Net Neutrality is Live
-
@scottalanmiller said:
But the problem is, once you allow a monopoly, even a private company turns into a form of government. Where does the line go?
We don't allow Monoploy's here. Contracts are only signed with electrical services. otherwise you have a choice for ISP/Phone and cable.
-
@thecreativeone91 said:
@scottalanmiller said:
But the problem is, once you allow a monopoly, even a private company turns into a form of government. Where does the line go?
We don't allow Monoploy's here. Contracts are only signed with electrical services. otherwise you have a choice for ISP/Phone and cable.
Um, those are monopolies. There is only one electrical provider, only one cable provider, only one fiber provider. Those are the very definition of monopoly. The attempt to lie to consumers about it not being a monopoly is so strong that they provide obvious "layers" that make no sense on top of the monopoly to make people believe that they have choice. But there is only one provide. We don't just allow monopolies, we go to insane lengths to support them no matter how crazy it is.
There is no choice in phone, cable, electric, etc. That we are faking it out to hide it just shows HOW strong the monopolies are.
-
@thecreativeone91 said:
@coliver said:
As I stated earlier in the thread municipal broadband has been able to increase customer service, speeds, and bandwidth, at a decrease of price. I don't see any ISP making the same claim.
Do you know the budget and costs in the locality well? if not you can the price is good. as that would only be true if it's an Enterprise fund, a lot of times the projects end up failing and taking money from other income sources to make them work, temporary grants, increased taxes etc. Our local Aquatic center was the same way, especially after VT got involved with it. Enterprise funds, means the project solely funds it's self the income from charging for the service makes more than the costs of providing it and leaves with some surplus.
Where have you seen this fail? Every city I know of to try this has succeeded wildly.
-
@scottalanmiller said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@scottalanmiller said:
There is no choice in phone, cable,
You can chose here. everything here runs off a Fiber OAN from the ISPs/Cable/Phone and then goes to whatever the Boxes they have to convert to their copper lines at the head of the side roads. If you want to pay for the fiber build out you can even get fiber directly to your house off of it but, it costs a lot. and right now is symmetrical connections only.
-
But can you choose different providers? Can you say have AT&T, Verizon or Google depending on who you decide to pay provide that last mile? I know of no market where that is the case.
-
In my area I have two choices for Phone for the last mile: Cox or Qwest. They each have their own wires directly to my house.
But for natural gas, water, sewer - there is no choice. In our case these all come from MUD (Metropolitan Utilities Disctrict).
And power comes from OPPD (Omaha Public Power District).These two are clearly monopolies and operate around here pretty much in the open.
-
@scottalanmiller said:
But can you choose different providers? Can you say have AT&T, Verizon or Google depending on who you decide to pay provide that last mile? I know of no market where that is the case.
There's Verizon, AT&T, Lumos, Cox, Comcast, Citizen's, Shentel, Suddenlink and probally some others.
With them sharing the costs of most of the infrastructure the cost of the last mile isn't as big a deal, and the competition has kept cost down. You can get a 40MB asymmetrical connection for $23.00/month. Comcast is a little more though, but they have better uptime it seems.
The idea was started by a bunch of counties/towns east of me, the localities paid for that OAN there, and provided them better pricing. So a private company decided to do it here and see how it works (plus, they go grants to do it.)
-
@thecreativeone91 said:
There's Verizon, AT&T, Lumos, Cox, Comcast, Citizen's, Shentel, Suddenlink and probally some others.
And they ALL can deliver the last mile? Not just bill you for it like in every other municipality, but actually own and roll out the cables? You could order from all of them and have at least eight different cable plants running cabling to your door separately and with different crews?
-
@Dashrender said:
But for natural gas, water, sewer - there is no choice. In our case these all come from MUD (Metropolitan Utilities Disctrict).
And power comes from OPPD (Omaha Public Power District).These two are clearly monopolies and operate around here pretty much in the open.
Traditional utilities normally do operate in the open. Everyone long ago figured out the obviousness of monopoly needs for physical infrastructure and don't question it anymore. Which they shouldn't because it would be silly to try to have competition for last mile water or power. There is only so much ground to dig through.
-
This post is deleted! -
@thecreativeone91 said:
@scottalanmiller said:
But can you choose different providers? Can you say have AT&T, Verizon or Google depending on who you decide to pay provide that last mile? I know of no market where that is the case.
There's Verizon, AT&T, Lumos, Cox, Comcast, Citizen's, Shentel, Suddenlink and probally some others.
With them sharing the costs of most of the infrastructure the cost of the last mile isn't as big a deal, and the competition has kept cost down. You can get a 40MB asymmetrical connection for $23.00/month. Comcast is a little more though, but they have better uptime it seems.
The idea was started by a bunch of counties/towns east of me, the localities paid for that OAN there, and provided them better pricing. So a private company decided to do it here and see how it works (plus, they go grants to do it.)
Wow.... I haven't heard of anywhere else in the US that has that option you are very lucky. Generally in the US you have two options for broadband access. The second option is almost always partially or wholly owned by the first.
-
@coliver said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@scottalanmiller said:
But can you choose different providers? Can you say have AT&T, Verizon or Google depending on who you decide to pay provide that last mile? I know of no market where that is the case.
There's Verizon, AT&T, Lumos, Cox, Comcast, Citizen's, Shentel, Suddenlink and probally some others.
With them sharing the costs of most of the infrastructure the cost of the last mile isn't as big a deal, and the competition has kept cost down. You can get a 40MB asymmetrical connection for $23.00/month. Comcast is a little more though, but they have better uptime it seems.
The idea was started by a bunch of counties/towns east of me, the localities paid for that OAN there, and provided them better pricing. So a private company decided to do it here and see how it works (plus, they go grants to do it.)
Wow.... I haven't heard of anywhere else in the US that has that option you are very lucky. Generally in the US you have two options for broadband access. The second option is almost always partially or wholly owned by the first.
The idea came from this gov't owned OAN http://www.thewiredroad.net/
-
@thecreativeone91 said:
@coliver said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@scottalanmiller said:
But can you choose different providers? Can you say have AT&T, Verizon or Google depending on who you decide to pay provide that last mile? I know of no market where that is the case.
There's Verizon, AT&T, Lumos, Cox, Comcast, Citizen's, Shentel, Suddenlink and probally some others.
With them sharing the costs of most of the infrastructure the cost of the last mile isn't as big a deal, and the competition has kept cost down. You can get a 40MB asymmetrical connection for $23.00/month. Comcast is a little more though, but they have better uptime it seems.
The idea was started by a bunch of counties/towns east of me, the localities paid for that OAN there, and provided them better pricing. So a private company decided to do it here and see how it works (plus, they go grants to do it.)
Wow.... I haven't heard of anywhere else in the US that has that option you are very lucky. Generally in the US you have two options for broadband access. The second option is almost always partially or wholly owned by the first.
The idea came from this gov't owned OAN http://www.thewiredroad.net/
There was something like this in Rochester, the local universities and hospitals all invested in a fiber loop so they had 1Gb/s access to each other. Then they they negotiated with a few intermediate carriers to get access to the internet. Apparently it made the negotiation process better as they already had the infrastructure in place. If I remember right larger organizations could invest after the fact to become part of it. Although I may be misremembering that.
-
@thecreativeone91 said:
@coliver said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@scottalanmiller said:
But can you choose different providers? Can you say have AT&T, Verizon or Google depending on who you decide to pay provide that last mile? I know of no market where that is the case.
There's Verizon, AT&T, Lumos, Cox, Comcast, Citizen's, Shentel, Suddenlink and probally some others.
With them sharing the costs of most of the infrastructure the cost of the last mile isn't as big a deal, and the competition has kept cost down. You can get a 40MB asymmetrical connection for $23.00/month. Comcast is a little more though, but they have better uptime it seems.
The idea was started by a bunch of counties/towns east of me, the localities paid for that OAN there, and provided them better pricing. So a private company decided to do it here and see how it works (plus, they go grants to do it.)
Wow.... I haven't heard of anywhere else in the US that has that option you are very lucky. Generally in the US you have two options for broadband access. The second option is almost always partially or wholly owned by the first.
The idea came from this gov't owned OAN http://www.thewiredroad.net/
@thecreativeone91 said:
@coliver said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@scottalanmiller said:
But can you choose different providers? Can you say have AT&T, Verizon or Google depending on who you decide to pay provide that last mile? I know of no market where that is the case.
There's Verizon, AT&T, Lumos, Cox, Comcast, Citizen's, Shentel, Suddenlink and probally some others.
With them sharing the costs of most of the infrastructure the cost of the last mile isn't as big a deal, and the competition has kept cost down. You can get a 40MB asymmetrical connection for $23.00/month. Comcast is a little more though, but they have better uptime it seems.
The idea was started by a bunch of counties/towns east of me, the localities paid for that OAN there, and provided them better pricing. So a private company decided to do it here and see how it works (plus, they go grants to do it.)
Wow.... I haven't heard of anywhere else in the US that has that option you are very lucky. Generally in the US you have two options for broadband access. The second option is almost always partially or wholly owned by the first.
The idea came from this gov't owned OAN http://www.thewiredroad.net/
But the city owns the last mile, right?
-
@coliver said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@coliver said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@scottalanmiller said:
But can you choose different providers? Can you say have AT&T, Verizon or Google depending on who you decide to pay provide that last mile? I know of no market where that is the case.
There's Verizon, AT&T, Lumos, Cox, Comcast, Citizen's, Shentel, Suddenlink and probally some others.
With them sharing the costs of most of the infrastructure the cost of the last mile isn't as big a deal, and the competition has kept cost down. You can get a 40MB asymmetrical connection for $23.00/month. Comcast is a little more though, but they have better uptime it seems.
The idea was started by a bunch of counties/towns east of me, the localities paid for that OAN there, and provided them better pricing. So a private company decided to do it here and see how it works (plus, they go grants to do it.)
Wow.... I haven't heard of anywhere else in the US that has that option you are very lucky. Generally in the US you have two options for broadband access. The second option is almost always partially or wholly owned by the first.
The idea came from this gov't owned OAN http://www.thewiredroad.net/
There was something like this in Rochester, the local universities and hospitals all invested in a fiber loop so they had 1Gb/s access to each other. Then they they negotiated with a few intermediate carriers to get access to the internet. Apparently it made the negotiation process better as they already had the infrastructure in place.
Do they own the loop or does Frontier own it?
-
@scottalanmiller said:
@coliver said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@coliver said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@scottalanmiller said:
But can you choose different providers? Can you say have AT&T, Verizon or Google depending on who you decide to pay provide that last mile? I know of no market where that is the case.
There's Verizon, AT&T, Lumos, Cox, Comcast, Citizen's, Shentel, Suddenlink and probally some others.
With them sharing the costs of most of the infrastructure the cost of the last mile isn't as big a deal, and the competition has kept cost down. You can get a 40MB asymmetrical connection for $23.00/month. Comcast is a little more though, but they have better uptime it seems.
The idea was started by a bunch of counties/towns east of me, the localities paid for that OAN there, and provided them better pricing. So a private company decided to do it here and see how it works (plus, they go grants to do it.)
Wow.... I haven't heard of anywhere else in the US that has that option you are very lucky. Generally in the US you have two options for broadband access. The second option is almost always partially or wholly owned by the first.
The idea came from this gov't owned OAN http://www.thewiredroad.net/
There was something like this in Rochester, the local universities and hospitals all invested in a fiber loop so they had 1Gb/s access to each other. Then they they negotiated with a few intermediate carriers to get access to the internet. Apparently it made the negotiation process better as they already had the infrastructure in place.
Do they own the loop or does Frontier own it?
That I don't know. I had a friend who was a sysadmin for the research computing college at RIT he filled me in on some of the details.
-
@scottalanmiller said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@coliver said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@scottalanmiller said:
But can you choose different providers? Can you say have AT&T, Verizon or Google depending on who you decide to pay provide that last mile? I know of no market where that is the case.
There's Verizon, AT&T, Lumos, Cox, Comcast, Citizen's, Shentel, Suddenlink and probally some others.
With them sharing the costs of most of the infrastructure the cost of the last mile isn't as big a deal, and the competition has kept cost down. You can get a 40MB asymmetrical connection for $23.00/month. Comcast is a little more though, but they have better uptime it seems.
The idea was started by a bunch of counties/towns east of me, the localities paid for that OAN there, and provided them better pricing. So a private company decided to do it here and see how it works (plus, they go grants to do it.)
Wow.... I haven't heard of anywhere else in the US that has that option you are very lucky. Generally in the US you have two options for broadband access. The second option is almost always partially or wholly owned by the first.
The idea came from this gov't owned OAN http://www.thewiredroad.net/
@thecreativeone91 said:
@coliver said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@scottalanmiller said:
But can you choose different providers? Can you say have AT&T, Verizon or Google depending on who you decide to pay provide that last mile? I know of no market where that is the case.
There's Verizon, AT&T, Lumos, Cox, Comcast, Citizen's, Shentel, Suddenlink and probally some others.
With them sharing the costs of most of the infrastructure the cost of the last mile isn't as big a deal, and the competition has kept cost down. You can get a 40MB asymmetrical connection for $23.00/month. Comcast is a little more though, but they have better uptime it seems.
The idea was started by a bunch of counties/towns east of me, the localities paid for that OAN there, and provided them better pricing. So a private company decided to do it here and see how it works (plus, they go grants to do it.)
Wow.... I haven't heard of anywhere else in the US that has that option you are very lucky. Generally in the US you have two options for broadband access. The second option is almost always partially or wholly owned by the first.
The idea came from this gov't owned OAN http://www.thewiredroad.net/
But the city owns the last mile, right?
No idea who owns the last mile.
-
@thecreativeone91 said:
No idea who owns the last mile.
Oh, okay. It sounds like this is a case where the city owns the last mile, breaking the necessity of monopoly. This is exactly what I am a proponent of. The city needs to own the last mile so that you can have competition for the NOC. But the last bit of the route, the final router and physical hookup have to be the municipal ISP, even if you never deal with them or are told that they exist.
-
@Dashrender said:
@doyle.jack said:
@Dashrender said:
The problem with comparing current Cable to Internet is that the bit for your cable service are NOT coming to you over the internet.
Agreed. Which is where the buffoon completely lost me.
@Dashrender said:
That connection is not an internet connection, so who in their right mind would think that this private connection would be regulated by these new laws?
Mark Cuban.
lol - apparently.
I think you are missing the bigger picture. Private cable and satellite connections are going to go away soon. It's already been happening they are losing business like crazy. AT&T keeps lowering their prices and offering $150 visa gift cards to get people to sign up and people still aren't signing up.
-
@thecreativeone91 said:
@IRJ said:
@Dashrender said:
I'm trying to figure out how we go from having this managed service Cable TV to a forced condition where TV shows have to delivered no different than say, Youtube? What's going to force this change? simply because they are all digital bits? I call BS.
I buy a pipe to a dedicated service - that service is called cable, and that service does not currently allow me to choose the channels I want. Some how making the internet Title II makes the dedicated connection between my house and my cable provider subject to the Open Internet laws? Please explain that to me. I think this is where Scott got the LAN vs Internet comment before. Your connection to a cable provider for Cable TV is like a LAN, it's all contained, it has nothing to do with the internet. And then there is the internet where I have access to anything anyone publishes to it.
Cable will go away. There is no longer a need for it. That's what he is talking about. With Netflix and Hulu, people no longer want to pay $75 for 250 channels when they only watch 10. Dish TV is actually already working on a service like this.
Cable in it's current form might go away but I don't think everything is headed to on-demand only.. there will likely still be normal broadcast channels just using IPTV over the local ISPs network. Just a different delivery method. Many have actually started doing this.
I am not exactly sure how Netflix pays for their shows, but It seems like they could just make their own channels with shows they already have. Although I believe that traditional channels are obsolete in this day and age.