seekers. Then you have issues of regional backhaul etc...
The issues are different again with the PON (Passive optical networks) family of technologies, but you can pretty much swap DSLAM for POLT, though the customer densities change the economics a bit.
With ISPs handling regional level aggregation and backhaul would probably be the optimal level in my mind at this point in time. But it is becoming interesting what the ISPs role really is anymore, once you take such a large amount of the infrastructure management off their hands. Since it would seem to be in between a traditional consumer ISP and an ISP that purely does transit.
Is it really that expensive to string cable? Fiber was laid like crazy all over the country in the late 90s, just not for the last mile. The "last mile" cost is probably all in dealing with the government to get permits and such. In which case government is the problem. They just need to make it easier to build.
I would personally assume that any government-managed utility would have well-defined regulations disallowing that sort of practice. The local power station, for instance, can't say that you're only allowed to charge your cellphone during off-peak hours, or that you have to pay extra for every kWh used by your bigscreen TV.
> I would personally assume that any government-managed utility would have well-defined regulations disallowing that sort of practice.
You clearly don't have much experience with govt.
> The local power station, for instance, can't say that you're only allowed to charge your cellphone during off-peak hours, or that you have to pay extra for every kWh used by your bigscreen TV.
CA does it the other way - they ban devices with certain energy characteristics.
I'll assume that your comments about socialism aren't simply trolling and respond that even in a broadly capitalist system, network infrastructure is effectively a natural monopoly.
Due to physical property issues, it needs public rights-of-way for deployment and maintenance. Also, fixed infrastructure costs are very high and only become cost effective with widespread buy-in and positive network externalities.
It makes no economic sense to build two or more parallel networks side-by-side, with each capturing only a fraction of the potential customers.
As a result, an unregulated telco in a natural monopoly has no competition and minimal market incentives to innovate and improve service. Consumers cannot "simply choose another supplier" because other suppliers wouldn't be crazy enough to sink the necessary huge capital investment into a competing service.
In general, the options to deal with this situation are:
* Public ownership and/or administration.
* Regulated monopoly with mandatory service quality benchmarks and profit reinvestment requirements.
* Introduce competition by forcing telcos to offer wholesale service to resellers.
* Introduce competition through public investment in parallel facilities.
* Introduce competition by allowing network service providers to leverage their networks to offer different services (e.g. cablecos offering telephony, telcos offering streaming video).
The perception, rightly or wrongly, in the rest of the world is that in the USA people go "OMG !!! IT'S SOCIALISM !!!! AAARRRGGGGHHHHHHHH !!!!"
Nowhere else have I come across people who dismiss ideas by saying - Oh, that's Socialism - and seem to think that that's enough.
Game Theory says that mixed strategies are almost always (in the technical sense) the best, so the instant dismissal of ideas simply being they have a flavor of socialism seems stupid, and yet it seems that it's the instant reaction of many, many people in the USA.
I could be wrong, it might not be the case, and it's interesting to see that the perception from outside the USA might be wrong.
What you'll find if you get into more detailed discussion with public-utility internet before dropping the socialism bomb is that they're usually advocating a hybrid model: municipality builds out the pipes and then isps compete on actually providing internet service.
You're right about the loudmouths here, but it'd be a mistake to let your sense of public sentiment be overly colored just by volume.
Calling something socialism here is a pretty good debate hack, like calling someone racist or anti-semitic or whatnot; it's enough of a social taboo that the so-accused will usually feel compelled to defend themselves against it, thereby derailing the original course of discussion...this is a good strategy for winning unrefereed debates.
Really? I just laugh when I hear someone talk about Socialism in the US. We have been Socialist for years. Ever drive a car on the road? Did you buy the road? Did you pay a company for a subscription to the road network?
No, it's all paid for by the government. That, my friend, is Socialism. And it's a good thing.
(Actually, it's a bad thing; if people had to pay the full cost of using the road network, it would be a lot easier to get people to take public transportation. But I am just saying it's clear that Americans have nothing against Free Stuff From The Government, even if that Free Stuff is paid for with tax dollars.)
Actually, most of us do pay for access to the roads, in the form of vehicle registrations, driver's licenses, and tolls. On average, I pay about $600-$700 every year just to drive on the public roads.
The fact that the roads are owned by state and local governments does not inherently make them socialist.
The perception, rightly or wrongly, in the rest of the world is that in the USA people go "OMG !!! IT'S SOCIALISM !!!! AAARRRGGGGHHHHHHHH !!!!"
This is true, but only because most of the people decrying "socialism" don't understand that many of the things they support are also socialist. Both the right and the left are already fairly socialist in the US; Norman Thomas, who ran for US President on the Socialist Party ticket a bunch of times in the early 20th Century, was asked why he wasn't running again at one point and replied that the Republicans had embraced all his major platform points, and the Democrats were already beyond that, so he'd accomplished much of what he'd set out to do. I can't find this in a minute of googling, so maybe it's apocryphal.
In any case, socialists on the right were discredited effectively everywhere by WWII, and in the US, socialists on the left were discredited by the collapse of the Soviet Union around 1990 and/or the (perceived?) near-collapse of Britain in the 1970s.
In fact you are wrong socialism can never work because it doesn't have proper price signals. There's an excellent paper: Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth that details this problem from the 30s.
Also, it is very hard to have a mixed plan because eventually one will exploit the other. Game theory is great and all, but most of the time I don't think it applies to multiple trials -- which is what the real world is.
I forget the term, but the current system is government and corporations teaming up to screw the citizens. It's basically the opposite of communism. It's not capitalism because competition is outlawed.
The first truth is that the liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to a point where it becomes stronger than their democratic state itself. That, in its essence, is fascism—ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power.
In large parts of the USA, there is only one (or fewer) decent Internet providers. It's hard to let the free market decide when there is no real competition.
That tells me there is a huge market waiting to be tapped by the right company. 20 years ago there were barely any cell companies and now people (and phone companies) are dropping their land lines left and right.
Up here in Burlington VT there is about to be some heads rolling on how the gov handled the gov run phone/internet company.
There are multiple competing cell networks because it's relatively inexpensive to set up a cell site, compared to running wires to everyone's house in the same area.
If this wasn't the case, you'd have a dozen pairs of copper phone wires and as many cable TV coax lines running into your house, all by different companies -- those industries have existed for far longer than the Internet has, and have traditionally been ridiculously profitable. That you don't have more than one telephone line and one cable line is a strong indication that last-mile infrastructure is a natural monopoly. Whoever gets to your house first basically owns you.
It is also far less expensive to drop a few new cell towers (or lease space on competitors' towers) than to go through the gigantic, expensive process of laying new cable/fiber.
"[T]he right company" is basically guaranteed my money.
I can't even imagine what 50MB must be like. The fastest connection I can get here in Georgia is 1.5MB ADSL that costs $35/month (plus phone service, no naked DSL offered) and stops working every time it rains.
In capitalism people are supposed to have choice. I'm not American either, but from reading HN for a while I gather that this does not hold for ISPs in many areas of the US. So basically what they have in those cases is a state-granted fiefdom.
And the solution of course is not to have the state run it. It's to introduce competition.
While competition is generally a Good Thing, there are times when it doesn't make sense to waste a lot of effort through duplication.
How does anyone benefit by having two or three equally-slow internet connections into their house (say over copper phone wires, coax, and BPL), rather than having one much faster connection (fiber)? All the money spent duplicating parallel infrastructure could potentially be spent making a single more robust network, one that gets upgraded more frequently.
It doesn't make much sense to force each would-be ISP to drag lines out to their potential customers' houses; once customers have a connection, a second one is just waste (unless there's some way to use both at once, but there generally isn't and most people couldn't afford to anyway due to the way they'd be priced -- each ISP has to recoup the cost of its own infrastructure).
The better way, and the way that actually fosters more competition where it counts, is to have a good, shared, high-speed infrastructure that all providers can operate on and which is made available to all on non-exclusive and non-discriminatory terms.
I think the proper vehicle for these sorts of things are public-private partnerships, similar to the way that transportation projects have been handled for years. (Ex. both the Erie Canal and the NY State Thruway were done by public/private partnerships, called "Authorities" in NY state parlance.) This provides a degree of isolation between the day-to-day management of the infrastructure and the machinations of the political process, and also discourages wasting of taxpayer funds, or raiding of infrastructure funds for other projects. The state might support a project via bond guarantees, but could reasonably expect it to stand on its own (and operate as a non-profit) from then on.
That strikes me as a compromise solution which is likely to produce the most competition where it actually benefits users.
> In capitalism people are supposed to have choice.
Yes - but nowhere it's stated that the choice must be between immediately comparable services.
The alternative choice they have is to go build their own ISP. But, such a venture is difficult, expensive and risky, and thus wasn't deemed a better option than sticking with the current offering. Until the municipality came around and forced the citizens to undertake the venture.
Things like this where the costs are dominated by the need to build lots of infrastructure before you can even sell to your first customer are naturally uncompetitive, and even may be natural monopolies. Without significant competition private companies will generally perform worse (as far as the consumer is concerned) than government.
This is certainly not Socialism, as the use of government to provide services that individuals and businesses cannot efficiently provide goes back thousands of years, well before Marx started writing.
Ideally, people should be able to choose another provider. Unfortunately, the many of the ISPs in America exhibit monopolistic tendencies. What you call "effective Socialism" is just encouraging competition, like the article says.
People in big cities usually have a choice of ISPs, but in rural towns, often there is only one "high-speed" ISP. It's kinda a sad state of affairs. I've recently gained a very interesting view, as I'm currently living in Japan. I'm American born though.
In the US many essential services work this way. Taxes pay for fire, police, roads, water, etc. Electricity & telecom are heavily regulated. Originally this started as a way to get coverage in rural areas. The government setup a non-compete franchise wherein a provider would agree to cover rural areas (even at a loss) but their exclusive rights would allow them to recoup costs. That alone wasn't a bad idea -- the US's adoption of electricity, telephone, and cable TV outpaced the rest of the world. This however is where it should have ended. Instead the exclusive coverage agreements mostly continue to this day. In spots where local government has decided to open competition the incumbent providers have such an overwhelming advantage that most smaller providers fail quickly but usually no one bothers trying. It's too capital intensive.
If it's too capital-intensive to compete, then I'm having real difficulties with your argument that "this... is where it should have ended." Having grown up out the boonies, I have to say that I really appreciated my access to electricity and telephones.
It is. It's an all too common knee-jerk reaction in well-off western societies that when something doesn't go exactly your way, call for politicians to fix it with force. And politicians are all to happy to oblige.
In Britain, back in the early 80s when British Telecom was operated on cost, and not lining the pockets of greedy corporations, it would take weeks or even months to have a single phone line installed.
One data point is a good example, but hardly a good way to back up an argument. I will concede that I'm unaware as to whether any serious analysis has been done of the efficiency of publicly-run corporations vs. privately-run corporations in first-world, democratic countries, but nearly any data set can be cherry-picked for evidence to support any view.
Arguing that all (or the great majority of) public organizations are wildly inefficient on the basis of i) philosophy, and ii) examples, is like arguing that all (or the vast majority) of governments are dictatorships because back in the 80's, Romania was one.
The argument made, was that a service will by default be better when profit for the owners is no longer a factor. This is largely a philosophical argument, even though it's framed practically, so I will counter it philosophically;
The argument fails to incorporate some very basic and well understood market mechanism. A company whose products consumers are forced to buy (either because they are subsidised or because they have a government-enforced monopoly) are less inclined to invest and take risks in development. Why take a risk when people are already buying what you have today and can't go anywhere?
Another factor is political interference and the ensuing ICan'tBelieveItsNotCorruption. What happens when the pipes clog up before there's budget for increasing bandwidth because more people than expected are downloading and seeding torrents? Is the memo that says that it's mostly porn and piracy anyway, and we can just block the ports going to be ignored over pumping money in new bandwidth? To help people get porn? Protect the children, save money and get re-elected -- all in one firewall.
Yes, absolutely, a government run business can be more efficiently than a private one, and sometimes if can get some infrastructure in place where it simply isn't practical for for private actors to work. But it's never because they don't have to make money for their owners.
As I understand it, some ISPs have a legal monopoly as the only Internet service utility company allowed to operate in an area (similar to how other utilities such as power and water work).
Almost every single industry in america is oligopoly and defending oligopolies with the free market capitalism argument is completely illogical and unfair.
If companies (private or state owned) are making huge profits at the cost of tax-payers money, then capitalism or socialism doesn't make any differences...
rather than to line the pockets of greedy corporations
What do you have against lining the pockets of greedy corporations? If there was no profit in it for them they wouldn't be doing it at all and you'd have no internet connection - or almost anything else.
Yes, and if the Internet wasn't a public works project to begin with the greedy corporations wouldn't have anything to do at all and you'd have no internet connection.
In my situation, I used "greedy" and "lining pockets" because Time Warner Cable reported record profits from broadband internet service in 2008, and then proceeded to announce the introduction of bandwidth caps that would force many users to pay more every month to get less from their service. In effect, TWC was abusing their city-granted monopoly position to squeeze citizens rather than use their record profits to further invest in their infrastructure.
Being surprised when a company maximizes profits is like being surprised that water runs downhill.
If we want them to invest in infrastructure rather than pay out dividends, we should figure out a way to make the infrastructure investment be the profitable (i.e. greedy) choice. Which is sort of the point of the article; by introducing competition that threatened to take away the incumbent ISP's business, they were forced to invest in infrastructure that they otherwise wouldn't have built.
It's a waste of breath to use loaded, emotional words in reference to big companies; they are the closest thing that exists in the economy to perfectly rational actors. If we, as a society, don't like the outcomes they're producing, the solution is to modify the competitive landscape so that the desirable outcomes are produced, not rail against the companies themselves as if they ought to care about things besides profit.
It's not surprising; it's frustrating and abusive. I'm not blaming them for acting like a company; I'm blaming the conditions that allow them to become abusive monopolies with no incentive to invest in infrastructure.
Well, that's fair. And FWIW, I agree with you. But my frustration isn't with companies or corporations, it's with the cavalcade of idiots theoretically responsible for regulating them and generally structuring the market to produce desirable outcomes.
That's where our collective ire ought to be concentrated. Whenever someone starts railing about the evils of corporations, it's generally a (conscious or unconscious) distraction from the true culprits: regulators or overseers who aren't doing their job.
What we have here is a classic case of barriers to entry.
Instead of turning to the government to provide the service (which will result in a sub-par service with no chance of recovery) we should look to innovate and wield new technologies to overcome the barriers and give the greedy corporations a run for their money.
Competition is the answer, not government intervention.
So, before everyone goes off on how it's only big business that's preventing great, high-speed internet, there are municipalities in this country that do run their own cable company.
That's a perfect example. Town owned and operated and it offers service up to 10Mbps for $50. More expensive and slower than the internet offered in many surrounding places. Oh, and they have a monthly data transfer cap that makes Comcast look good. At $40, you only get 75GB of transfer.
I think it's wonderful if municipalities want to try and roll their own competitors to commercial cable/phone/internet companies. However, it isn't all roses. It's expensive to build and operate and you need to get enough capacity to the internet to serve everyone's speeds.
The threat might have been better than actually building it.
The bandwidth cap sucks, but compared to DSL, that's a great deal for 10MBps. In Cambridge, MA we were paying Speakeasy more than that for 1.5MBps.
<rant topic="speakeasy">
It turned out to be terrible, but our contract locked us in for a year... and we moved to a new town in 10 months.
Free markets are great, contracts are fine, but in our situation, we simply didn't have any competitive options to choose from. Also, the assumption of "perfect knowledge of the marketplace" was violated because we didn't know how severely non-premium the service would be.
Speakeasy happens to be the worst ISP I have dealt with -- ever. Their support were competent, but customer service was terrible. They had a system-wide outage during the US Inauguration ceremony. Their prices, as I already mentioned, were very high, but we agreed to the contract under the assumption that we were paying for premium service.
In contrast, I can't say enough good about sonic.net, which is a California Bay Area ISP. I'm currently very satisfied with Teksavvy, who are an Ontario ISP.
Speakeasy, though... Avoid them. It's the free market in action. If you're in MA, and specifically in the Boston area, be aware...
I think that's a good argument for why municipalities ought to, at the very most, maintain the bottom-layer infrastructure itself and not try to actually operate services over it.
Somebody in Shrewsbury probably thinks the services and price structure they're offering is reasonable, but that "somebody" probably doesn't have the knowledge of the market or interest in making the ISP a success that an entrepreneur would.
As I said in another comment, there are good arguments in favor of publicly-maintained roads, as an alternative to having multiple parallel toll roads, all poorly maintained; but there are also good arguments why the government doesn't own all the vehicles or operate all the services that run on top of those roads. A government-run trucking company would likely be rather unpleasant to do business with.
Add telecommunications companies to universities, hospitals, mercenaries (Halliburton) and banks as private institutions that receive government money and/or monopoly protection in order to avoid both market competition and public oversight. I continue to think that this is the central problem with the U.S. system at this moment in history.
It would ideal if the government bundled fiber and power lines together and restructured both grids at once. Two birds with one stone. However, this is probably unlikely.
I have to laugh at the idea that 20Mbps is slow. I just got upgraded to 16Mbps (from 2Mbps) and still can't believe I can download a full HD movie in 30 minutes.
Heh. I have, at nominal, 16Mbps. During peak times, though, it drops like a rock below that to even being intermittent - Google Talk and AIM will drop every couple of minutes. Our cable node is seriously overloaded, and Cablevision isn't doing a damn thing about it. Over the summer everything was pretty reliable, but then a bunch of new students moved into the 'hook and it plummeted. I can get 16Mbps - if I'm lucky - at 4am, and sometimes 8Mbps throughout the day. But from 7 to midnight or so, it's impossible to even browse the web.
Part one is connecting fiber to every house back to some centralized switching station. This part can, and should, be financed and regulated by government in much the same way power lines are.
Part two is what happens at the switching stations -- who controls the service and bandwidth to the homes. This part should be as free and open as possible, and each home should have at least three available services competing for its business.
We seem to lump all of these problems together when we talk about the problem of internet connectivity. I don't know why. Maybe it's just easier that way. But it obfuscates certain parts of the discussion.
For instance, in this story things got very interesting once two suppliers were competing to connect fiber. Why? Because whoever connected the fiber would run the service, ie, have the business. It shows that as things stand, you physically have to be willing and able to take the fiber right into the house to make the current monopolistic providers increase their service.