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Baby Bells Victorious Over Sharing Rules

An Anonymous Coward sent in somewhat troubling news for people who like high-speed internet access at reasonable prices: the Baby Bells have won their legal challenge of FCC rules requiring them to accomodate competitors providing high-speed internet access. The FCC has already been moving toward this on its own (the FCC is headed by political appointees appointed by the President), but this court decision will accelerate it: neither the current FCC nor the courts are going to stop the Bells from squeezing out their competition. There's a CNet story and the decision is online.

311 comments

  1. Appointees of the President by smyle · · Score: 1
    the FCC is headed by political appointees appointed by the President

    Yeah, that d*mn president. If it weren't for that un-elected president, everything would be soft and pretty, the Sept. 11 attacks wouldn't have happened, and all the geeks on /. would have gotten laid by now.

    I'm not saying I approve of everything GWB does, but give it a rest, already.

    --

    Sleep is just a poor substitute for caffeine, anyway. -Bob Lehmann

    1. Re:Appointees of the President by Zelet · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You are right. Sept. 11 would have happened but W is taking advantage of his "mental immunity" for everybody trying to be patriotic and so nobody is questioning his policies or politics (Iraq, Enron) when they very well should be scrutinized. But worse yet, it isn't just Bush that is doing this. Congress, RIAA, MPAA, and Microsoft are all using the terrorist attacks as shields of their messed up policies. Everybody is pushing for copyright laws and pro-DMCA because "terrorists" are the ones who crack programs. Also, according to Microsoft, the anti-trust case is taking resources away from the investigation of the attacks. Of course this is all bogus, but nobody of power and influence is saying anything because then the Republicans will label them as anti-American.

      Hopefully, this phase of trust in our government will pass and we can get back to criticizing them when they do something stupid.

      --
      ...And when they came for me, there was no one left to speak out for me." - Martin Niemoeller (1892-1984)
    2. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The unelected thing.... man that ticks me off, the "Full Recount" in Florida that gore argued would have had him win... well, it was done after the fact. guess who won? (if your too stupid to figure it out, it was Bush)

      Still though I hear that every time a democrat talks about Bush I hear that line. And it'll never die either. Ignorance knows no end, and the Liberals tend to stick to what they believe regardless of what facts show.

    3. Re:Appointees of the President by billstr78 · · Score: 0

      I get the sick feeling that Dubbya is just greasing the palms of all the buisiness men who helped put him in office. He is treating his duty as President like a big payback/kick-back session. It's too bad the Open Source community did not fund is campain, then things like the DMCA may have never passed.

    4. Re:Appointees of the President by delcielo · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Liberals tend to stick to what they believe regardless of what facts show.


      That's not limited to liberals, though I agree with the current thread.

      --
      Hot Damn! It's the Soggy Bottom Boys!
    5. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hehe true, shoulda said morons instead =)

      I hold up for example senator Brownback (from my home state of kansas) who is about to start gumming up the congressional works because they wont ban human cloneing (thats just wrong! who will save the Jedi if we cant make a clone army?)
      He is threating to start adding his cloneing ban to every bill that passes in front of him unill congress passes it along with one of the other bills.

      Ive said for years what this country needs isint the Line Item Veto, but a law stateing that congressional bills can only deal with ONE subject each. (that woudl strip 90% of pork in one fell swoop)

    6. Re:Appointees of the President by nexusone · · Score: 1

      Both parties took money from Enron, have of Clintons staff after he left office went to work for them!!!

      --
      Wise men speak because they have something to say, Fools because they have to say something!!!!
    7. Re:Appointees of the President by bofkentucky · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sorry, wrong answer, the DMCA passed under the previous administration.

      --
      09f911029d74e35bd84156c5635688c0
    8. Re:Appointees of the President by smyle · · Score: 1
      On the other hand, Brownback is vehemently against the SSSCA/CBDTPA/anything-Hollings-proposes.

      Just a note from a fellow Kansan.

      --

      Sleep is just a poor substitute for caffeine, anyway. -Bob Lehmann

    9. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. It's odd. When was an apointee not really a political move? If the FCC were moving towards the alleged more competitive rules, some would cite these as "liberal" movements. Heck, if the president was Gore and these rules were approved, on a conservative medium, they'd be comments about the business destroying democrats stinkin' political move.

    10. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhhhh, you must not read /., or have short memory, or just wantonly biased (what's new). The DMCA passed under Clinton. As did COPA. Likewise, Hollings, the sponsor of the CBDTPA, is a Democrat.

      The reality is that BOTH PARTIES get their palms greased. Gore, Clinton, W, Cheney....all have.

      Also, funding has nothing to do with it. Voting does. Organization does. Open Source does not. Something like 60% of available voters in the US did NOT vote in the last presidential election.

    11. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually i'm of the opinion that 11 sept might not have happened. GW got in office and proceeded to piss off every country. our friends as well as enemies. and now with the stories of just how much the whitehouse knew, well i feel stronger with my sense of "it's all bush's fault"

    12. Re:Appointees of the President by exploder · · Score: 1

      Just because Bush would have been elected had all the votes been properly tallied doesn't mean he was elected. He wasnt.

      --
      Yo dawg, I heard you like the Ackermann function, so OH GOD OH GOD OH GOD
    13. Re:Appointees of the President by arfy · · Score: 1

      I realize you're trying to be sarcastic, but:

      GWB may be legal, but he wasn't elected. Well, maybe by five votes on their Supreme Court but not by their voters.

      September 11th may or may not have happened, but it would have been a lot less likely -- the Clintonistas managed to repel at least a couple of attacks while the Commander-in-Chief was getting blowjobs from that fat intern so there's at least some truth to charges of the Bushites being asleep at the switch.

      It wouldn't be soft 'n' pretty but their economy wouldn't be as far in the tank because the U.S. tends to run better when the president and congress are in the hands of different parties and they can't pass paralyzingly costly packages to deplete their budget.

      And the slashdotters who aren't getting laid? Too obvious a punch line to point out who they're going to be getting it from.

      P.S. Mike Powell IS an appointee of GWB and IS administering virtual Monicas to the Baby Bells and other potential contributors until they bring forth their "donations". Ah, the wonders of the legal bribery of the U.S. electoral system! Don't like the way the current laws are rolling? Convicted of abuse of monopoly? Be a big donor and Get Out Of Jail Free! (or at least be able to say to the judge with a straight face that the penalty would have a negative impact on your business model -- isn't that what a punishment is supposed to do?) The U.S. is adjacent to Mexico in more ways than one these days...

    14. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you misspelled your username, it's z-e-a-l-o-t

    15. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both parties took money from Enron

      That is so misleading. Repablicans took 7-10 times more money than democrats. You cannot just imply that they were all equally bought by Enron.

    16. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Who started the court battle?



      The loser.



      The rest follows from there.

    17. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop calling others "ignorant" because lots
      of people are reading your own post and find you
      ignorant as well. Almost everyone tends to stick to
      what they believe regardless of what the facts show, that is part of
      human nature.

    18. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well, then, who was?



      Please, don't keep us waiting any longer!

    19. Re:Appointees of the President by ttyRazor · · Score: 1

      there's evidence that sept. 11 was planned well before bush was even nominated, and its doubtful they would've called it off if gore was elected. If Clinton's attempt to attack al Qaeda hadn't been dismissed as a distraction from the Lewinski scandal, THEN manybe things would have turned out differently

    20. Re:Appointees of the President by Archfeld · · Score: 2

      err it said the president, NOT which president.
      and c'mon you are right it is not GWB's fault, he would have to have an IQ slightly higher that 87, AND actually be in charge. Neither of which he qualifies for. I'd say Cheney qualifies as 'handler' and someone with CIA contacts is still in charge...

      --
      errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
    21. Re:Appointees of the President by Requiem · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but ten thousand votes given four million overall is well within the statistical margin of error.

    22. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is so misleading.

      60% of the Enron contributions went to Democrats.

    23. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot.

    24. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You talk about it like it's some kind of personal corruption on his part - that, Billstr78, is about as mistaken a view as the opinion that the Bush administration is not stepping over the bounds of ethics and clean government proceedure to confer blessings on big business interests.

      the short version: look up Whiggism. Esp, the decay into Toryism.

      the longer version:
      They most certainly have been pimping their level best for Enron (Enron, dynegy, Williams, Duke power et al.) and Arthur Andersen and Xerox. They have broken the rules for Mining Co.s, big Coal, GMFORDDAIMLERCHRYLSLER, and let's not forget delivering Afghanistan for UNOCAL and Enron, but there is no monetary quid pro quo as you and others allege at the heart of this. Not even the "legalized bribery" of campaign contributions. George W. Bush does not consider himself in the back pockets of these interests - not in his worst nightmares.

      Can you guess why? It's important that you understand the distinction between a pol on the take, who knows he's selling out his constituents and the very different motivational basis of the current regime.
      Every single dime George W. Bush has ever made has been a bribe. A favor from one rich and powerful person to the son of another - or more properly speaking, his father. Look up the history of Arbusto Oil and Harken energy and his association with the Texas Rangers if you don't believe this. You have to ask yourself this: how would our President know the difference between bribery and honest pay? How would I know if I were he? I mean this literally, not as any kind of snide joke. He has no life experience working for any other kind of pay, except perhaps as the governor of Texas, which didn't involve either much pay or much work. Filial loyalty and his self interest as a certified halfwit both mandated his acceptance of the stream of cash that came his way. Now in that germinal narrative you can see the reason why nothing his administration is doing is morally corrupt, at least not in the manner you seem to be thinking of.

      They aren't doing it for the money. Not their own wallets anyway. They're doing it out of loyalty. All those 5 and 6 figure salaries George W got for doing nothing on the boards of failing oil companies were favors from people who wanted to demonstrate their friendship and loyalty to his father. It was all between social acquaintances and friends. George W got the payback if we must use that concept, over the entire 55 year course of his life of extreme privilege. So, it 's not what he hopes to get, but what he has already received that binds him, that has determined his allegiances and has generally molded his character and his views. Duty required him to accept help since he was utterly helpless on his own, (the one social pressure the rich suffer that is akin in painfulness to what the not-rich feel is the pressure not to embarass the family by becoming poor) and he would be a cad not to have accepted a lifelong duty to the people from whom he received all his fives and sixes (5&6 figure stipends). He got it all from members of his own social class (roughly speaking) and that is why you see his adminstration taking care of the interests of people like himself to the contempt of the interests and lives of ordinary people, including the ordinary morons who voted for him. (I said he was stupid not disloyal. He's not President because people voted for him so much as because his People are in the ascendancy and his family is ...in line for succession.)

      As for the rest of us out here in TVland, what did we ever do for him? (Except go to Viet Nam in his place and work on the dangerous oilrigs that made his family money, and defeat the Nazis who made the Bush family's original fortune, and a thousand other invisible services which may be found in historical records, payrolls and balancesheets, but nowhere in his conscience).

      Can you see why people like Bush do what they do? They are being loyal and ethical - towards the people that matter to them and according to the streamlined ethical standards that hold in their social order. We are ghosts in their world, less substantial than air. And you can't be accused of selling out a ghost. When lowermiddle class slobs and trailertrash show up to cheer and vote for him, he doesn't even laugh about them screwing themselves and voting against their own interests. He takes it as a validation of the social order that has brushed aside Utopian meritocracy and egalitarian nonsense put him on top. "See, even the unruly proles recognize the Social Order, and its apex, their King".

      What looks like corrupt government on the outside to you is simply, to his way of thinking, trying to be a standup guy for people who matter and who like to refer to themselves as "representatives of the forces that made this country great" (that is, able to afford to keep idiot man-children like himself in luxury) What those rich corporate friends of his want of course is to own everything that presently belongs to their rich corporate peers, unless they have settled into stable cartels and oligopolies that characterize "mature" sectors of American business. And clearly some eggs will have to be broken to make an omelette that size. They want to change things wholesale without reference to rules that cropped up in the period of say 1865 to the present. Those rules were put in by usurpers acting out their tyrannical dreams under the color of doing the People's Will and protecting the interests of the People. Those ordinary people, though all sweet folk they might be, just AREN'T LIKE THE PEOPLE GEORGE BUSH KNOWS. Not only doesn't he know them personally, like he knows Steve Ballmer personally, or Ken Lay, but as Jack Welch and his sockpuppet Tim Russert will tell you, their ordinary lives are of no particularly great moment in the destiny of the American Empi.. -er- Republic. GE matters. Enron matters. Microsoft matters. These are our leading citizens from whom the Emp... from whom the Republic draws its strength in a world full of foreign dangers (forgetting a moment that they pay income taxes only sporadically as a unwelcome result when something has gone wrong) President George will break any and all eggs for them, since it's their shared political faith that any rule standing in the way of their dreams was erected by ne'erdowells jealous of the success of their genetic superiors. How could he think otherwise? I mean these are the people who have been there for him over the course of his life. He's learned alot of difficult lessons , as he himself says, in his transition from witless wayward youth with a twenty dollar bill stuck up his nose, to witless, wayward adult with a White House pretzel stuck up his nose, and one of those lessons surely has been to love and accept the wisdom of the Hand that has been feeding him all his life. It was already way too late to change when went AWOL from the Texas Air National Guard. He owed too much to the insititution of class privilege from then onwards and the hole would just get deeper.

      He doesn't just owe these people, he identifies himself with their causes as a member of the same aggrieved, put upon, but resurgent minority: the filthy rich and powerful.

      No doubt, if he had made his own way in life he would be far less "tool-like" and servile and smug in his agreement with the Ken Lays and Jack Welches. But then, they wouldn't have selected him as their party's candidate for President either.

    25. Re:Appointees of the President by billstr78 · · Score: 1
      You talk about it like it's some kind of personal corruption on his part - that, Billstr78, is about as mistaken a view as the opinion that the Bush administration is not stepping over the bounds of ethics and clean government proceedure to confer blessings on big business interests.


      Whatever. He does plenty for people he wishes to pay back and pretty much screws over the rest of us in the process. Of course it's not entirely personal, it's the way of high-level government to a degree. I just think there seems to be alot more favors floating around during the last 2 years as apposed to the previous 8.


      Next time AC, I will consult your opinion before posting anything regarding GWB. sheesh.

    26. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I voted for neither Bush nor Gore. Gore won the popular vote. Gore beat Bush by a landslide in my Congressional district, right here in Texas.

      Despite the expressed preference of all the People, Bush is acting like he has a mandate for every crackpot right wing scheme put forward in the last 20 years.

    27. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      the Clintonistas managed to repel at least a couple of attacks while the Commander-in-Chief was getting blowjobs from that fat intern so there's at least some truth to charges of the Bushites being asleep at the switch.

      While I wouldn't comment on the first part of what you said (about Clinton's effectiveness against terrorists) the issue if I may say, is not about a scorecard between different admnistrations at all.
      The facts that we know at this point show a terror threat emerging as Bush took office (legally or illegally -again no comment) different in kind from what we had seen previously.
      Increasing references to the use planned/desired use of commercial aircraft as suicide attack weapons. Surely everyone's heard of the plan to attack the G8 Summit with planes. And the Millennium Plot to hijack and crash 12 airliners out of LAX in 2000. Now this next one you may not have heard about.
      The US military held an exercise in Nov 2000 simulating an airliner crash into ... the Pentagon. And not one year later what happens.
      FBI Field office in Minnesota has a Frnch Algerian member of Al Quaeda in custody with detailed plans of flying airplanes into WTC. He's taking aviation courses and is reported to FBI because he's ALgerian and he doesn't seem to have any interest in either takeoffs or landings. FBI field office goes ballistic but can't get FBI HQ to pay attention....
      WHY?


      Seems one of the first things the incoming Bush Administration did wrt the functions of the FBI was to tell them officially to lay off investigating Bin Laden's brothers in Reston Virginia. And Saudis generally.
      Bin Laden family has been a business partner of George Bush the Elder in Carlyle and George Bush the Younger (in Arbusto).
      Like the Powell, Bush(jr, sr.) Cheney, the connections span generations.
      Bin Laden and Bush are practically FAMILY.
      Isn't it funny how you always end up hurting the ones you love?

    28. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who started the court battle?

      The loser.

      That's exactly right. Bush campaign and fla GOP officials began the court proceedings to stop a legal vote recount with repeated pleas for temporary injunctions.
      Thank You for pointing that out.

    29. Re:Appointees of the President by pivo · · Score: 1
    30. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the Clintonistas managed to repel at least a couple of attacks

      You mean like the attacks on the US embassies and the attack on the USS Cole?

      Clearly this is some new use of the word "repel" that I'm not familiar with.

      In fact, Clinton did two things about bin Laden: jack and shit.

      He launched ONE half-assed missile attack, conveniently timed to coincide with one of his (many) court appearances. Other than that, he did squat.

    31. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      He launched ONE half-assed missile attack, conveniently timed to coincide with one of his (many) court appearances. Other than that, he did squat.

      Don't forget that he also managed to seriously piss off Pakistan at the time, over whose territory the cruise missiles flew without airspace permission, which I'm sure didn't do much to persuade the Pakistani government that we were friendly.

    32. Re:Appointees of the President by StevenMaurer · · Score: 2
      The unelected thing.... man that ticks me off, the "Full Recount" in Florida that gore argued would have had him win... well, it was done after the fact. guess who won? (if your too stupid to figure it out, it was Bush)

      Actually, you're wrong twice (I'm not going to call you stupid - this is pretty detailed stuff). First, Gore didn't ask for a "full recount". Gore only asked for a recount in four Democratic leaning precincts. If only these had been recounted, Bush would still have won....

      However... if all votes in the state of Florida were recounted in every county, both Democratic and Republican leaning, including the overvotes (ballots in which the candidate's name is both checked and written in) Gore clearly won. By thousands. It's not even close.

      (The reason is that Democratic voters tend to be new, and make ballot mistakes. Overvoting is a typical one.)

      The media focused on the fact that Gore's selected strategy would have failed to land him the Presidency. But the majority of Florida ballots with discernable intent were clearly marked for Gore.

    33. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes please this I HAVE to hear.

      who is the rightfully elected person, if not the person who was rightfully elected?

    34. Re:Appointees of the President by exploder · · Score: 1

      Bush was basically appointed by the Supreme Court. He didn't win based on vote counts, but rather by virtue of a judicial decision. I don't call that elected. IANAL, so this is more of an opinion than a fact. Heavens!

      --
      Yo dawg, I heard you like the Ackermann function, so OH GOD OH GOD OH GOD
    35. Re:Appointees of the President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WOW! What a intelligent and witty comeback. Sometimes the truth hurts and as usual the Repub/conservative right can only sputter personal attacks.

  2. DSL bumming by guacamolefoo · · Score: 1

    As if DSL wasn't having enough problems, the Baby Bells finally beat the line sharing rules. This is one of those victories that I'm not sure the ILECs really want to have. It's just going to slow broadband adoption (less competition) and allow the Bells to sit on their fat T-1 revenues.

    Ugh.

    1. Re:DSL bumming by martissimo · · Score: 2

      It's just going to slow broadband adoption (less competition) and allow the Bells to sit on their fat T-1 revenues.

      if the Bells sit on "their fat T-1 revenues" too long they will find that their chance of a large market share has been gobbled up by cable, satellite, and wireless. They know better than to let this happen, they just want to make sure that small ISP's can't compete with them (over their own lines at least), and for now they seem to have succeeded

    2. Re:DSL bumming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      READ THE DAMN ORDER!

      The only thing they got was an order requiring the rules to be reviewed. Nothing was thrown out. Morons.

    3. Re:DSL bumming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The only thing they got was an order requiring the rules to be reviewed.

      Any intelligent person knows that means the court doesn't agree with the rules and expects them to be changed.

      Moron.

  3. Anna Kournakova dead at 22 by CofWheat · · Score: 0, Funny

    Tennis beauty Anna Kournakova 22 was found dead at her villa in Ivanov a suburb of Moscow this morning. Initial indications are she died of acute alcohol poisening from a nightlong vodka drinking binge. Her body was found by her sometime boyfriend NHL star Pavel Bure. A distraught Bure said, "We spent the night screwing and drinking vodka straight. Anna had her normal 3 bottles and vomited on me. I then left the villa and went home." An autopsy is pending and nude photos of Kournakova will be posted on internet sites.

  4. Powell's job by ch-chuck · · Score: 3, Funny

    BellSouth, Verizon and SBC Communications hailed the decision as conforming with FCC Chairman Michael Powell's plans for the industry.

    Powell's job must be so easy - just let the market decide! Then take a nap. If anything really important comes up ask Dad in the State Dept, he'll know what to do.

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  5. Anybody but Ameritech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or it's master, SBC......if their DSL is anything like their regular phone service, you better hope nothing goes wrong, and it if is, that it's serious enough for them to actually wanna fix it.Maybe some competition (when it eventually comes) will finally make them get the act together. Of course, right now, it's cable modem--but Roadrunner doesn't have any competition in this market either

  6. sharing & cooperation by EricBoyd · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think companies here in North America still have a lot to learn about cooperation as a method of business. I mean, we have incompatible cell phone standards, lots of proprietary interfaces, etc. The real value in any economy comes from trade - which is basically different things interacting. The more we create closed off little worlds, the worse we do, and yet it seems that's all North American businesses are interested in these days!

    Websurfing done right! StumbleUpon

    --
    augment your senses: http://sensebridge.net/
    1. Re:sharing & cooperation by Stoutlimb · · Score: 2

      "I think companies here in North America still have a lot to learn about cooperation as a method of business."

      I think they know how to co-operate all too well. Just look at the RIAA or the MPAA. Price fixing, ripping off artists... etc.

    2. Re:sharing & cooperation by Orne · · Score: 2

      Last time I checked, you and I live in a Capitalist society, not Socialist...

      Businesses aren't supposed to cooperate, they are supposed to compete, and to the victor goes the spoils. You build a product, I build a product, and the consumer chooses which one they like, and the loser either comes up with a BETTER alternative or goes out of business.

      The problem with modern society is that the losers are refusing to sit down and, well, lose. These cable providers are providing CRAPPY service at high rates, yet you all complain because the little fish might get gobbled by a big fish, a big company who DOES have the resources to provide a standard interface at low bulk prices.

    3. Re:sharing & cooperation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bull. Save your post for the future so can reflect later
      what you wrote when your a teenager. The world does
      not work ithis way at all!

    4. Re:sharing & cooperation by coryboehne · · Score: 1

      I would like to disagree with your comment regarding cable providers, currently I'm on cable in DC, however I seem to get a sustained transfer rate of no less than 144kbps, now if this is crappy (and I assure you it's not, I've had several T1 lines and this is very close if not better, due to the fact that I'm not sharing.) I'd just love to see good.

    5. Re:sharing & cooperation by pivo · · Score: 1
      The problem with modern society is that we've fogotten that that our economic system is in place to serve us, and that we are not here to serve it. The capitalist system is meant to foster competition in order to improve the state of all citizens. If we have a condition in which a single company has acheived a monopoly then competition cannot exist and something needs to be done to fix it. In a capitialist system, no company "wins" for good, when competition stops then capitalism can't function.

      There's nothing socialist about competition, and there's nothing capitalist about celebrating monopolies.

    6. Re:sharing & cooperation by Martin+Blank · · Score: 2
      These cable providers are providing CRAPPY service at high rates, yet you all complain because the little fish might get gobbled by a big fish, a big company who DOES have the resources to provide a standard interface at low bulk prices.

      Maybe you have crappy service, but I find through discussions with friends across the country that the price/performance ratio is highly dependent on local factors. I know of many who cursed Comcast@Home when it was around, and yet I dearly loved them in Orange County, California. Sure, Level I tech support sucked, but in four years I had to call them only twice. Since Adelphia has taken over, there have been some DNS issues, but these have been relatively minor issues, and I still get the same fantastic speeds I have maintained in the last three years at my current address. My supposedly DHCP address even seems to be locked to my account, as well, allowing me to set it as a static IP.

      OTOH, I know Adelphia users in other states who routinely lose connections for several minutes at a time, several times a day, and those are the least of their issues. Much of the performance of a given area has to do with the local network topology and techs, the former of which can vary considerably from region to region and the latter of which can vary by work shift.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
  7. not sharing sux by billstr78 · · Score: 1

    Doh! Just my early 2 cents, but a company with such broad infrastructure that is essentially a public utillity should be required to share with everyone given a reasonable exchange for services or money. It's not like every mom and pop ISP is going to be able to run FIDDI rings around your local neighborhood to provide high-speed access.

  8. Not In Canada by nuggz · · Score: 2

    In Ontario at least you don't have to get your DSL through the phone company.
    In larger areas you can choose from cable or DSL through either hte phone co or someone else.

    1. Re:Not In Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well here in Edmonton this is true, (I can think of 3 providers off hand, but they all share and use the same network infrastructure (Telus).

    2. Re:Not In Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but the last mile is still *ALWAYS* Bell Canada. Actually, I heard there was a lawsuit going in between the Ontario gov't and Bell Canada over this - they give normal commercial customers a 4-hour ticket pickup guarantee, whereas they give CLEC's a 24-hour ticket pickup guarantee. And that's not resolution - that's just when a tech actually picks up the ticket.

    3. Re:Not In Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I have just told Sympatico (Bell's ISP business unit in Canada) that I have found cheaper ISP when they pull a 5G up & 5G down cap and raise the rates.

      The new place gives 20G combined caps at a CHEAPER price than the old price and sell 10G blocks at 25% what Sympatico will sell. They rent the linecard from the same place Sympatico does.

  9. This is why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is why I've gone strictly cablemodem and pcs voice - I refuse to do buisness anymore with the "Bells".

  10. Also Bad News for Free Speech by donnacha · · Score: 3, Insightful


    "...troubling news for people who like high-speed internet access at reasonable prices..."

    It's also bads news for freedom of speech

    Whereas in a competitive environment ISPs can compete for savvy customers by touting their lack of restrictive practices (such as server-side censorship software that eliminates client-side choice), now they'll be more worried about not offending the big-hitters like the Christian lobbying groups who have the Washington-level power to disrupt their cosy monopolies.

    1. Re:Also Bad News for Free Speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're saying that, due to the lack of competition, the ISP's will all install filtering software because they're afraid of "Christian lobbying groups?" I think you're taking this just a bit too far. The public outcry would quickly overshadow any such lobbying power, be it real or perceived.

    2. Re:Also Bad News for Free Speech by bcboy · · Score: 1

      Yeah! Just like all the public outcry when text book publishers started censoring their works to conform to the wishes of Christian lobbying groups, because they couldn't afford to lose the Texas (conservative Christian) market. State-wide contracts in this large state can make or break a publisher.

      Errr.... except there was no outcry, and the text books are still being censored according to the wishes of Texas conservative Christians. Amusingly this includes eliminating text books that mention that latinos lived in the western states before they "became" part of the US. This is considered "radical liberal propaganda" these days. Instead these populations are called "immigrants" in the text books. Uh. Yeah.

    3. Re:Also Bad News for Free Speech by visualight · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that, due to the lack of competition, the ISP's will all install filtering software because they're afraid of "Christian lobbying groups?" I think you're taking this just a bit too far. The public outcry would quickly overshadow any such lobbying power, be it real or perceived.

      The poster didn't describe a direct connection. He described what is likely to happen in a non-competitive environment. And he's right.

      When the customer has no other broadband alternatives the ISP will be in a much stronger position to dictate terms. Also it's one thing to try to coerce a single ISP, quite another to try to exert control over 3 or 5. With one ISP you don't even have to pass legislation to regulate or censor the internet. Just a phone call, "Hi, ISP? This is GW..., yeah, well we'd really appreciate a little cooperation on this issue. Thanks, I knew I could count on you." Filtered content follows.

      --
      Samsung took back my unlocked bootloader because Google wants me to rent movies. They're both evil.
  11. Surrounded by Verizon already by Fastball · · Score: 2
    In Lexington, KY, my only options for broadband are Verizon DSL or Insight cable. So I'm already locked in. I would have dumped Verizon had Insight not changed its cable modem service to DHCP only. That makes hosting from home a lot tougher.

    Fortunately, I've been able to run with a local ISP, QX.net, on top of that DSL line. They're top drawer. Call their office and you get a technically proficient human being. You all know well enough what Verizon is like...

    This sucks, but not as bad has shutting out a local ISP. The day I have to sign up Verizon as my ISP is the day I move to the China moonbase.

    1. Re:Surrounded by Verizon already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hosting at home tougher because of DHCP? Not at all. Try dnydns.org -- dynamic dns for dynamically-addressed servers. I use it and have not missed my old static IP once. There are other dyndns services out there as well, just check them out.

    2. Re:Surrounded by Verizon already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Verizon isn't the only provider in town...

      Mikrotec (local ISP) offers DSL in the Lex area. Can't describe level of service as DSL was only getting started when I worked there.

      *disclaimer - previously a Mikrotec employee and all views expressed are my own...

    3. Re:Surrounded by Verizon already by geektweaked.com · · Score: 1

      i just spent 4 days in lexington, and let me tell you, its not as bad as it seems. i live out in the middle of nowhere, and we don't get high speed service of any variety (save satellite, but that's kinda retarded).

      the girl i was staying with had verizon dsl, and all i could think was "i would kill to have service like this back home"

      sure, they're not perfect, but trust me, ISPs do get much, much worse.

      -c

    4. Re:Surrounded by Verizon already by Agent+Green · · Score: 1

      Just keep renewing your DHCP lease...and it shouldn't expire. I've had my IP for several months now with AT&T.

      I've had to change my IP info with NetSol 3 times...once because my computer was disabled for 3 weeks while I was injured (wrecked my arm, couldn't pull it out of the rack), and twice when the scopes were changed to meet local demand.

      I'd only change to something else if they forced an IP change. :)

      The place where I'm moving to offers static IPs for cable service, so I can't wait for that to get setup!

      --
      // Agent Green (Ian / IU7 / KB1JQO)
      // IEEE 802.3: All 10base Are Belong To Us
  12. guerilla war by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 1
    Just like how 'new napsters' have jumped up in multitudes after the old napster and morpheus were attacked, private wireless networks will sprout everywhere and erode their business by offering users an affordable alternative. This would be like a grassroots guerilla war with users one by one causing small but cumulative damage to the monopolistic baby bell.

    Obligatory Princess Leia reference: "The more they tighten their grip, the more users will slip through their fingers."

    1. Re:guerilla war by alexandre · · Score: 1

      I hope this happen. Now the problem is: how do you get your wireless user to connect to the net?
      within citys it may work fine with guerilla style wireless, but between cities, only telcos have the money to run big installations :-(

  13. For what its worth, Powell's strategy by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Powell's strategy at the FCC has been to basically accept that cable and phone companies have de facto monopolies, and to allow them to work unfettered without having to subsidize their competitors.

    Comeptition is reduced, but it is his opinion that progress will occur more rapidly nonetheless. It is certainly true that PacBell was in no rush to distribute new equipment and services that would enrich Covad (hence the "cancellation of Project Pronto).

    1. Re:For what its worth, Powell's strategy by sky_fire · · Score: 1

      Have you actually been keeping up with some of the lawsuits and crap phone companies are going through or just reading slashdots "evil monopoly" reports and feel informed?

      The phone companies are quickly coming to the conclusion that DSL is not worth the hassle of leasing their lines to competition for LESS than it costs them to install the lines. Can you come up with any reason a company would do this? I know if I were running the company DSL would have been dead a long time ago because of crap like this and having to put an equal # of DSL lines in lower income areas where DSL will NEVER sell because of equal access rules.

      People whine all the time about this but never seem to read anything but the evil monopoly side of things here on slashdot.

      The decision said, "we're not going to force you to sell quite as much of the infrastructure you've PAID to develop and the weasely little CLECs and ISPs want to steal for a lowered cost."

      I'm honestly suprised phone companies are still around after all the stupid "anti monopoly" laws that are enforced on them. You should really work in the actual phone company before whining so much. you'd be amazed what you can't do as a phone company employee.

      Why would anyone think that being forced to get rid of things you've produced AT COST OR BELOW is a fair thing? Why don't people whine about the cable companies not sharing all their infrastructure everytime we turn around? You want competetion? write your representative and say you want cable companies to open up their broadband to competing networks. Put them on the same level as the phone companies you people love to whine about.

      --
      -- Proud member of the Jello Sex Cult.
    2. Re:For what its worth, Powell's strategy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      We don't owe the phone companies anything. The public granted them an actual (not virtual) monopoly throughout much of their previous life as Ma Bell.

      You can't apply the standards of open competitive business to the phone companies - the relationship between their service and public discretion simply doesn't justify such an analysis.

    3. Re:For what its worth, Powell's strategy by pivo · · Score: 1

      Right. Let's offer the phone company the choice between loosing their monoploy or maintaining it and dealing with government requirements. I'll bet I know what they choose.

  14. so I can pretty much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kiss my Covad DSL goodbye. Great, the choice between Verizon and Comcast; do I pick getting kicked in the nuts or getting kicked in the nuts?

    Remember way back when, when they broke up ATT and tried to create a little competetition? Then the republicans got into power.

    1. Re:so I can pretty much by teamhasnoi · · Score: 2, Funny
      Kiss my Covad DSL goodbye. Great, the choice between Verizon and Comcast; do I pick getting kicked in the nuts or getting kicked in the nuts?

      I pick getting kicked in your nuts.

  15. Have you noticed? by deepsea007 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Has anyone noticed a problem with the way things are in the States these days? Many other countries are currently trying to find ways to bring the power and advantages that the internat offers to their public, while the States just keep on catering to the big companies. The Bell's need more money like I need a hole in the head, and meanwhile, a large percentage of public schools and normal people still do not even have access...Just a bit of a rant, it's over now...

    1. Re:Have you noticed? by JordanH · · Score: 1
      • The Bell's need more money like I need a hole in the head...

      Where should we put that hole in your head?

      In case you haven't noticed, the Baby Bells are hurting right now. Remember the telecom meltdown?

      US West (aka Qwest) just had their bond status downgraded to junk. This is the worst example, but the others aren't doing so hot these days, either.

    2. Re:Have you noticed? by deepsea007 · · Score: 0

      Try answering this. Is it my problem that they did not know how to appropriate their funds? I think that they have been given enough of our tax money and our patience at this point. If it is their time to go, then so be it. Return the infrastructure to the people. That is the only reason that they have it to begin with.

    3. Re:Have you noticed? by deepsea007 · · Score: 0

      And, by the way, how is this OffTopic? It is simply pointing out that the States have not used the same approach as other countries and this article is a perfect example of this. Ugh...

    4. Re:Have you noticed? by outZider · · Score: 1

      Oh, and I feel so bad for them too. The pain in my rectum after dealing with Qwest's idea of 'customer service' is disconcerting, at best.

      --
      - oZ
      // i am here.
    5. Re:Have you noticed? by JordanH · · Score: 1
      • The pain in my rectum after dealing with Qwest's idea of 'customer service' is disconcerting, at best.

      Yeah, I agree. And, maybe they wouldn't be in such bad shape if they didn't try to grub every penny and give good customer service.

      My Baby Bell pays big fines every year to the state public service commision for their terrible 'customer service'. I wonder if the fines are actually more costly than it would be to beef up the service, though.

      My #1 reason for going with Cable Modem vs. DSL was the poor customer service that my local Baby Bell is so well known for, especially with DSL connections. I have to say that I was quite pleased with the Cable Cos. customer service, so far. So, poor customer service loses another customer.

  16. Dammit by mosch · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    What's next, will Ford no longer be forced to build cars for Kia? Will Mobil no longer be forced to acquire oil for BP? This is outrageous! Companies should be forced to help their competitors, like the way Microsoft is forced to support Linux!

    oh wait.... no.

    1. Re:Dammit by billstr78 · · Score: 1
      "But to the extent that the commission orders access to unbundled network elements in circumstances where there is little or no reason to think that its absence will genuinely impair competition that might otherwise occur, we believe it must point to something a bit more concrete," the decision said.


      Right, becuase there are lot's of ISP's with the ability to provide the same large-scale mult-million dollar infrastructure that the baby bells aquired only by being a public utility.


      This is a sham to try and boost the economy and keep us po folks from surfing our pr0n !

    2. Re:Dammit by Rupert · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wake me up when Ford is the only company that is allowed to provide cars in my area.

      --

      --
      E_NOSIG
    3. Re:Dammit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ok, fine your right about that.

      EXCEPT that the phone companies have a monopoly on the WIREING that is protected by the government (because if anyone could put up wires it would be a tangled mess)

      Forceing the phone companies to share the wires was treating them like they should be, a resource that belongs as much to the users as the providers.

    4. Re:Dammit by xnuandax · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think the point is that the infrastructure the Baby Bells are so keen to shut competitors out of was originally provided by public funding (much like highways).

      So lets say the government privatises highways, selling them all to Ford. Ford would just have won the right to block Kia-made cars from using the on-ramp.

      Reduced competition & corruption (aka lobbiest pay-offs) are going to rot the US economy from the inside. Where does the US rank in the world now for broadband penetration/adoption??? Further and futher behind....

    5. Re:Dammit by ShawnDoc · · Score: 1
      I don't know if you are joking or not, but there is actually a lot of cooperation between the auto manufacturers.

      Kia made the Ford Aspire & Festiva, and had a relationship with Mazda on the 323 (Though I'm not sure the extent of that relationship).

      The whole GM Geo line was nothing but Japanese cars.

      Geo Metro = Suzuki Swift

      Geo Tracker = Suzuki Sidekick

      Geo Storm = Izuzu Something

      Geo Prism = Toyota Corolla

      Chrysler and Misubishi shared cars like the Talon and the 3000GT/Stealth.

      Heck, right now, if you can buy a Toyota Matrix from Pontiac as the "Vibe". So maybe a better analogy could have been drawn than the car industry.

    6. Re:Dammit by ivan256 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      There's a huge difference though. Kia didn't have to dig up every lawn in the US to start selling cars.

      Competitive telecom companies aren't even allowed to dig up your lawn and attach wires to your house (Or to run a cable across your lawn to get to your neighbor's house). If you want competitive local loop access, you need to either force the incumbant providers to lease out their wire, or you need to let competitive telecom providers have access to private property to run cable. Which one of those do you think is more practical? (Consider that you don't need wire from more then one company to your house because you're presumably only going to buy one provider's service at a time).

      If the fees are reasonable, and they aren't loosing money on the deal, then the incumbant phone companies should have nothing to complain about. They should be bending over backwards and kissing our asses for letting them exist in the first place. Not everybody gets to be an exception to the rule.

    7. Re:Dammit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ooo the festiva and the aspire... there's two real winning automobiles.

      so basically, cooperation creates crap... I don't think that's the example we want to use...

    8. Re:Dammit by bwohlgemuth · · Score: 1

      Where the hell do you live? In the frozen tundra?

      CLEC's can dig up the yard and drop OC-192 fiber in your backyard if they damn well wish to. There are no restrictions to this (besides filing for the right permits, etc).

      Now, if we bring the COST perspective into this then we see WHY CLECs don't drop in their own copper loops. It is "COST INEFFICIENT" for them to pony up the $$$$ of dropping a loop at a site only to have said customer ditch it six months later because they got a good deal on a cell phone from Joe's Cell Phones 'R Us.

      Any CLEC would be more than happy to drop a fiber in your backyard, provided that you sign a five year contract promising to pay $50k/month.

      B

      --
      Flamebait .sig for sale, low mileage, one owner only.
      Serious inquiries only.
    9. Re:Dammit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All utilities should be provided by the county you live in. They would be responsible for providing the actual "pipe" to your house. The content carried over those could be chosen at will at switching centers. Whether that be gas service, water, electricity, telephone, cable, or Internet access. For-profit monopolies should not be in control of last mile resources. If that means raising taxes and charging the utilities leasing fees to get to your house, so be it.

    10. Re:Dammit by bwohlgemuth · · Score: 1

      The problem with that theory is economies of scale. Most carriers have one or two engineers that cover a multi county area along with a cadre of techs that cover that same area. Now take that group of employees (which might cover 4 counties) and have them now cover the one county.

      Your costs have now quadrupled. Guess where the money to pay for that is going to come from?

      Also if it would be run like my water department is here, the price would vary by election year.

      B

      --
      Flamebait .sig for sale, low mileage, one owner only.
      Serious inquiries only.
    11. Re:Dammit by ev0l · · Score: 1

      If the Internet was provided by the county(state FL) I live in.

      Then you would only be able to use the Internet on Sat and Wed if you address ends in odd numbers or Sun and Tus is you address ends in even numbers and only between the hours of 4:00PM and 10:00 AM.

    12. Re:Dammit by zCyl · · Score: 2

      Wake me up when Ford is the only company that is allowed to provide cars in my area.

      I'd prefer if you just let me sleep...

    13. Re:Dammit by Danse · · Score: 2

      How do you think the Bells got all that wiring? They were granted a monopoly, which made it possible to pay for all of it. How come nobody else gets such help from the government? The Bells wouldn't have that wiring if it weren't for the government. The government didn't want everyone and their brother laying wire all over the city. So they only allowed one company to do it. Now they turn those companies loose with no competition. Nobody else is going to be able to build that kind of infrastructure again because nobody else is going be be handed a monopoly by the government. The only sane solution is for the city to own the infrastructure and allow all of the various service providers to have equal access to it.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    14. Re:Dammit by bwohlgemuth · · Score: 1

      Telecom History 101:

      Originally, there were dozens of local carriers (back when local telephone service began). While prices were cheap, the phones were all based on different standards AND you couldn't necessarily be on one carrier and talk to someone else on another carrier. The government realized that two things had to take place.

      #1. All the phones in the country had to be able to talk to each other (i.e. same electrial standard).
      #2. All of the switches across the country had to be connected together (i.e. long distance).

      Bell had the most lines and the patent on the telephone, so it was common sense to give him a regulated monopoly for wires in the ground and to install phone service everywhere.

      B

      --
      Flamebait .sig for sale, low mileage, one owner only.
      Serious inquiries only.
    15. Re:Dammit by Chainsaw+Messiah · · Score: 1

      ... either force the incumbant providers to lease out their wire, or you need to let competitive telecom providers have access to private property to run cable.

      I can let whomever I want do whatever I want on my private property. Another fubar in all this is that many utilities have "exclusive" right-of-way leases on poles and underground conduit from the municipalities. If a competitor can't get through the right-of-way to my property, that'll be a problem.

      Buy a poster.

    16. Re:Dammit by A_Non_Moose · · Score: 2

      Wake me up when Ford is the only company that is allowed to provide cars in my area.

      Heh:

      Your Honor, he ain't Chevy, he's my br...uhhh...Oldsmobile?

      and am I the only one who thinks KIA is a bad name for a car? (think the acronym K.I.A).

      .

      --
      Have you read the moderator guidelines? Well, have you, PUNK? (and I want a Karma: Gnarly option)
    17. Re:Dammit by Danse · · Score: 2

      Bell had the most lines and the patent on the telephone, so it was common sense to give him a regulated monopoly for wires in the ground and to install phone service everywhere.

      Giving them a monopoly isn't the problem. It was the right thing to do at the time. The problem is that due to that monopoly they have become very well entrenched and competition doesn't stand a chance without access to the infrastructure. The government created the monster, they need to control it. This ruling just shows that that isn't happening.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    18. Re:Dammit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      isn't classifying Ford's latest offerings as 'cars' being a bit generous?

    19. Re:Dammit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You speak out of context. The "line sharing" rule
      was the agreement that made it into the telecommunications act a few
      years ago. It was giving something in return for that legislation.


      The situation now is not a lot different than when we agree for me to
      rent your house. After you receive my money, you
      go around saying "it is ridiculous for someone else to live in your house because it is yours."

  17. Question by MarkusH · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If a person or group of people wanted to set up their own broadband wiring throughout a small town, what would be necessary?

    I'm not talking about the physical components (the wiring, the routers, etc). Are there any legal requirements that have to be met? Do you need to get eminent domain to run over (or under) roads, or simply get permission from the land owners? Is there any way we can bypass the bells entirely?

    1. Re:Question by CaffeineAddict2001 · · Score: 2

      There are various wireless networking projects going on throughout the country. Start one up.

      If you have a home owners association try and see if you can set up a meeting for a community intranet or something.

      There are a few (and i mean few) books on building wireless communities on amazon, I think slashdot ran a review of one of them but im too lazy to check.

    2. Re:Question by bluGill · · Score: 2

      You have to talk to each city/township/county/state individually. And note that not just one of the above, you may have to convince several to let you through. Many cities granted a cable company a limitless cable monopoly if they would bring cable in, and internet might apply to that grant, depending on the lawyers.

      Fortunatly there is wireless compitition in all areas for both cable (satalite and VHF/UHF) and phone (cell). Internet also has some compitition, but it remains to be seen how much. (cell modems are not broadband today, but your have 802.11, cable, DSL, and satalite for compition) Federal regulations make it illegal for a town to prevent you from putting up satalite dishes. (often towns make it difficult though) 802.11 antennas can often be hidden.

      Your best bet if you want to compete with the local monopolies is wireless. Copper is expensive, and breaks even after it is in the ground. Wireless is cheaper (once you buy the license if applicaable)

    3. Re:Question by GMontag · · Score: 2

      You need to coax whatever pesky government beurocracy covers utilities in your area.

      You see, it is the government that is the roadblock here, not the corporations. The government (pick a level) has the final authority, not any corporation.

      Folks can shout all they want about "secret" payoffs, purchase of politicians, et. etc, but the bottom line is the politicians can ignore the business folks, just like they did with Enron. Noooo, not the Enron myth, what happened for real. Note the Enron is bankrupt now, no larger a bazillion dollar firm. If they really got any meaningful help they would still be a huge firm.

      Bottom line is, the government made the decision in this article and they would also call the shots on the utility that you theorize too.

    4. Re:Question by maniac11 · · Score: 2
      It's not going to be cost effective to run your own wire. Even for a point-to-point connection you're probably talking millions of dollars in permits, wire, and labor (unless you fancy digging trenches yourself).


      This is exactly what the ruling is about... The phone companies (or the ILECs -- Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers) own the lines. Unless you run your own copper, you have to deal with them if you want to roll your own bandwidth.


      Except maybe Wireless Community Freenets?! That's what I'm betting on...

      --
      Guvegrra?
    5. Re:Question by MeNeXT · · Score: 2
      Yes it could be cost effective because you would be able to sell phone services.


      The problem is that you will never be able to get the permits/approval to run your own wire. The market is closed to any newcommers. It does not matter how much money you have because you will never get the permit.

      --
      DRM? No thanks, I'll just get it somewhere else...
    6. Re:Question by smyle · · Score: 1
      You need to coax whatever pesky government beurocracy covers utilities in your area.

      My first thought upon reading this was "why coax? aren't we looking at fiber when possible?"

      Duh.

      --

      Sleep is just a poor substitute for caffeine, anyway. -Bob Lehmann

    7. Re:Question by Danse · · Score: 2

      Note the Enron is bankrupt now, no larger a bazillion dollar firm. If they really got any meaningful help they would still be a huge firm.

      Note that the top Enron execs made out like bandits. If they had really received no help, they probably would have lost their shirts too. The only help they needed was to delay the news long enough for them to cash out.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    8. Re:Question by Danse · · Score: 2

      Sure you could sell phone service, but that won't be enough to recoup your costs when you're attempting to compete against a well entrenched competitor. The Bells never would have made it if they hadn't been handed a monopoly over service.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    9. Re:Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you need contracts with all the land owners for right of way. this involves lots of money. this is why no one tries to compete with the local phone company.

    10. Re:Question by erpbridge · · Score: 1

      Somebody has been reading a little too much UserFriendly

    11. Re:Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So you want the power of a corrupt government by
      corpartions, rather than to correct the problem
      of curruption? What a thoughtfull proposition!


      Please excuse me if I misunderstood what you wrote, but
      that is how many of us are reading your post.

    12. Re:Question by GMontag · · Score: 1

      Try reading it as it is written. I mentioned nothing of what I want nor of how I wish things to be. I only stated the way things are and who is responsible.

    13. Re:Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are in the shirt loosing process now and nobody is tossing around pardons. I would still like to see some conspiracy alligations that hold water, but I have not to date.

    14. Re:Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Consensus from every single homeowner affected , most of whom BTW aren't at all sure about this diabolical internet thing what with terrorists running for president now, minority people getting in your face, and catholic priests lining the walls of every AOL teenchat room.

      My mamma says there's alot of black people on the Internet.

    15. Re:Question by Danse · · Score: 2

      Thanks to their theft, they can afford lots of lawyers. Kinda sad. When a guy robs a bank, they don't let him use the money to pay his lawyers. Have they frozen the assets of these guys? Even if they're convicted, they'll probably never spend any time in jail. Hell, there was a case here a few weeks ago where a guy committed insurance fraud and ripped people off for about 3.5 million. Caught red-handed, he got 12 years. That's freaking it. If I stole $1000 bucks I'd probably do 20.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  18. This is dumb. by Telastyn · · Score: 2

    Duh. But seriously, the courts broke up the bells for a reason, and it wasn't so they could be all bought out into a monopoly again. Forcing 3rd parties to lease their networks will kill the 3rd parties.

    Competition will be destroyed. This could easily lead to a situation within a year that leaves SBC/Verizon as the only dsl carriers, and only 2-3 overpriced cable carriers for the nation.

    1. Re:This is dumb. by GMontag · · Score: 2

      But seriously, the courts broke up the bells for a reason, and it wasn't so they could be all bought out into a monopoly again.

      Yes, that reason was that the Bell system asked to no longer be a regulated monopoly utility. The breakup was part of the remedy.

      Granted, the breakup was not so they could reform and be an unregulated utility and they were resricted from certain business areas until competition took hold, but if they prove enough competition is out there they do not have to become a monopoly-regulated utility any more either.

  19. The problem is.. by RailGunner · · Score: 4, Insightful
    That technically the Bells own the wiring. In fact, there was a time when the copper in the wiring was worth more than AT(and)T! Someone could have conceivably bought AT(and)T in that time, dug up the wiring, sold the copper, and turned a profit.

    But the point is - the telecoms own the wiring from the switch to your house. Why should government dictate what the owner of that wire has to do with it? Allowing other DSL providers to use that infrastructure is going to cost the Bells money. So I really feel that the court is correct in this matter.

    However, I don't want to pay exhorbitant amounts of money for my DSL line. And I think the way to do this is to offer a true competitor.. maybe it's the cable companies and cable modems, maybe its 802.11 wireless, maybe it's satellite transmission, maybe it's something that hasn't even been thought up yet, but there will be a competitor.

    And I don't think this is a monopoly any more then I think DISH Network is after buying Direct TV.. they still have to compete with cable companies.. much the same way DSL is still going to have to compete with cable modems, etc. They're selling broadband access, and there will be multiple ways to get it.

    This court decision is not the end of the world, folks.

    Now I just have to prepare myself to be modded down.. ;)

    1. Re:The problem is.. by Telastyn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, it is not, but there will not be a competitor for a few years. How long do you think it'll take to lay a few million feet of cable/wire, even if a mythical company existed that could afford it? Or to send up enough satellites or towers to do wireless?

      By then it is too late. The bells will have all the customers, or countries with more foresight (Canada?) will have passed the US by.

      It is not the end of the world, but it's likely the end of US leading the way.

    2. Re:The problem is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ...countries with more foresight (Canada?) will have passed the US by.


      Aaaaaaaaahahahaha! Aaahahaha! Wait, let me catch my breath. Try to take this seriously...Canada?!! Aaaaahahahaha!!
    3. Re:The problem is.. by billnapier · · Score: 3, Informative

      This court decision is not the end of the world, folks.

      It may be if you're a DSL customer. They are using the popularity of cable modem service to indicate that there is enough competition in the high speed internet market to indicate that now anti-monopoly restrictions should be placed on DSL service. In the past, you could get DSL from Covad (or somebody else) because the FCC foreced the ILEC's to open up the unused frequencies of the local loop to CLEC use. It sounds like the FCC is going to be forced to change their mind on this matter and will no longer have to allow CLEC's access to the non-voice portion of the local loop.

      It sounds like if you want to get DSL service from sombody besides your local RBOC, you'll need to completly change local providers (ie. you new local provider would have full access to the local loop (all frequencies) and they could offer you DSL service). Anybody else have a different interpretation?

    4. Re:The problem is.. by Misch · · Score: 2

      Why should government dictate what the owner of that wire has to do with it?

      Because the government dictated that in exchage, that company is the only company that gets to run a wire to your house to provide cable or phone services. That's what a monopoly is. We hoped that the monopoly would be benevolent, but, then we found that they weren't, so we de-regulated, and found that without rules, they wouldn't play nice anyway. So, it's back to the not-quite benevolent monopolies.

      Most places get 3 wires and 2 pipes to their house. Phone, Cable, Electric, Gas, and Water, but only one company really gets to provide the services for each of these.

      --

      --You will rephrase your request for me to go to hell. Goto statements are not acceptable programming constructs
    5. Re:The problem is.. by cwebster · · Score: 2

      > No, it is not, but there will not be a competitor for a few years.

      there already is competition. I have high speed broadband (2048/384k) and i dont buy from a bell. Where i live i have a choice from DSL, Cable and Satelite.

      > How long do you think it'll take to lay a few million feet of cable/wire,

      my guess is that the wire is already in the ground, seeing as how i (and many many other people) are getting high speed connections that arent through DSL.

      > even if a mythical company existed that could afford it?

      is $45/month affordable for you? it is for me.

    6. Re:The problem is.. by Clark+Rawlins · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While the Baby Bells own the last mile to the customer they own the cables because the states where they operate allowed AT&T to have a Monopoly on the telephone infrastructure. This monopoly was granted to avoid the requirement for multiple incompatible telephone competitors in each market and in return the state/local government got to regulate the industry.

      So while the Baby Bells own the copper wire that connects the customer to the central office that copper was installed under monopoly conditions, and in return for regulation. Now that the regulators are trying to restore competition they are attempting to balance the head start that the Baby Bells got using the government granted monopoly with equal access to facilities. If the Baby Bells (or their parent AT&T) got a leg up to enter the market place (i.e. the monopoly) why shouldn't the competitors get access to that infrastructure during the transition period to even the playing field.

      I think a better way to handle all of this is to move the last mile assets into a wholesale infrastructure company and make both the Baby Bells and the new competitors pay to access the last mile.

    7. Re:The problem is.. by Telastyn · · Score: 2

      Do you think cable will stay at $45/month if they don't need to compete with non-bell dsl?

      Do you think that's really 2048/384 on a cable or satellite?

      Don't think that if you don't have dsl you're safe from the repercussions of this ruling (if it stands)

    8. Re:The problem is.. by MeNeXT · · Score: 2
      Well here is where I have to agree. We should dismantel the FCC and allow anyone who wishes to run their own cable/line to do so.


      Their is no need to interconnect telcos. As a metter of fact long distance carriers should not have to provide service to Baby Bells they should run their own wire for long distance to the home.


      The Baby bells should create their own network for long distance.

      --
      DRM? No thanks, I'll just get it somewhere else...
    9. Re:The problem is.. by flatrock · · Score: 5, Informative

      That technically the Bells own the wiring.

      Technically this is true, but it's not that simple. Bell telephone was granted a monopoly by the government. They were given exclusive rights to porvide telephone service to people. In exchange for that monopoly, they had to accept government oversight of how that monopoly is used. When you went to have telephone service hooked up at your house you didn't have a choice who's wiring used. The government granted exclusive rights to one company to run that wiring to your house. This servers a purpose in that you don't want dozens of companies putting up telephone poles and runnign wires everywhere.

      The Bells do own the wiring, but how they can use that wiring is regulated by the FCC. The government can't just take the wiring away from them, but it can tell them they have to share. If they refuse to share, I would assume that the govenment could fine them or even force them to sell the wiring.

      As other options become available such as wireless or options over cable TV networks, the monopoly of the telephone company becomes less important. Because of this it may be reasonable to give the Bells more leeway so that they can compete with other technologies. The problem is that from what I've seen, some of them make Microsoft seem like a team player.

    10. Re:The problem is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they actually paid for the wiring it would be one thing, but the Bells got huge tax breaks and incentives to lay the lines, to the effect that they did not really pay a thin cent for them. Our tax dollars (of lack thereof) paid for 'em. And since I am part owner I would like to see the wires put to better use than any of the Bells can offer. I have DSL right now, and would love to be able to use a better service than sbc - they are incompetents. Cable is not an option since I do not have a TV.

      Letting things drop to the colluding duopoly of one cable provider and one DSL provider hiking rates in tandem, is not allowing for real competition. It is not the end of the world, but it is anti-competitive, and for all that this administration uses the rhetoric of supporting free markets and competition, this sort of crap shows their true colors.

    11. Re:The problem is.. by newt_sd · · Score: 1

      Cable is an option I have a cable modem without cable tv (own a sat).

      --
      ***I GOT NUTHIN***
    12. Re:The problem is.. by truesaer · · Score: 2
      They should have to share for the same reason that they need to share the phone lines with competitors, for the same reason cable companies have to allow competitors to sell cable, and power companies have to allow competing companies to sell you power. Its a utility, and that changes all the rules.


      Imagine if every new company had to dig up the whole damn city to install their infrastructure.

    13. Re:The problem is.. by Monkelectric · · Score: 2
      Who marked this guy as insightfull? He sounds like a stock owner to me :D Companies like telco, gas, power, etc are called "natural monopolies". In exchange for the government allowing thim to have this natural monopoly, they are supposed to accept regulation and such ...

      Do you remember before long distance de-regulation paying 40c/min to call then next city over? I sure do. A call from Hemet, CA to Riverside, CA cost 40c a minute. In alot of cases it was cheaper for me to *drive* the 30 miles (2$ worth of gas round trip) round to talk then talk on the phone for 5 minutes. Now the calls cost like 7c ... thats deregulation. I already pay *50* bucks a month for the base DSL package from Verizon, the service is awfull, tech support is a joke, and half the time the thing dosen't work. Allowing them to be the only company offering DSL isn't gonna help.

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

    14. Re:The problem is.. by mwa · · Score: 2
      technically the Bells own the wiring

      Technically I rent that wiring. Shouldn't I have a choice has to who provides my service at the other end?

    15. Re:The problem is.. by elmegil · · Score: 2

      Does your provider actually own the wires? In my neck of the woods I have a non-Bell DSL provider, but the Bell still owns the wires. With this decision, the chances of my provider sticking around in the face of the Bell deciding it wants to be a jerk about it are about nil.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    16. Re:The problem is.. by bwohlgemuth · · Score: 1

      Umm...no. If you owned a house and someone decided to turn it into an airport landing strip, I think you would be quite peeved at your rentor.

      B

      --
      Flamebait .sig for sale, low mileage, one owner only.
      Serious inquiries only.
    17. Re:The problem is.. by brsett · · Score: 1

      I pay $35/month, but its more like 2048/256. DSL isn't an option, but I don't expect the price to change (they recently raised the proce and lost a significant amount of customers). This is still a captialist country, I don't have to buy the service if I can't afford it.

      Sometimes Michael (the /. editor) has a hard time remembering whether he's a socialist or a capitalist, but mainly he's just a whiner (perhaps he ought to move to Europe, they seem to grow them on trees over there).

    18. Re:The problem is.. by PJPorch · · Score: 1

      How do you think the Bells were able to lay all that wiring. They existed as a regulated monopoly and therefore could put out that much cash for infrastructure because they had a guarentee that they would get returns on their investment. No other company is allowed to lay the wire and now they can't even use the wires that were made possible by the government. No body is going to put out that amount of money for new infrastructure because they don't have that same guarentee of returns on investment. They might as well make it a regulated monopoly again because it would be better than this. With this new ruling they can charge whatever they want and not have to worry about competition.

    19. Re:The problem is.. by toddler420 · · Score: 1

      Why should government dictate what the owner of that wire has to do with it? Allowing other DSL providers to use that infrastructure is going to cost the Bells money.

      the problem with this statement is that the Bells make money off of "others" (Covad, DSL.net, etc...) that use their infrastructure. the government is required to step in and say "you must allow these guys to use your "last mile". the Bells don't like that because (at least some of the time) their little competitors can offer higher quality service (in terms of customer care, mean time to repair, etc...) to their customers; this makes the Bells look bad, since the little guys are doing this using the Bells' own network (at least at the physical layer)

    20. Re:The problem is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      All you need is a real LEC and you can do whatever you want. If you have your own routing and switching equipment in a fiber hut, all they do is pass you the copper pair. Mind you, if you are a LEC and are dealing with Ameritech, they tell you to meet them at some manhole between the hours of 2pm and 7pm and if you're not there the exact second they are they wont do ANYTHING because residential phone service has a federally mandated required uptime (just to keep 911 working, even for people without phone service) that will wind up getting them (the previous phone company) fined for cutting off what is still their customer.. It's a joke, and SBC/Ameritech dosen't make it easy on other LEC's. Once you get that far, though, you can do whatever the hell you want with that pair. DSL, voice, etc. It really sucks to provide local service because if people want to be an ass about network outages and equipment problems they can claim it may of interfeared with 911 service, complain to the FCC, and unless the LEC can prove it did not, the LEC will get fined up the ass.

    21. Re:The problem is.. by toddler420 · · Score: 1

      what are the economic implications of that statement?

      if your telco's network is disconnected from your premises under the auspices of "running your own wire", you have to set up your own telco network.

      can you imagine what it would cost for me to buy the switching equipment and lay the copper just to call my buddy across town?

      how bout if i want to call my mom at home in another state? i have to long haul the switch i set up to call my buddy to the state my mom lives in, setup switching equipment there as well, and then lay copper from that switch to her premises.

      these issues are all compounded when you start to talk about data connectivity. establishing your own backbone connectivity to the internet is not a cheap thing to do. now imagine deploying the access technologies required to provide even the connection to the home (DSLAM or CMTS, choose your weapon) plus the backend connectivity required to connect that equipment to the internet backbone router.

      there is no way that any smart, private entrepeneur (unless you're bill gates) would be able to lay out that much cash to build out that kind of network.

      the issue on the regional end is that you have no access to the networks of other regions unless you are connected to the other regions. for internet connectivity, this is not an issue (what with the wonders of BGP); for telephone exchange, that means you can't call anyone in the other region (unless of course someone builds the pristine yet phantom long distance network that was previously described).

    22. Re:The problem is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That makes absolutely no sense. The phone company charges me for use of the wires. That basically means I rent them.

    23. Re:The problem is.. by RailGunner · · Score: 2
      Sorry, I don't own any stock. Yet...

      Look, I am a free market capitalist. And I'm not crazy about there being only one service provider in town - but that's just it - there isn't. If Bell pisses me off then I'll call the local cable company and get a cable modem. If that doesn't work then I'll take a hard long look at wireless providers. I really think a lot of us are making a mountain out of this molehill.

      I also see a HUGE business opportunity for an alternative broadband connection. Especially if it's cheaper then DSL / Cable... 802.11 may be it, it may be something else.

    24. Re:The problem is.. by bwohlgemuth · · Score: 0

      Exactly. If you rent something from someone, there are usually certain restrictions to its use. You just can't go out and take a pair of copper and drop DSL over it. Especially when DSL has been known to interfere with DS-1 level services. Boy, wouldn't it sucks to know that you killed 911 so you could play Quake faster...

      And yes, I know that a good portion of DS-1 local loops are on HDSL. Don't get me started on that.

      B

      --
      Flamebait .sig for sale, low mileage, one owner only.
      Serious inquiries only.
    25. Re:The problem is.. by RailGunner · · Score: 1

      They can't charge whatever they want because there is competition - they're selling Broadband access. If DSL prices gte too high, I'll either A. Get A Cable Modem or B. go back to dialup or C. Try to invent a new way of doing it.

    26. Re:The problem is.. by toddler420 · · Score: 1

      mod parent up.
      best solution is to make everyone pay the same rates to the same single company.

      the only problem is telling the ILEC's that they no longer own all of their own switching equipment, remote huts, transmission equipment, etc...

      the wholesaler would have to have MEGAbucks in order to pull that off. or it would have to be a governmental institution that could affordably compensate the ILEC's for the taking by "eminent domain" of their equipment.

      if the wholesaler was a non-profit organization (aka government agency), there wouldn't be any issues with competitive pricing, because everyone would be paying the same rates; the only way to differentiate yourself from the rest of the crowd would be by offering better service (something we all sorely need anyway).

    27. Re:The problem is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're arguing with a libertarian. That is similar to (and as productive as) repeatedly bashing one's head with a hammer.

    28. Re:The problem is.. by cwebster · · Score: 2

      my 2048/384 is on cable, time warner austin. Thats the speed my cable modem tells me i'm capped at, and the speeds i actually get. apt-get dist-upgrading with 250kB/s from the debian mirrors at nice. I will admit i get closer to 35kB/s when people are uploading from me, but that is probably due to the fact that i run a couple other things taking up bandwidth, so they dont get all 40kB/s.

    29. Re:The problem is.. by cwebster · · Score: 2

      my provider is time warner (cable), and the the best of my knowledge they do own the wires.

    30. Re:The problem is.. by mrseth · · Score: 1

      One of the things that really sucks if they are able to squelch the competition is that:

      a) the Bell's TOS typically sucks. Especially compared to ISP's like Speakeasy and Megapath. E.g., they do not allow you to run servers.

      b) Their service (at least for me with Verizon) is always battling for 2nd worst ISP* with AOL according to this:

      http://www.dslreports.com/gbu

      *MSN is *always* the worst rated.

    31. Re:The problem is.. by kir · · Score: 5, Interesting
      It is not the end of the world, but it's likely the end of US leading the way.

      The U.S. hasn't led the way in broadband for a while - Japan has.

      In my area alone (Tokorozawa, which is no megapolis), there exists a ridiculous amount of ADSL providers for me to choose from (ISPs - GOL, BigLobe, SoNet, OCN, YahooBB, etc. "loop" providers" - Eaccess, NTT, ACCA, DION, etc.). Of course, NTT owns the copper to my house, but they get their cut. NTT charges an "access fee" (about 180 yen a month) for the use of the "last mile" copper for something other than telephone service. In total, I pay a little under $40 a month for 8Mb ADSL (<=8Mb down, <=1Mb up).

      Then there is cable TV access... oh yeah... and a huge initiative that's coming to my area soon... FTTH - Fiber To The Home. 100Mbs of broadband lovin (too bad about them bottlenecks).

      Broadband internet access has become like telephone or cable TV service... it's just something you have. I don't know anyone here, none of my friends, none of my co-workers*, that doesn't have some form of broadband.

      From what I read here and from talking with friends in the States, quality broadband is hard to find. It's definitely more expensive. It's sad that I live in arguably the most expensive country in the world, yet I pay less for my broadband than anyone I know in America (does 8Mb ADSL even exist there?).

      * Some of my friends live in Yokota AB. That place is NOT Japan. It's little America. The sole ISP there is fully taking advantage of it's monopoly. If you live on the base, you pay $35 a month for 56k dial-up that's limited to 90 hrs a month or you go without, which in today's world, isn't an option when you're thousands of miles away from home. Poor bastards!

      --
      3cx.org - A truly bad website.
    32. Re:The problem is.. by Telastyn · · Score: 1

      From what I understand of Japan, the proliferation of broadband isn't so much due to a good environment for broadband, as much the horrifically crappy environment for dialup. (because local calls aren't free iirc)

    33. Re:The problem is.. by sjames · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That technically the Bells own the wiring.

      There are two strong mitigating factors. First, they were granted the special privilege of being a monopoly, and two, they were granted the special privilege of mandated right of way.

      If they wish to be freed of the special conditions that went with those two valuable grants, they should be freed of the grants as well.

      Imagine if they had to pay property owners if they needed to dig up the yard for repairs! For that matter, if they were forced to pay yearly rent for the right to bury wires on people's private property!

      Yes, they would go bankrupt overnight, and yes, that would be bad for everyone.

      So perhaps a compromise is in order? They get to leave their lines buried on my property and I won't shoot them as trespassers if they have to do some digging for repairs, BUT I get to use a portion of them (one pair to be specific) to connect to someone elses DSLAM if I want to. Just to sweeten the deal, I will pay them a reasonable monthly fee to be my telephone provider.

      Otherwise, they should come and get their wires out of my yard before I declare them to be abandoned and remove them myself.

      In other words, the people have cut them slack (through the government) since day 1, they could at least do the same in return.

    34. Re:The problem is.. by Geekboy(Wizard) · · Score: 1

      From what I read here and from talking with friends in the States, quality broadband is hard to find. It's definitely more expensive. It's sad that I live in arguably the most expensive country in the world, yet I pay less for my broadband than anyone I know in America (does 8Mb ADSL even exist there?).

      I pay 60/month for 1.5m/128k DSL. I can get 6m/384k DSL for $200/month. That's in San Francisco.

    35. Re:The problem is.. by toddler420 · · Score: 1

      what is the actual probability that your bell would pull the competitive access from ISP?

      that would make them a most unpopular company in the media.

      plus they would lose all revenue from the circuits (physical medium still has to be leased) that your isp is giving them.

    36. Re:The problem is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK... let's assume for sake of argument that yours is a good idea.
      Using that same logic, AOL wouldn't have to provide their clients access to any network that didn't belong to AOL, essentially bringing AOL back to it's BBS roots.
      Interconnectivity, competition and progress are the issues here folks.
      Imagine a small local company providing you with local phone service. The number of people you could call, would be limited to only those connected to the same grid. If the compay wanted to provide you with a connection to your relatives in another city or state (let alone another country), theyd have to build their own connection from their grid to your relatives house. Of course, making a contract with another company to get access to their local systems is cheaper as the system is already there, and also means added revenue to that other company because they suddenly get paid for usage of their grid they otherwise wouldn't have.
      Your idea would in effect take telecommunication back about 90 years or so, back to the age of telegrams. Only one or two big companies would have the dough to be able to connect from state to state (or coast to coast) and not even those companies would have any sort of connection between them.
      In fact, your logic is the antithesis of how global telecommunications - including the internet - were built.
      Imagine if your phone system was provided by one huge national company, and that you had no choice at all, because they built the system and nobody else has the money to try to compete. How much different would their service be now, than it was, say, in the 1930's? There would be no incentive for innovation or added services, since they'd already be making so much money from all those new clients that are born every year. Is that what you want? No competition? If you deregulate, and make this a FreeForAll, that's exactly what would happen. One giant wealthy company would dominate the market, doing it's best to crush all potential competition, no matter how good their ideas were, and stealing the best ideas for themselves to abuse their dominant place in the market... oh, but wait, don't we already have one company like that, but in a different marketplace? I think it's headquarters are near Seattle...

    37. Re:The problem is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $60? I pay $50 for SBC/Pacbell DSL in Oakland. Who the hell are you using? Whoever it is, you're getting kinda screwed.

    38. Re:The problem is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      > Why should government dictate what the owner of that wire has to do with it?

      1.) The government invented these "companies" in the first place, gave them authority to distribute their wires universally, and guaranteed that they would be profitable since before you were born. I am a free market capitalist bastard; yet it's clear to me that these quasi-government "companies" owe "us" big.

      2.) These "companies" are doing a downright crappy job of providing broadband. When pissy little backwater third world nations like Canada can get broadband to damn near everyone, and I haven't long since had several mbits of cheap, low latency bandwidth, something is very wrong. That something is the vestiges of monopoly that continue to f*ck up the marketplace that would have long since spawned an overwhelming plethora of "joe's hotwire broadband" ISPs selling unadulterated broadband for next to nothing.

      Thats why. Mkay?

    39. Re:The problem is.. by elmegil · · Score: 1

      They would simply make it much more expensive for Covad to do business, hoping that I'd cave in and go ahead and pay them directly. Hardly a strategy surprise, and practically what they've been doing already.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    40. Re:The problem is.. by IHateUniqueNicks · · Score: 1

      The issue being discussed is whether they should have to SHARE the pair that you're paying them to provide telephone on, not whether they should allow someone else to use the other pairs.

      I'm not sure if they are right in this, if you're paying them for a service, and they chose to go through a pair of wires, but not to use the wires to capacity, I don't see why they should not be made to allow other people access to the remainder, since they're getting paid to provide the service, not to tie up a pair of wires.

    41. Re:The problem is.. by sjames · · Score: 2

      The issue being discussed is whether they should have to SHARE the pair that you're paying them to provide telephone on, not whether they should allow someone else to use the other pairs.

      If the economic incentives weren't contorted into pretzel shape, they would WANT to share the single pair. Considering that the splitter filters are far cheaper than doubling the number of lines that must be buried and maintained (especially since the splitters are installed only on the easily accessable ends of the line rather than under ground and the customer is perfectly capable of handling the installation on his/her end), the only economically sensable thing to do under a normal set of incentives is to share the single pair.

      On the other hand, if the lines are so cheap and plentiful that a simple and inexpensive way of doubling the use of each pair (thus cutting the cost to them nearly in half) is not attractive, they need to quit whining about how much they invest in the last mile and start selling them off for next to nothing (the apparent value they place on a pair) + a fair margin.

      The pretzel twist is that they wish to leverage their existing monopoly to launch their DSL services (the very definition of abuse of monopoly power). They apparently believe that their DSL offerings are inferior enough to the competition's that they cannot compete on an even footing.

    42. Re:The problem is.. by MeNeXT · · Score: 2
      Thamk you for making my point.

      --
      DRM? No thanks, I'll just get it somewhere else...
    43. Re:The problem is.. by Rakarra · · Score: 2
      Technically the Bells own the wiring

      Technically I rent that wiring. Shouldn't I have a choice has to who provides my service at the other end?

      If you rent a Ryder truck, can you say "I know this is your truck, but I'm renting it, and I'd rather be governed by U-Haul's contract."

    44. Re:The problem is.. by Rakarra · · Score: 2
      a) the Bell's TOS typically sucks. Especially compared to ISP's like Speakeasy and Megapath. E.g., they do not allow you to run servers.

      Eh? I have Pacbell DSL and they allow me to run servers. I specifically chose not to get AT&T/Excite's Cable service because they don't allow servers. Quick easy install, it's rarely down, it always runs at 1.5Mbps/128kps, at a reasonable price. Tech support truly sucks, but I don't expect good tech support from anyone anymore.

    45. Re:The problem is.. by PJPorch · · Score: 1

      There is no competition, that's the point.
      Your assuming people can get both cable or DSL at their houses when the truth is most people only have access to one or the other. Dialup isn't really an option because its not broadband and good luck inventing a new way to do it.

    46. Re:The problem is.. by mwa · · Score: 2

      If I rent a Ryder truck, they don't stop me from pulling into U-Haul to buy boxes or storage space or gas or whatever other services might make me better able to use the truck I rented.

    47. Re:The problem is.. by Rakarra · · Score: 2
      Yes, but those are completely seperate services from the truck rental. The baby bells don't stop me from dialing 10-10-220 either.

  20. Squeeze out competition? by mqatrombone · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why should the baby bells have to provide the infrastructure for their competition? This decision is actually better in the long term. In case you haven't noticed, customer service has gone way down since the bells were forced to open their phone lines up. What happens when an entire neighborhood no longer uses a bell? Why shouldn't bell just pull out of that neighborhood and no longer support those lines? Then what happens? Yep, the company leasing the lines can't help the customers because they don't know what they're doing or they don't have the knowledge the bells do of the system in place.
    Broadband suffers from the same thing. If you want cheap broadband, wait 20 years. If you want high speed access now, expect (and be willing to pay). And if you want competition, then be willing to pay higher (should be only to begin with) prices while infrastructure is being laid. The baby bells should not be required to lay the infrastructure for their competition. If someone wants to compete, that's fine, but they should also be willing to put down the money required and set up their own infrastructure, instead of trying to build on top of the bells' hard work.

    --
    If 76 Trombones really led the big parade, why did they have anyone else in it?
    1. Re:Squeeze out competition? by BannSidhe · · Score: 1

      --If you want cheap broadband, wait 20 years. If you want high speed access now, expect (and be willing to pay). And if you want competition, then be willing to pay higher (should be only to begin with) prices while infrastructure is being laid.

      The problem is, this is a flawed concept. The competition isn't ALLOWED to run the new wires to build that new infrastructure either. Ever try to set up a fiber connection for a WAN between two buildings over a mile apart?

      Every pole you run a cable on you need to pay for. You have to hope that the company your running it on gives you access to do it as well.

      End result: Verizon could just kill you right off without ever doing anything. (Literally)

      Put the lines in the CO? The bells own those too....sorry.

      When the gas/power industry was deregulated and competition was given a chance through government enforcment, all the baby competition was allowed to run using the other companies wires/pipes.

      The companies pay for the structure. Just like what goes on currently in telecom. Covad pays Verizon in my area to have their sections in the CO. They share the line with my phone numbers, and the payments they make pay for the support they are supposed to get.

      That's why Bell wouldn't just move out of that neighborhood. They are being PAID to stay there and maintain the equipment.

      The problem is, they are now being given full right to deny that competition now. Say hello to Verizon/SBC for all your DSL needs. (and VERY high priced payments)

  21. Vote with your dollars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Revert to dial-up Internet access! High-speed connections are too fast, too dangerous. When some spyware starts sending your files, at least with dial-up you can fell it and stop it before it has sent your entire harddrive.

  22. Regulation wrapped in regulation wrapped in... by bafu · · Score: 2, Informative

    The court also overturned a 1999 rule that required the dominant carriers to share a portion of a local line into a home so that the customer could have a different provider for DSL (digital subscriber line) service, but keep their local telephone provider.

    I wonder how often the existing line was suitable for DSL anyway. Didn't seem like it was the case in SNET country, anyway. If they are saying that you have to run a separate copper line, that's not such a big deal except that I expect that, in areas where they can get away with it, bells charge a lot more for a second line that will be used for DSL than they do for one that will be used for POTS, even if they would be conditioned the same in either case

    "The commission's own findings repeatedly confirm both the robust competition and the dominance of cable in the broadband market," Williams said.

    So they are trying to look at the total competition picture rather than just DSL vs. DSL. Probably a good idea. The problem with all this is that telcos have all kinds of weird deals with state and local gov'ts for what can be provided, etc. There are all kinds of unintended consequences whenever changes are made that end up muddying the waters. Sucks. It also sucks a lot to have to depend on your competitor for your service to work. As long as the bells get to own the wires and sell networking that runs on the wires, providing DSL will be messy.

  23. Are we seeing a possible 'Matrix' birth? by Mhrmnhrm · · Score: 1

    Forgive the flight of fancy here, but did anybody notice that in the Matrix, *EVERYBODY* was using cell phones, and the only people interested in land lines were Neo and his gang? Perhaps there's a reason for this...

    Here in Baltimore, Verizon has had a terrible track record in keeping my land line running properly. On a good day with good luck, I MIGHT connect a dialup at 28.8. My line is often marred with static and other "artifacts". But since I'm in the great megacity of the eastern seaboard, there are so many cellphone companies competing that Verizon must figure I have one of those anyways, and don't really need good, consistent, and reliable POTS service. But without reliable POTS lines, there's nothing for DSL to carry over! So at least here, Verizon may very likely cheer and pat itself on the back for winning this ruling, then turn around and realize their equipment is so outdated (from neglect, afterall, everyone's using cell phones) and their users gone (Besides the @Home fiasco, my cable access has been the model of speed and reliability) that they no longer have a viable business from which to profit!

    --
    I suspect that one of these choices is incorrect. Correct.
  24. competition? by PD · · Score: 3, Insightful

    completely failed to consider the relevance of competition in broadband services coming from cable (and to a lesser extent satellite). We agree.

    Cable is absolutely NO competition for DSL. My requirement was

    1) static IP
    2) low price
    3) allows servers. I run mail and http servers.

    My directtvdsl is $49 a month with a static IP. If they take this away, I'm screwed. I'll have to pay a bundle to get the same service from the phone company.

    1. Re:competition? by ClarkEvans · · Score: 2

      My directtvdsl is $49 a month with a static IP.

      I _had_ cais.net for $72 per month... now the same level of service with the regional bell costs me $178 per month... for less bandwith.

    2. Re:competition? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My directtvdsl is $49 a month with a static IP. If they take this away, I'm screwed. I'll have to pay a bundle to get the same service from the phone company

      I suggest you head to the store and pick up a 12 pack of condoms and some lube, because you're gonna get screwed every month.

    3. Re:competition? by binarybits · · Score: 2

      The requirements you list have nothing to do with the underlying technology and everything to do with the policies of your ISP. Cable ISP's tend to be more fascist about servers and statics, but that's not because of any intrinsic flaw in the technology.

      The point is that most users in most areas have a choice between cable and DSL, and those that don't are likely to get that choice soon. The fact that a few people with niche requirements (and I'm sorry, but static IP and running servers are niche requirements for home broadband) don't have multiple choices doesn't necessarily prove that the market's uncompetitive. DSL and cable both serve the average consumer quite well, and so it seems to me that this is enough competition to falsify the claim that heavy-handed regulation is needed to combat the lack of consumer choice.

    4. Re:competition? by Boulder+Geek · · Score: 2

      No cable ISP that I know of allows any kind of commercial use of their facilities. Contrary to what some of the above posters may think, some of the reasons are technical, going back to the infamous "shared bandwidth" issue. With the lack of competition from DSL, I don't see this changing any time soon.

      There are other issues. If the rule is changed substantially where I live, I will be forced to go with MSN as my ISP, something I really don't want. If somehow the rules still allow competition on dry lines, then I suppose I could drop my voice service and only use cell for that. Gee, that would mean I wouldn't ever get a QWorst bill again ;-).

      --
      A well-crafted lie appears unquestionable - Dama Mahaleo
    5. Re:competition? by Danse · · Score: 2

      If the Bells weren't being handed their monopoly back, the whole market could be served because niche providers would pop up to serve those with needs greater than the Bells can meet. The fact that this will no longer happen proves that competition is not sufficient, and it's obviously due to the fact that the Bells control the copper. They city should control the copper and all comers should be allowed to provide service over it. Anything else would be stupid.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    6. Re:competition? by singularity · · Score: 2

      Cable was no competition for cable *for you*. That means two things:

      1) You needed the specific features. Some people do not. In that case, cable is competition for DSL.

      2) Where you are, cable does not offer static IP or the ability to run servers. That is not a limitation of IP over cable, but rather policy set by your local cable company.

      In other words, you are making generalizations based on *your* specific case.

      Are the moderators on crack for marking this Insightful?

      I still see very little reason for people to run http servers off of what should be basic access. Quite a few DSL and cable companies throw in server space with the deal to keep people from doing this.

      The ability to say "Hey, I am running my own server" does not justify it.

      If there is some actual commerical or hobby need for it, I am positive that a dedicated server (either co-lo'ed or shared) would be a much better idea.

      --
      - (c) 2018 Hank Zimmerman
    7. Re:competition? by PD · · Score: 1

      Your other points are well taken, but I can address the "why" of running your own server:

      I want to make (eventually) hundreds of megabytes of my snapshots available to friends on the web. Maybe gigabytes.

      Colocating a server for my snapshots makes NO sense at all when my 128K up works just fine.

      As for my own mail server...

      I hate spam, and the best way I have found to fight it requires control of the server. Earthlink refused my request for a dedicated e-mail server. :-)

  25. My phone co. doesn't care... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They replaced all the phone lines with wireless video phones and food replicators.

  26. Competition is meaningless without access! by Ma$$acre · · Score: 2, Insightful

    One of the biggest barriers of bringing DSL to my community (other than it's small size) is the fact that after investing a rather large chunk of capital in equipment, the phone company would have to share access to competitors.

    I'm all for competition, but when that very competition is delaying rollout by years, I see this as a partial win.

    For those who already have the access they want, they probably have options such as DSL and Cable, and maybe even Wireless. I have none of those. When the phone company already has to compete with Cable and Wireless, they won't even enter a market when they have to make the investment in equipment that other get to use to add to the level of competition.

    --
    Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information upon it. -Samuel Johns
    1. Re:Competition is meaningless without access! by TheHawke · · Score: 1

      Just checked the Black Box for their pricing on MUXes and DSLAM modules, $10K starting for a 25 port DSLAM and $5KUS for a MUX of equal size...
      CHICKENFEED! The bells can buy this sh*t by the lot and implement the hardware in due time. The major labor is breaking the loops and clearing the wires of any taps and loads.
      This is breaucratic Bullsh*t that the bells do because they are concerned about their bottom line. They are a UTILITY for god's sake! They dont need to be worrying about that. Their main concern is proving service for their areas of responsibility.

      --
      First rule of holes; When in one, stop digging.
  27. Wireless Broadband by bhsx · · Score: 1

    is coming soon. Couple this with the FCC widenning the frequency spectrum and broadband providers wont depend on the Baby Bells' backbone for long. I'd be more concerned with how this effects businesses requiring high-speed lines and the prices of OC3 or even T1 lines, more concerned than over my personal cable line anyway.

    --
    put the what in the where?
  28. Governmental Genious by Allaria · · Score: 1

    Aren't we in the middle of a recession?
    And isn't this going to destroy the economy even more?
    "Let's give the big companies more reason to charge little companies more and put them out of business."
    WooHoo.
    Great idea.
    I'm excited.

    --
    If a and b in c, and a can create b, and a can create a, and b can create b, and b cannot create a, then a created c.
    1. Re:Governmental Genious by mqatrombone · · Score: 1

      you don't listen/read the news do you?
      the first quarter economic numbers are in:
      the economy grew at a rate of 5.6% (annual).
      You know what percentage of annual growth economists are happy with? 3-5%
      And we're in a recession? I don't think so. Recession is when the economy shrinks.

      --
      If 76 Trombones really led the big parade, why did they have anyone else in it?
  29. ILEC -- don't forget the Universal Service fee's by teambpsi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is really troubling. As an ISP in QWEST territory it might spell trouble for us in terms of the Internet service we provide to our clients.

    All they have to do is declare us a competitor instead of a client, and poof! there it goes.

    Furthermore, lets not forget that the BELLS get huge tax breaks and subsidies to build out the wiring to provide service.

    All those Universal Service Fee's we pay on our lines to help make sure that EVERYONE gets phone service.

    I think to some extent that this will eventually get challenged and reversed. Much in the same way MCI and Sprint and the cast of THOUSANDS of small long distance providers have the right to serve your LD needs on your ILEC provided lines, so should the physical plant be open as well.

    Of course, you're getting this IMHO from a guy that thinks the cable companies should be open as well, given THEIR tax breaks etc.

    Then again, this might help force Neighborhood Wireless Access Points to more of a real thing....then again we have other special-interest-group-companies that want to block up the airwaves and control them. Anyone remember XM's challenge to 802.11 that got essentially rejected?

    </flame off>

    ;)

    --

    Old age and treachery almost always overcome youth and skill.
  30. michael's bias by Torgo's+Pizza · · Score: 1

    Paint me green and call me a troll, but michael do you always have to somehow blame the President for everything that goes wrong in the world? Why not just post the news and let the reader decide for him/herself on what to think?

    1. Re:michael's bias by 3am · · Score: 1

      No, Michael just pointed out a fact: The FCC is headed by political appointees appointed by the President.

      You're the one who brought the idea of the President doing something blame-worth into play here. Freud would be proud....

      --

      A: None. The Universe spins the bulb, and the Zen master merely stays out of the way.
    2. Re:michael's bias by xnuandax · · Score: 1

      Yeah no kidding...Michael that little GWB crack just earned yer ass a front row seat on the Axis of Evil(tm)

    3. Re:michael's bias by Peyna · · Score: 2

      Yep, and major news outlets do it all the time. They bring in other details and facts, which by themselves are facts and probably meaningless, but when connected to a specific story they can help the reader/listener draw some conclusions.

      A simple example of this was a map on the front page of my newspaper the other day. It showed Chandra Levy's Apartment, her gym she worked out at where she was last scene, where the found her body, and last, that senator's apartment was labelled too. By itself it's not a very interesting piece of news, but it is suggestive to the idea that he was involved somehow in the incident.

      It happens all the time, some people just don't realize it is being done.

      --
      What?
  31. mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Excellent point - they own the copper, but the rights of way are not such that competetion can lay wiring to people's homes. That, coupled with the fact that phone companies are local monopolies, is what makes it necessary to have the government force the Baby Bells to allow others to use their wiring.

  32. You think Verizon's bad?? by SaDan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Try Qwest. They lie about everything, make you wait forever for anything to get accomplished, and their billing department has to rival the IRS when it comes to complexity of an organization.

    I've had Verizon (DSL, home phone, still have Verizon Wireless). I've had Qwest (DSL, home phone). I had good service from Verizon, and most definately did NOT from Qwest.

    As soon as AT&T digital cable is rolled out in my area, I'm dumping my landline and going with AT&T phone service over cable. Qwest will not get another cent from me, ever again.

    It's a shame Qwest won't have to share their lines... Anything to make those bastards work for their money is fine with me.

    1. Re:You think Verizon's bad?? by LordSah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I hope Qwest dies of gonorrhea and burns in hell.

      I've had several service snafus with Qwest, and it boggled my mind that every single person I talked too was as incompetant as they were. And, in the end, I was horribly ripped off.

      Unfortunately, the broadband in the neighborhood (AT&T cable modem service is available 3 or 4 blocks down the road) is Qwest copper...and they won't let you have DSL if you're not a Qwest phone customer.

      If you have a choice, never, never give Qwest a dime.

    2. Re:You think Verizon's bad?? by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      I'm not really a fan of Qwest, but haven't had any problems with their services yet. But I believe that its not technologically possible to only provide DSL without phone service. Someone more knowledgable is welcome to inform me otherwise but as I understand it, DSL connections simply divide the frequencies used into data and voice, thats why you have to put low pass filters on your regular phone lines.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    3. Re:You think Verizon's bad?? by loraksus · · Score: 2

      sure it is. You just don't activate the voice circuit on the line. Of course qwest will lie to you and tell you (and their technicians, who "might" not know better . . ) that phone service is necessary. Truth is, there is no need for the frequencies below 20kHz, since analog voice is only ~ 300 - 4000Hz. DSL runs much higher, and the frequencies depend on whether you use CAP/QAM or DMT or the bastardized Glite on the line (probably DMT if you had DSL installed in the last 2 years)
      As long as the copper is between you and the co, you can get dsl.
      http://www.orckit.com/fr_newsa.html?/how_doe s_ads_ works.html

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
    4. Re:You think Verizon's bad?? by LordSah · · Score: 1

      I don't think the technical limitations are a factor. I asked if I could stay with my current telco and just get DSL service, and they said no.

      It makes them more money.

  33. Now if cable wasn't just as bad by bluGill · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The obvious answer is just move to cable, since cable companies want to provide phone service you should be able to choose who gives better service. Now if cable companies weren't even more evil that the worst baby bell.

    Still, it is worth your while to keep checking out the compitition. If the bells see everyone switching to cable modems and cell phones they will respond (eventially). There are local 802.11 (and other licensed band are possible) networks to connect to. Satalite works great for some people.

    Remember, you can turn this into a non-issue, but only if you tell everyone you know that there are options and they should check out cell phones (my cell phone is more talk time then I need, free long distance all for what a land line would be.) Cable is trying to get into the phone market. Let everyone blindly use the phone company, and the phone company has won. Tell people to compare service, and the phone company will start losing. Not everyone, but enough to affect the bottom line, and that is what will bring service to your neighborhood.

  34. Buy the last mile? by yzquxnet · · Score: 3

    How would competition and QOS differ if instead of the phone company owning the wire, the consumer was able to buy that last stretch of cable to your home. Ignoring all bad factors such as having to replace a crappy cable yourself. What would the benefits be? You would be able to dictate what you wanted to run on the cable, who you wanted to run it and a variety of other things. People who want to replace their cables with optics could hire an 3rd party to replace their cable for them. Instead of hasseling with the phone company. Who more than likely won't replace your cable unless your whole neighbor needs replacing. People who want the good stuff can get it and those content with shitty copper can still have it.

    Am I off my rocker or is there something to this?

    1. Re:Buy the last mile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It might cost a lot at first, but I would like that option.

      My Internet provider is sprint b.b.d. wireless. So I own the wireless equiptment here, and they own the tower that sends the signal.

    2. Re:Buy the last mile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who more than likely won't replace your cable unless your whole neighbor needs replacing. People who want the good stuff can get it and those content with shitty copper can still have it.

      I don't want to replace my whole neighbor, just her dog.

      This poster's name secretly replaced by Folgers Crystals

  35. Independant broadband competitors in deep doo-doo. by xnuandax · · Score: 2, Informative

    Note Covad's stock dropping 12.5% on this announcement, their days must truly be numbered now...

    Also note the previous weeks price erosion (no doubt the cronies running the FCC/judiciary getting friends & family to sell short before the press release...). Why oh why can't I be a crooked public official on the corporate payroll!?!? :-(

  36. Screw you, Mpower! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hah! You based an entire corporate business plan on the ILECs playing nicely and being cuddly and friendly. Well, you screwed your customers, your employees, and your stockholders, but now it's your turn. Have fun, Rolla, as your little DSL-wannabe imitation CLEC piece of crap empire crumbles around you. Have a nice day!

  37. cable modem and wireless by sydlexic · · Score: 2, Insightful

    a victory for the cable modem industry since dsl will become increasingly less competetive (viva isdn). and hopefully this will spur even more interest in alternative routes like wireless.

  38. ADCo by Target+Drone · · Score: 2, Informative
    Maybe this might encourage someone to start up an ADCo or maybe 802.11 will create some more competition.

    I'm just glad I live in Canada where I have the choice between 3 different DSL providers or cable at about $35US/month. It seems like the states has really fumbled the ball when it comes to providing high speed Internet to everyone. The FCC should be creating more competition not less.

  39. Powell's "Strategy" by burgburgburg · · Score: 2, Informative
    Some background on Michael Powell's "strategy":

    The Media Borg's Man in Washington

    Their Man in Washington

  40. I disagree with this post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Liberals from other countries see your American Democrats, and they're whining about vote recounts, and their wishy-washy support of universal health care, and think "They're on their own ; I definately can't abide by their ignorance."


    Unfortunately, the same applies to the Republicans - both parties copy each other's policies, just like in Canada, the Conservatives (nicknamed Tories) copy almost exactly the policy of the Liberals(nicknamed Grits). Now don't get me wrong, the Conservatives aren't in a position of power since there's about 5 parties that are more important than them.


    But the struggle between the Conservatives and the Liberals is the closest analogy to that between the Democrats and the Republicans, except that you don't have any other parties to fill the void, so you get 4 years of the Republicrats, then 4 years of the Republicrats, then 4 years of the Republicrats again.


    We, on the other hand, live in the land of Jean Chretien. But I take a great deal of comfort in knowing that there are more choices for Prime Minister than two.

    1. Re:I disagree with this post by smyle · · Score: 4, Funny
      I take a great deal of comfort in knowing that there are more choices for Prime Minister than two.

      I wish we had another "real" party in the USA (the reform party of a few years ago was basically a "vote for me - these guys suck" party).

      I feel like I'm stuck in a Douglas Adams novel:

      "[The saying] comes from a very ancient democracy, you see... On its world, the people are people. The leaders are lizards. The people hate the lizards and the lizards rule the people."

      "odd," said Arthur, "I thought you said it was a democracy."

      "I did," said Ford. "It is."

      "So," said Arthur, "why don't the people get rid of the lizards?"

      "It honestly doesn't occur to them," said Ford. "They've all got the vote, so they all pretty much assume that the government they've voted for in more or less approximates the government they want."

      "You mean they actually vote for the lizards?"

      "Oh yes," said Ford, "of course."

      "But why?"

      "Because if they didn't vote for a lizard," said Ford, "the wrong lizard might get in."

      --

      Sleep is just a poor substitute for caffeine, anyway. -Bob Lehmann

    2. Re:I disagree with this post by bafu · · Score: 1

      I wish we had another "real" party in the USA (the reform party of a few years ago was basically a "vote for me - these guys suck" party).

      Any third party that got to the point of winning would have become like one of the Big Two we have now anyway. It has more to do with the kind of personality that's attracted to that sort of work than anything else. People who act on principle typically don't fit in very well and, as a result, are not going to advance very high. A Ron Paul, for example, can get elected as a congressman and work very hard to do what he thinks is right, but is not going to get elected to president (even if he didn't run on the Libertarian party ticket again ;-) ). Even Senator is too much of a longshot.

      Rather than hoping for better politicians, perhaps we should stop giving them more and more say over what we do. Just my $0.02.

    3. Re:I disagree with this post by quantaman · · Score: 2

      However also keep in mind that the fact that there are 4 other parties to choose from there is a great deal of vote splitting that goes on between parties with similar platforms (i.e. Canadian Alliance and Conservatives). The only reason the liberals continuously get in is the right is divided and the left (all relative to the current political situation) is left entirely to the Liberals because the NDP is a very poorly run party with a worse provincial record (can anyone say BC). It's likely the fact that the Conservatives imploded after Mulroney that an extremist (depending on your view) party like the Bloc was able to form by picking up old Conservative votes in Quebec (this is pure speculation on my part). While the multi-party system does give us more choice it also effectivly limits that choice by placing the majority of the power in the hands of strong regional parties (Liberals, the Alliance, the Bloc) and punishing the parties with a more widespread base of support (NDP, PCs) and when it comes down to the choice of Prime Minister it really mimics the US in the fact that the decision is pretty much eft up to Ontario and Quebec and even then Quebec essentiall works outside by voting for the Bloc. Other than coalitions what other party has even formed the government than the Liberals or PCs? The only time it really is an issue is we get a slightly more multi dimensional debate and the other parties sometimes formed the opposition and got a chance to pressure the government. The fact is that unless the Canadian Alliance merges with the conservatives or implodes we will never get a different government (at least for a few decades), the other Parties are marginal, the PCs lose too many votes with them and the east will never accept a government that it percieves has western roots.

      --
      I stole this Sig
    4. Re:I disagree with this post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People who act on principle typically don't fit in very well and, as a result, are not going to advance very high.

      That is the paradox that political conservatives face.

      We're in favor of much smaller government. But we have to pick out people to become part of that government in order to become enough a part of the system to shut things down.

      Plus, there's a real difference between a Conservative and a Republican. Just like there's a big difference between a Conservative and a right-wing Religious advocate.

  41. Start thinking people! by benzapp · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I can't believe the communist crap I am reading on this board.

    The reason we do not have better high speed internet acccess is BECAUSE no one wants to bother investing money in something that the government will force them to give away for free under penalty of law!

    There are miles and miles of unused fibre optic cable in this country that could provide T1 speed to every home in America easily, but because whoever bothers to build that infrastructure will HAVE to share that service with a competitor at prices dictated by the government no one will invest a dime.

    I can understand how the small minds cannot understand the rather esoteric issues regarding intellectual property, but outright capital investment such as this is a no brainer. There are currently no high speed connections to houses. Yes, some smart people have found ways to use the phone and cable networks installed 20-30 years ago to provide faster than modem speed, but true synchronous high speed internet access is out of the reach of all but the most wealthy.

    Someone needs to build a high speed network for the regular joe sixpack. Who is going to do it? Right now, NOBODY. You can complain about monopolies all you want, but you are not going to find anyone, anywhere who will invest a dime in infrastructure when he will not own it in the end.

    Hypothetical: Lets say you buy your dream car and it costs you $300 a month. What if the government came along and told you that unless you want to go to JAIL, you will give your brand new car to your neighbor for six months a year and you cannot charge him more than $250 a month to use it. The government doesn't care that you will lose $50 a month. The government says that because your neighbor can't afford $300, this is only fair.

    Does this sound reasonable? I think not.

    This ruling is a victory for the Americans everywhere. The iron grip of Washington is losing its grasp on the throats of innovation.

    --
    I don't read or respond to AC posts
    1. Re:Start thinking people! by Cytlid · · Score: 1

      Yea, so I barrow my neighbors car for 6 months, and pay him $250 a month while driving to my business, I find I keep running out of gas, because after all, my neighbor not only has a nice new car, but controls all the gas in the area (for miles). I can't seem to get to my business and make any money because my neighbor, when not out of gas, supplies me with gas that is no good and says "Sorry, that's all I've got." This meets my neighbors needs because he didn't want to share his car in the first place, he didn't want me to be able to afford the $250 it costs to even rent the car from him... thus successfully squelching all his competition like he has in the past. And when they throw me in the poor house, he parks it right next to his other 5,000 cars just like it. Then maybe you have a reasonable analogy. (Sorry folks, bad experiences with Verizon.) ;P

      --
      FLR
    2. Re:Start thinking people! by aphor · · Score: 2

      Illinois took Ameritech to court last year over the same issues.

      Illinois won. Now SBC has legal minimum service standards or they risk having to pay millions of dollars in refunds (again) or losing their charter to operate the CO (if the state legislature decides to get involved).

      --
      --- Nothing clever here: move along now...
  42. Bush in not for free trade by seldolivaw · · Score: 2

    Which is interesting, since "free trade" was a key part of his election platform. Since getting into office, he's slapped tariffs on steel, signed a huge farm-subsidy bill, and made a bunch of other dumb decisions which benefit the people who funded his campaign at the expense of free trade and fair competition. This move is just another drop in the bucket.

    1. Re:Bush in not for free trade by Peyna · · Score: 2

      I always wondered what would happen if a politican accepted all that money from people and then just turned around and did what they wanted to. It's not like they have a binding contract to make something a law because someone gave them money. Might not be able to get funds the second time around, but it's still worth a try.

      --
      What?
    2. Re:Bush in not for free trade by mqatrombone · · Score: 1

      how is not forcing a company to do something anti-free trade? its definitely free trade because it levels the playing field. if other comapnies want to get involved, they can, they just have to invest the money to get in. kinda like the bells, except they start x number of years behind

      --
      If 76 Trombones really led the big parade, why did they have anyone else in it?
    3. Re:Bush in not for free trade by paranoic · · Score: 1

      SARCASMYou expected something different?\SARCASM

    4. Re:Bush in not for free trade by geekoid · · Score: 2

      actually, this happens quite abit.
      they use to say to Jr Senators:
      "If you can't take there money, drink there licquer, and fuck there women, then vote against them, you are in the wrong line of work."

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:Bush in not for free trade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kinda like when Clinton took millions of dollars and hours from the Unions and then turned around and pushed through NAFTA?

  43. DOES NOT LOCK CLEC OUT OF LOCAL LOOP ACCESS by aphor · · Score: 5, Informative

    Unless I'm reading this wrong, you don't have to worry unless you have only one pair of telephone wires run to your house/office. The decision says it removes the "line sharing" stuff from a list of services that must be offered to CLECs without bundling. This is that the phone company can deny CLECs access to the loop already providing your voice phone service. They hinted at, but ultimately balked at deciding to throw out the whole unbundled service mandate list. It looks to me that Covad can demand a local loop to your house if there is a dry one available. Go to your box and find out how many pair you have!

    Accordingly, the Line Sharing Order must be vacated and remanded. Obviously any order unbundling the high frequency portion of the loop should also not be tainted by the sort of error identified in our discussion of the Local Competition Order and identified by petitioners here as well.

    Petitioners also claim that the Commission without explanation reversed a prior decision that a portion of the spectrum of a loop cannot qualify as a "network element." The Commission urges that any language suggesting such a view is explicable as simply reflecting a judgment on technical feasibility, which it here reversed on the basis of a reexamination of the facts. Line Sharing Order, 14 FCC Rcd at 20942-43, p 63. We think the Commission's view is convincing.

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    --- Nothing clever here: move along now...
    1. Re:DOES NOT LOCK CLEC OUT OF LOCAL LOOP ACCESS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      But line sharing is the way that low cost ADSL is delivered. No line sharing, no self-install; no self-install, no cheap ADSL (costs would be MUCH higher if a truck had to roll each time). This ruling would open the door for all kinds of harassment by ILECs of CLECs (short of absolute stoppage of ADSL line-sharing) and as such MUST be overturned.

      I'm a dsl product manager for a national ISP offering this stuff, so I know that of which I speak... hence the AC post.

    2. Re:DOES NOT LOCK CLEC OUT OF LOCAL LOOP ACCESS by aphor · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Sorry, but I'm one of those wealthy people who has SDSL for the sake of taking a loop away from Ameritech. I pay almost out of principle. I installed a 110 block and ran CAT-5 in my house. The install (truck already rolled) should have taken 10 minutes. The Covad line technician had to argue with the Ameritech CO people for 60 minutes about taking bridge clips off, and before that, he had to spend an hour to tone out the subloop because they don't properly tag lines in my neighborhood. Your ILECs and RBOCs can and will still harass the CLECs, but that doesn't stop me from getting my unmetered (not oversold) DSL Internet access.

      --
      --- Nothing clever here: move along now...
    3. Re:DOES NOT LOCK CLEC OUT OF LOCAL LOOP ACCESS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Er, you can have 12 UNEs into one facility. Unbundled dosen't mean just one, it means loops connected to a CLEC's rather than the ILEC's switch. As a tech who works with several CLECs I've ordered in and set up quite a few small busnesses with half a dozen or more UNEs. If the ILEC is not required to offer UNEs it means that they no longer have to allow extensions over their copper to be switched by third parties.

  44. Bad news by willmc · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I know for a fact that this is really bad news for the city that I live in. Sprint owns all the phone lines here, and are notorious amongst local residents and (especially) businesses for being extraordinarily slow (as long as weeks) making installations and repairs. While Sprint does offer DSL in town, they masquerade IPs and have rather unreliable speeds. A regional telco exists that provides almost flawless service (less than an hour of downtime in the past two years) and gives you real IPs so that us geeks can operate servers and other nonsense on them. Suddenly, it appears as if this telco may no longer be able to service us and we'll have no comparable alternative to it.

    When I signed up for their service, they had me a modem at my house and another ready on their end within 24 hours. I then sat for nearly THREE MONTHS waiting for Sprint to get off its ass and turn over the phone line, which as I understand it is a completely computerized process that requires almost no effort on their part. Sprint wouldn't talk to me because I wasn't technically a customer (the other telco was, they said) and all the other telco could do was keep asking them over and over to turn over the line. Finally, after running around in circles for months I had a lawyer friend of mine fax them a letter threatening legal action, whereupon the line was turned over less than 24 hours after sending the fax.

    Since then, the wait hasn't been as long, though it's still generally between two and three weeks, which is unreasonably long for a 5-minute (if that) action. I can't imagine what it would be like here if Sprint wasn't even forced into competition with this other telco.

  45. Just another Enron waiting to happen by Sydney+Weidman · · Score: 1, Flamebait
    As long as you leave critical infrastructure in the hands of people who have no public mandate or regulator and who are only concerned with profit, you are asking for trouble.

    It's strange that a country so concerned about security and stability would let its own citizens be manipulated and abused by commercial "governments".

    1. Re:Just another Enron waiting to happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What idiot moderated this as flamebait?!

      If I had moderator power, I'd give this dude +3, Insightful...

  46. Last Mile by ThePlague · · Score: 0

    Ok, I'm all for competition, and think choice makes everybody better. However, in this case, not forcing the phone co to share access to their lines could be a good thing. The reason is simple: this now gives them much more incentive to make the investments in "last mile" runs to residentials to all that dark fiber sitting out there. When they knew they would be forced to open those lines to competition, they had no incentive to make the runs, as they knew they would be undercut in pricing by ISPs "piggy backing" on their infrastructure investment. Consequently, all the dark fiber.

    Now, however, they know they'll have a bona fide monopoly at least for a time. This gives them tremendous incentive to make the investment while they can charge premium fees for access.

  47. profitable copper by McQuaid · · Score: 1

    So if the copper was worth more again, you don't think the government should step in if they actually wanted to dig up the wire and sell it?

  48. "Competition" by binarybits · · Score: 2

    I'm all for competition, but it seems to me that the flavor of "competition" these rules were designed for foster is an awfully strange beast. I can't think of any other industry where the larger firms are required to share their facilities with smaller competitors.

    I think the basic problem with this approach is that someone has to decide what a "reasonable" price for access to Baby Bell lines is. If that price is too high, baby bells will be able to undercut them and they'll get driven out of business. However, if the price is set below the market rate, then the upstarts will forever be living parasitically off the efforts of the local Baby Bell, and will never have any incentive to build infrastructure of their own. As a result, the "competition" between the Baby Bell and the upstart competitors will be fought in the political arena over access to shared resources, rather than any sort of competition in the open market.

    What ought to be happening is upstarts should be putting their own coax or fiber in the ground. Then there'd be no issue of who has to share their lines with whom. The problem is that state and local governments make this almost impossible, by signing exclusive contracts with a single cable or phone company and giving that company a de facto monopoly. Clearly all the regulatory hurdles to start a competing network is all but impossible.

    It seems to me that the efforts of the geek community should be aimed at breaking down those political obstacles to new development, not taking sides in the pointless battle over how much the Baby Bells should have to "share" their facilities with competitors. As long as such "sharing" is the basis for competition, the Baby Bells will continue to dominate the market, and competing carriers will continue to place their stock in lobbying for more "access" to the entrenched monopoly's facilities rather than focusing on building competing infrastructure.

    1. Re:"Competition" by cmowire · · Score: 2

      Actually, I think that multiple sets of coax/fiber/etc lines is counterproductive.

      What we really need is to seperate the people who put the wire in the ground from the people who offer service on said wires. This creates an environment that preserves freedom of service (i.e. the ability for you to choose Speakeasy instead of the mass-market ISP you get by default) while not forcing the ILECs to aide their competitors. Plus you give the wiring providers an incentive to offer fiber to the curb, etc.

    2. Re:"Competition" by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 3, Insightful

      what you have here is a "natural monopoly". The thing is that you dont really need to have incentives for others to make their own infrastructure. Making ionfrastructure is very expensive, and doubling would just be an enourmous waste.

      You just need companies to compete over the quality and price of services over this infrastructure.

      Such an arrangement is not as strange as you say. It often happens with natural monopolies. for example when the electrticity market was being deregulated nobody seriously suggested that different power companies should build different powerlines.

    3. Re:"Competition" by GnrcMan · · Score: 2

      Wow, just what I want. My road being dug up several times a year as upstart telecom. companies go in and out of business.

    4. Re:"Competition" by Trashman · · Score: 1

      Someone please! mod the parent up. This is the first real solution I've heard thus far.

      --
      Do not read this .sig
    5. Re:"Competition" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't think of any other industry where the larger firms are required to share their facilities with smaller competitors.

      I can't think of any other industry where the larger firms had their facilities donated to them / built by the order of the governmment.

      Oh, wait, stop-- i can think of another industry where the facilities were built using government iminent domain and government funds. The railroad industry.

      Say, don't the larger firms in the railroad industry have to share their facilities (tracks and such) with the smaller firms, now that their monopolies were broken up?

    6. Re:"Competition" by cmowire · · Score: 2

      I'd take credit for the idea, but it was actually posted on slashdot months back and pulled out of my wildly associative memory. ;)

    7. Re:"Competition" by unitron · · Score: 2
      If you separate the provider of the wire from the provider of the signal on the wire (and prohibit the wire provider from being in the signal providing business), then any time there's anything wrong, won't each blame the other, just like when the software company blames your hardware and the hardware company blames your software?

      Of course if the wire provider is also in the signal business (phone company, cable company, electricity company), then they will have an incentive to make sure that the wire works so that they can sell the signal, but only as long as you are buying the signal from them and not from some other signal selling company.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  49. Small community? by isotope23 · · Score: 1

    Guess what, that is what YOU think.... I don't care what the CLEC has told you, if your community is small, they won't upgrade the equip until they have to. Their current thinking goes like this : 1. Small community - hey we can make a killing providing T-1's cause they have no other access. 2. DSL? If we do that, all our gravy from business service goes away, AND we make a lot less per pair due to the customer service issues etc. Not to mention bandwidth congestion on their backbone. So If you were a bell, and could charge 1,200 a month to a few businesses, or spend a good chunk of change to upgrade the CO's and then only get 35.00 a month which would you choose? The ONLY way a CLEC will upgrade their CO's in a small town or any other place, is when the bandwidth cat is out of the bag and someone else starts reaping the $$$......

    --
    Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
  50. Amen. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's not forget that the Democrats took money from Enron, too. Or, should we remember good old Slick Willy's Chinese Campaign Funds? (Tell me just why the hell it's 'okay' for a politician to take funds from a FOREIGN POWER?!)

    Bush can screw around with corporations all he wants, for all I care, as long as the bombs keep dropping.

    Not that I'm some kind of loony bent on war, but after Clinton firing off two cruise missiles and hitting nothing but dirt while yelling 'Yeah, problem solved guys! Y'huh, I'm gonna go git me sum head now!'..

    It's kind of good to have someone with balls in office now.

    1. Re:Amen. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See, conservatives are fascinated my male genitalia. It's so obviously queer. And that whole suit and tie thing. God it's bizarre.

  51. Well, then... by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2

    Let's get rid of the *rest* of the 1996 TCRA.

    --
    Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
  52. No comparison at all by PunchMonkey · · Score: 1

    completely failed to consider the relevance of competition in broadband services coming from cable (and to a lesser extent satellite). We agree.

    Cable is absolutely NO competition for DSL.


    You should be comparing companies, and not the medium they use for the service. Just because the cable company in your neighborhood doesn't offer static doesn't mean other neighborhood's don't. Same goes for hosting rules etc.

    Guess what, in my neighborhood it's the cable that you can get a static ip with, and the DSL is dynamic (usually -- depends on the DSL provider).

    So compare Rogers vs. Bell or whatever you folks have down in your neck of the woods, not just the service.

    --
    I'll have something intelligent to add one of these days...
  53. TROLL by aphor · · Score: 1

    TROLL!

    Hyperbole

    Confusion

    TROLL!

    Who paid for the local loop? AT&T? Where did they get that kind of cash? You would not be so irritated and confused if you knew the history of our phone system. Also, if you were to invest in joe6pack.net as a capital invetment in your own POPs with your own last-mile wiring, you would not be an RBOC subject to the regulations questioned by the decision we speak of. Therefore all of your economic arguments' examples are moot.

    Calling someone else an ignorant fuck does not exclude you from being one yourself.

    --
    --- Nothing clever here: move along now...
  54. Ruling is by Court of Appeals for DC by sulli · · Score: 2

    but this will most assuredly go to the Supreme Court. No way will this be allowed to stand without a fight.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  55. Re:but I refuse to share the fp with an ac by j0nkatz · · Score: 0

    Yo homie!!

    Please put a space in his name or it could cause confusion. I'd hate for people to confuse him for me! :)

    --
    Don't mod me, bro'!!!!
  56. here's a solution by mqatrombone · · Score: 2, Interesting

    government should own the landlines. kinda the same way they own the roads. most people would consider telephone/broadband wiring essential infrastructure nowadays. So why don't we have the government treat it as a utility and the different companies compete for repair and lease rights?

    --
    If 76 Trombones really led the big parade, why did they have anyone else in it?
    1. Re:here's a solution by ZenJabba1 · · Score: 1

      There is a discussion paper in Australia about this exact topic

      http://www.alp.org.au/dload/federal/reports/tels tr a_discussion_paper.pdf

      --
      `find / -name "*your_base*" -exec chown us:us {} \;`
    2. Re:here's a solution by Insanity · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would take the worst commercial monopoly over government control any day. A government organization would make the telco's look like friendly and efficient organizations. The enormous overhead would result in higher prices: if not directly, then through taxes.

      If govt were to own the wiring, the quality of service would vary from year to year depending on how much tax money is diverted to the War on Something. There are a lot of roads in fair or poor condition around the country, but at least a road is still a road, even if it's a bit rough. DSL or cable, on the other hand, just doesn't work if the lines aren't in near-perfect condition.

      Finally, I can think of no justification for siezing control of billions of dollars in wiring from the company that laid it. Regulating a business is one thing, taking all of its assets is another entirely.

      Phone lines are a natural monopoly, we just have to accept that. Any attempt at forcing competition is artificial and thus doomed to failure. The same can be said of power and gas distribution. One need look no further than Caliornia to see the spectacular failure of unnatural competition, and if you consider the slow growth and unreliable nature of DSL under this system, it too is an example of a large-scale failure.

      To reiterate: phone lines are a *natural* monopoly, and if you think about it, the idea of competition is completely absurd. The only solution is regulation of the kind that is currently done for standard voice lines.

      --
      Nix absolutably seriousness.
  57. forced competition by SlugLord · · Score: 1

    yes, it is unfortunate that some companies have large market shares in the telecommunications business, but it's silly to force them to bend over backwards for their competitors.

    I find this especially irksome because I've been in the similar situation all my life: "no, charles, we will move slowly on this math because everybody else needs more help. I know you could move faster, but you could just help everybody else along"

    1. Re:forced competition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hmm, it would appear I come off as a bit of a spoiled brat with that last comment. Let me point out that I do have a habit of tutoring others (I refuse any monetary compensation, by the way). I just feel it's unfair to focus on the slower kids and expend so much extra time and money on those who will get the least out of their education and ignore those who will get the most.

      This is off-topic, so I'll post anonymously...

  58. Halfway there by aphor · · Score: 2

    In Illinois, when you pay to have a line installed, you bought the local loop(s) for however many pair they charged you to drop. I think the subloop (pole to your house) can be claimed by you. The rest of the loop is a grey area owned mostly by the phone company, but held in public trust by the charter granted to the phone company.

    Can anyone refute/substantiate this?

    --
    --- Nothing clever here: move along now...
    1. Re:Halfway there by bwohlgemuth · · Score: 2, Informative

      In Illinois, when you pay to have a line installed, you bought the local loop(s) for however many pair they charged you to drop. I think the subloop (pole to your house) can be claimed by you. The rest of the loop is a grey area owned mostly by the phone company, but held in public trust by the charter granted to the phone company.

      Umm, no. The ILEC (usually) owns the pole, the wire to your house, and the little box on the wall on the outside of the house (called a demarc). You connect your wiring to that box. That's why when a tree knocks down the wire after a storm, you don't get a bill for $3,000.

      B

      --
      Flamebait .sig for sale, low mileage, one owner only.
      Serious inquiries only.
  59. Recession is: by aphor · · Score: 2

    Recession is two consecutive financial quarters with inflation that meets or exceeds growth.

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    --- Nothing clever here: move along now...
  60. Ballence between Democratic and Captialistic force by ClarkEvans · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I can't believe the communist crap I am reading on this board.

    What makes America great is that we arn't a pure capitalistic society... if we were, we would quicly slide into a dictatorship as companies gobble up smaller companies in order to form monopolies, etc. Further, we are not a pure socialistic society, private ownership is essential. What we are is a pretty-good ballence between the two extremes. Unfortunately, for the last 10-20 years the power has been getting out of ballence, with capitalistic forces now having more control then the democratic forces. This is clearly seen by the acquisations of congress people doign the bidding of companies instead of people.

    Have you read Adam Smith's title called The Wealth of Nations? It rests on a principle of a competitive or free market economy; a competitive market being defined by many economists as one where no single supplier holds more than 20% of the marketspace, having 7 or more distinct direct competitors. Only under these circumstances will capitalistic markets bring the highest value to society. In marginalized situations, where a single company holds a large share of the marketplace there isn't a choice, it is called monopolistic.

    Monopolies in general arn't bad, but a special class of monpoplies which provide for essential services are problematic. Telephone is essential in our day and age (ever try to get a job without a telephone number?) and the baby bells have a huge part of the marketshare for telephone and related land-line services.

    So. What do we do with essential monopolies? There are two extremes forms of control; Democratic (one customer one vote) or Dictatorship. The latter choice is usually bad since, if left to its own devices, it will maximize profits by overcharing the customer, causing huge distortions in the economic system and undermining other markets and thus our free market economy. The former choice is not great, but variations of it are important to consider.

    One form is to have government operate the smallest, most essential service of the business which cause it to be a monopoly. Our roads are good examples. The government owns them, but services to maintain the road (which can be competitive) are all farmed out to various companies who can bid. The government need not create the road signs, for example. The other form is to let a private dictatorship run it, but regulate the dictatorship. Unfortunately... there just arn't any other options!

    As for the phone systems themselves, a bulk of the funding for these systems were initally provided by the government (the people) since setting up a phone infrastructure is a huge operation... thus to say that private enterprise has done this is just not true. Private funding for stuff is usually not long-term. More often than not, public funding for bring projects is the only way to get them done.

    Your black and white charactization is just dead wrong. It isn't iorn grip of Washington that is the issue. Washington is just the government controlled by either Democratic or Capitalistic forces. In this case, we have yet another victory for the capitalistic force; which already has the bulk of the power. The more we allow this to happen the closer we come to having a pure dictatorship. By the way, if we were shifting to be totally socialist (everything decided by the people with equal weight), then I'd be arguing on the other side of the fence. This is a delicate ballence, not a black vs white issue. Becarefull for what you wish... you may just get it.

  61. Sorry meant ILEC, not CLEC.... by isotope23 · · Score: 1

    My Bad DOH!

    --
    Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
  62. This may be a good thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First,I think this is a typical end-round around the de-regulation rules that allowed telcoms to add new services. The locals wanted to add long distance, internet, ect but were barred by the conflict of interest in also providing the phone lines. (Some how people in the 70's and 80's thought less of monopolies?) Now they have the right to compete in other markets and are asking for the courts to remove the competitors in theirs.

    This may be a good thing! Telcos have traditionally been prohibited from content provision gining them no interest in the entertainment industry, just communicating two points. The cable companies are mearly content providers propped up by the entertainment industry as revenue stream. If the telcoms were to get their act together and just provide a good clean line like they used to do with phone service they could do well.

    An another note, Doing well as a company is no longer acceptable on wall street. An example of this is my local power company. After enron, they were being degraded as too much in debt with some questionable trades. They are still planing to send out check for $1.40+ a share! Wall street is nuts. Few tech companies post that kind of earning and the few that could don't actually write the checks, but keep it! Wall street is all about the "benie baby" stock of the week to make a buck not about the long haul!

  63. Good, I currently cant get DSL becuase of this by Boxcarwilli · · Score: 1

    I must of spent about 5 hours and 10 different phone calls trying to weasal my way into getting DSL with Verizon. My neighbors get it, North/South/East/West of my place, but apparently "Im To Far Away From The CO"

    So what that means, is I have to be ingenous as to getting a repair tech out to sort out my line becuase of my incompatibility for DSL. By law, they cant provide that service, becuase it locks out comptitors. Even though they are my local carrier and phone company and they own the systems.

    So, my last attempt, is to have them bring in a second phone line. Maybe I will get lucky and be put on the same local loop as my neighbors instead of the one Im on that probably wraps me around the city to or three times. I'll know monday if this works. I HATE DIALUP :(

  64. My DSL provider... by I.T.R.A.R.K. · · Score: 0

    ...recently hiked rates by $5 and capped my dl/ul at 5 gigs. I'm paying more for less now.
    I will be switching to one of the other four DSL providers in the area, or going cable.
    I don't know how Americans have it, but in Canada, there are more than enough choices to go around. And they seem to be getting cheaper every year. Hiking your rates is either blatant stupidity or suicide around here, because there will always be a cheaper(and reliable) alternative.

    --

    "Adequacy.org: Where congenital stupidity is not an option, but a requirement."

  65. Re: Troll with a Soul gets Coal in the Hole by benzapp · · Score: 1

    "The court also overturned a 1999 rule that required the dominant carriers to share a portion of a local line into a home so that the customer could have a different provider for DSL (digital subscriber line) service, but keep their local telephone provider."

    What the article is not telling you is this same 1999 rule did not just require telephone companies to share their network with "competitors", it also required companies to do so at a price set by the FCC or some other administrative body. This price made it UNPROFITABLE to bother upgrading this network further.

    As far as the last mile, there are other regulations that are being challenged now as well of which this ruling is one part. This decision is just one domino down and what will hopefully be a wave of deregulation. The issue with the "last mile" carriers is not the situation you propose, its the backbone carriers. If it was profitable for them to provide service to homes and use all the available bandwidth, they would.

    I suggest you or someone else explain what it will take to get fibre into homes in the US. Who will do it, the government?

    What happened to all those wonderful dreams of high speed internet access in 1999? Why is my high speed internet access much slower than it was in 1999? where is the progress?

    Yes, the phone network and the big carriers acquired their wealth by using the government to enforce their monopoly status, but what is done is done. This does not justify screwing over AT&T, et al to MY detriment.

    These regulations obviously did not help competition, because service got worse. How many people are happy with their DSL service? Why does it take months to get it? If you believe there are not problems with DSL... you are ignoring reality

    These administrative codes were not just unjust and inconsistent with American ideas of freedom and liberty, they make my internet experience SUCK.

    --
    I don't read or respond to AC posts
  66. Fine, then pay for the right of way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The wire is theirs, the poles are theirs. The property their wire travels across is mine.

    If they figure they want to "own" everything, fine. Make me an offer, or tear down the wire.

    The Government granted them the right to cut through my property. I want something for that, other than being bonded into indentured servitude to a service needed to function in today's world.

    Rights of way were "taken" on the basis that the utility would be regulated in the public interest, and that utility would be available to me. That was the compensation needed for taking one's property.

    Now, you're suggesting the rules be changed to simple outright ownership by the utility. Fine, then the "rent" you're paying has stopped and I want properly compensated.

    This actually got my parents "free cable". The poles ran over their property and the cable company started running the wire. Local magistrate said cable was not "health, safety, or the common good", and while the poles were owned by the power company, the right-of-way was not and could not be taken without consideration. Parents said that, unlike a phone, they had no need for cable.

    The right of way was "taken", but the compensation was free cable as long as they owned the property. I thought they should have fought for a grant to the property, but they didn't want to fight it.

  67. Dish without DirecTV would be another monopoly. by Agent+Green · · Score: 1

    Part of the problem with Dish TV's argument is that the combination of DirecTV with them would somehow allow them to better compete with cable comanies, which is utter BS.

    Both of the companies offer a heck of a lot more programming, clearer picture, 5.1 Dolby Digital on some channels, and a better value for the money, overall. However, DirecTV actually has some consumer choice with receivers and equipment...the main reason I prefer DirecTV over Dish...which uses inferior JVC equipment...and doesn't have tivo, last I was aware.

    In competition with cable...if they think for a moment that satellite Internet access can somehow compete in a viable manner with cable and DSL, they are sadly mistaken. Two-way traffic over a satellite that's over 22,000 miles above the earth is going to present some incredible latency that gets clobbered by dialup.

    Now, perhaps they could come up with some neat and funky antenna to use the 3 DirecTV satellites and the Dish satellites to get an ass-kicking amount of programming...but there is a point of reaching overkill.

    In the old days of satellite, it was cool to have the 10' dish outside tuned to whatever I wanted to watch...but those days are over. Personally, I'm glad I can choose between Dish or DirecTV depending on my needs. It would be a mistake to create another monopoly in the terms of "competition".

    The ideal way to promote competition would have been for municipalities and towns to have been wired and maintained by a neutral facility, handing off circuits to whatever telco wanted to set up shop...then you have 100 LECs in the CO, and since none of them owned the wires, you could choose your provider in a manner as simply as moving a jumper. It's nice to dream.

    Personally, I think the establishment that is presenting a viable challenge to the cable and telcos is RCN when it's available. After all, they are putting in their own physical facilities to provide their phone/data/cable services...which is really the only way to compete against the baby bells/cable franchises.

    --
    // Agent Green (Ian / IU7 / KB1JQO)
    // IEEE 802.3: All 10base Are Belong To Us
  68. You are wrong... by Boulder+Geek · · Score: 2

    Your problem isn't that you are too far from the CO, its that your line is provisioned in an incompatible manner, or was in the past. For instance, if you have a MUX (two lines on one pair) DSL won't work. If there ever was such a beast on your line, the phone company probably thinks its still there, because (regardless of your ILEC) they are notorious for their incompetence.

    --
    A well-crafted lie appears unquestionable - Dama Mahaleo
  69. Last mile by nuggz · · Score: 3, Informative

    Last mile wire may be owned by Bell Canada, but other ISPs can use it.
    End result is I do not have to deal with sympatico to get my DSL.

  70. Time Warner, FCC, sharing by --daz-- · · Score: 1

    This is very slightly off topic, but remember how the FCC required Time Warner to open it's cable internet lines to allow ISPs other than RoadRunner?

    Well, I seem to recall that the FCC gave Time Warner 1 year. Also, IIRC, that was well over a year ago, and I still have no choice of ISP on my cable line. WTF happened here?

  71. Re:Ballence between Democratic and Captialistic fo by benzapp · · Score: 1

    "Have you read Adam Smith's title called The Wealth of Nations? It rests on a principle of a competitive or free market economy; a competitive market being defined by many economists as one where no single supplier holds more than 20% of the marketspace, having 7 or more distinct direct competitors. Only under these circumstances will capitalistic markets bring the highest value to society. In marginalized situations, where a single company holds a large share of the marketplace there isn't a choice, it is called monopolistic."

    I challenge you to find for me the chapter in The Wealth of Nations that describes any of this garbage about monopolies. It sounds like you are confusing Alan Keynes with Adam Smith. I would suggest the spirt of Book IV, Chapter III, Part II would contradict your claim. In it, the case is made that any sort of restrictions on trade do not help anyone. I would argue this chapter can be applied to restrictions on telecommunications companies as well. Adam Smith was also well aware of basic greek. The word MONOPOLY comes from the two words mon and polein. MONOPOLY literally means SINGLE SELLER. Because you arbitrarily decide the greeks really mean 20% of the market or less than 7 competitors is absolutely irrelevant. We can change the definitions of every word here. But, fortunately I have history on my side.

    Perhaps you should read Smith instead of quoting him to give credence to your bogus claims. Or better yet, stop getting your info from the New Republic.

    Monopolies exist for one reason and one reason alone, because the government forces others to accept them. We are talking about WIRES here, not roads. There is no reason why 10 companies can't contract with individual citizens to lay wire on their property. You may laugh at such a prospect, but it is not as difficult as you might think. Personally, I don't even believe the roads should be owned by the government, but that is another issue.

    Lets say in 1970 you decided you were going to set up a compete with AT&T. Nevermind how expensive this prospect might seem, you could not have done so. The police would have come, with guns pointed at your heads, and drag you off to jail

    True monopolies are not arbitrary numbers of market control, a monopoly is ONLY POSSIBLE under threat of violent force. A monopoly is absolutely impossible in a free society. Capitalism is not about bogus statistics and ridiculous definitions such as yours regarding monopolies, Captitalism is about freedom. You are free to do whatever you wish, unless someone makes it too costly for you to do so. Usually, this involves weapons.

    This IS a black and white issue. Freedom, or not freedom. You may try and obfuscate this issue by presenting irrelevant facts or changing the definition of ancient words in the argument... but the fact remains we can either have a company owned by citizens provide high speed internet access. OR we can have the government do it.

    A simple proof of why government sucks, is Europe and Japan. These are two economies that believed everything you have just said, and their are absolute basket cases. You are proposing nothing less than the Command Economy theories presented by the American Left in the 1970s.

    Government does not work, it never has worked, and it never will work. Get over it. You may think your parody of marxist economic theory you learned in college is sufficient, but it is old news. We have listend to the chatter of micromanaging arm chair thinkers like this for a hundred years.

    I also had to say that I found your discussion of dictatorship versus democracy amusing. Personally, I do not believe in the rule of men. I believe in the rule of law. The government exists to protect citizens from force and fraud, nothing more nothing less. Whether despotism or democracy does this is unclear as it has not been tried too often in the last 2000 years.

    --
    I don't read or respond to AC posts
  72. Yet another reason to live in Alaska by captain_craptacular · · Score: 1

    I like to think AK is similar to the cloud city, we're small enough that the empire doesn't notice us. Because of this we have no "baby bells" or the like. Just good cheap cable modems/dsl service from local telcos. Another plus is most of the population up here is computer illiterate so we don't have problems with cable modem congestion ;)

    --
    They who would give up an essential liberty for temporary security, deserve neither liberty nor security
  73. neither nor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..."neither the current FCC nor the courts"...

    Its good to see some people still know the proper use of "neither-nor". As President Bush would say, you have nice grammaticalized strategery.

  74. wires owned by telco, land owned by people by Brian+Ristuccia · · Score: 1

    One important aspect that you neglect to mention is that telco wires and their supporting infrastructure occupy public and private property. In exchange for the use of this property, the property owners must be given some consideration. It seems reasonable that property owners should have some influence over where wires are strung or burried and how those wires are used.

    That said, I'm all for mandatory at-cost leasing of wires that occupy public land or private property not owned by the telco. In absence of such measure, another method for preserving fairness might be requiring telco's to pay rent to the property owner.

    1. Re:wires owned by telco, land owned by people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give us your address and we'll have someone out there to remove the wiring as soon as possible

  75. Re:Ballence between Democratic and Captialistic fo by bcboy · · Score: 1

    You'd be more convincing if you at least knew the names of the economists you're talking about.

    It'd also help if you weren't wildly out of step even with conservative economists.

  76. From a selfish standpoint: let the Bells at it! by mountainhouse · · Score: 1

    I'm more concerned about a cable monopoly than a telco monopoly. My only choice for better-than-dial-up is cable. I'm not too impressed with the service I've recieved from AT&T Broadband, and it keeps getting more expensive. Couple of points: 1) I'd love to see Verizon given an incentive to expand DSL into my neighborhood. Having numerous competitor's is ideal, but I don't think it's realistic. At least, let's pit the cable companies against the Bells where possible. 2) Why doesn't the cable company have to share its facilities with competitors?? I think a Covad-like company should be able to give me service over AT&T's facilities. Last I looked, there's more cable modems in service than DSLs. The cable companies claim there are technical issues. Yeah, right.

  77. Re:Ballence between Democratic and Captialistic fo by benzapp · · Score: 1

    Please, please tell me. Of which economist(s) am I so ignorant? This discussion revolves around a single economist, Adam Smith and my personal musings.

    It should be obvious that my economic musings are not at all conservative. They are based on an absolute distrust of government, a respect for the power and threat of violent force, and a desire to not have other people tell me what to do when I am not hurting anyone nor lying to them. It is as simple as that.

    Further, one need to follow anyone about anything. Who cares what Adam Smith said or Karl Marx for that matter. The simple fact is 99.9% of the people on slashdot probably have not read the 1100 page Wealth of Nations or the 10000 Das Capital. We also cannot debate such mammoth works here. But, contrary to the powers that be, economics is not rocket science. We need not quote other economists or disect their arguments in order to figure out the basic problem here:

    For Americans to get high speed internet access in their homes RIGHT NOW, should we use the government to regulate the industry or not? Is the recent appeals decision regarding the 1999 FCC regulations of the telecommunications industry beneficial to the American people or not?

    You find my an economist who deals with this issue explicitly. They do exist, but I won't help you find them.

    --
    I don't read or respond to AC posts
  78. Nitpick (not quite) by efuseekay · · Score: 1

    It's not the wires that's expensive, it's the ducts and poles and central stations (switches) and repeaters locations/buildings...

    This is not just nitpick, since cable companies uses the same ducts and poles and switch locations etc... (the parlance is OSP : Outside Plant). But the Bells own the ducts and poles too, for the most part (though I think the cable companies have dug their own OSPs : someone correct me if I am wrong since IANAA).

    And, that is where the Bells can squeeze you too : force you to pull out all your cables from the ducts they own.

    Offtopic : Ever wondered how posts with "I will be modded down" always gets modded up? Moderators are so easily swayed. Now having said that, I will definitely be modded down... :)

    --
    Mode (3) smart-aleck mode. Press * to return to main menu.
  79. Re:Ballence between Democratic and Captialistic fo by beanyk · · Score: 1

    Please, please tell me. Of which economist(s) am I so ignorant? This discussion revolves around a single economist, Adam Smith and my personal musings.

    I think the previous poster meant John Maynard Keynes. You referred to an "Alan Keynes", who appears from a Google search to be a Republican politician, but not a famous economist.

  80. 'Free Market' economics by ioscream · · Score: 1

    "You find my an economist who deals with this issue explicitly."

    Start here: http://www.cato.org/
    then wander here: http://www.mises.org/
    and be sure to visit here: http://www.free-market.net/directorybytopic/regula tion/
    [yes, those are right out of my bookmarks]

    Your post reminds me of Orwell's line, "As with the Christian religion, the worst advertisement for Socialism is its adherents."

  81. Economics 101 -- Monopolies by Valdrax · · Score: 2

    Monopolies exist for one reason and one reason alone, because the government forces others to accept them. ... True monopolies are not arbitrary numbers of market control, a monopoly is ONLY POSSIBLE under threat of violent force. A monopoly is absolutely impossible in a free society.

    This utter and complete nonsense means that it's time for a basic economics lesson.

    There are generally considered to be three major types of monopolies: natural monopolies, local monopolies, and regulated monopolies.

    The first type of monopoly, the natural monopoly, is the result of economies of scale. When an industry is a decreasing cost industry, increases in production lowers the LRATC (Long-Run Average Total Cost). This is what is referred to as economies of scale. The more infrastructure you build to support production, the cheaper the cost of production becomes. If the bottom of the company's LRATC curve intersects the market demand curve or is beyond it, then when the company has scaled up to cut costs as low as they can go, it has become a natural monopoly. Firms entering the market will have a much higher ATC until they can meet the same level of production as the monopoly maker. However, without the ability to lose money for long periods of time, the new entrant will never be able to reach the same level of production as the the monopoly because its costs are far above what the monopoly can charge for the product. In this case, the barrier to entry is the economies of scale.

    The second type of monopoly is the kind that the phone companies are usually considered to fall under, the local monopoly. These monopolies form when only one company services an area. Utility companies are some of the most common types of local monopolies due to the expense of setting up alternative infrastructure for competitors. Without forced access to the private infrastructure of the local monopoly, the overhead costs of setting up business are usually too great to recoup at rates competitive to the local monopoly. Other local monopolies include stadium parking (only so much nearby space) and the concessions stand at a movie theater (can't bring your own food with you). In this case the barrier to entry is control of an essential resource.

    Finally, you have regulated monopoly. For one reason or another the government has decided to grant monopoly control over a market to a company. Examples of this include patent holders, copyright owners, and certain kinds of government contrators. The barrier to entry is government dictated here.

    Utility companies fall under all three categories. Economies of scale give the local utility the severe advantage unless the government forces them to share their production infrastructure in some fashion. They are characterized by controlling a geographically-tied market, and they are subject to many kinds of government regulation to avoid the price-gouging and customer abuse that comes with a captive market.

    Violent force is completely unnecessary and happens extremely rarely in the real world. A company that is up against a natural monopoly is driven out of business by the higher cost of production. In addition, should the competitor manage to draw close to the monopoly's price, most monopolies set their production along the demand curve so that they maximize profit (when MR = MC, something that you can look up on your own). This is not nearly as low as they can go. Quite simply, market forces will drive the competition out of business. Regulated monopolies are kept out of business by the fact that entering the market may be illegal. Usually the courts are enough to stop production without need for police action. Local monopolies straddle the line. However, it's the possession of a critical resource that keeps them in control. All sorts of legal means, such as property rights and the expense of finding/creating an alternative resource are enough to keep them out.

    I'd recommend taking a basic economics class before pretending to know something about monopolies. Failing that, there are several good resources online that you can find via Google. Unfortunately, all the good ones with diagrams are not in HTML format, so I couldn't post a link to a diagram of the demand curve set against the LRATC curve for you.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    1. Re:Economics 101 -- Monopolies by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Ooooh I am so impressed you can quote from a textbook you college student! Gee, if ONLY I was smart enough to have bother remembering all those definitions for my Economics 101 test instead of failing out of college.

      Rather than describe these wonderful curves of which you speak, why don't you describe how they acquired their data sets which they used to construct that statistical analysis. I am absolutely amazed how my undergraduate business hacks who are destined to be little more than idiot secretaries are able to identify the various curves of economics but they have no idea how those curves came into being. Most economics textbooks I have read are exactly as vague as you are right now. In fact, many don't even define the measurement of a particular axis. Just two intersecting lines and a curve. For your own benefit, you will begin to have a greater aspect of the HUMAN aspect of economics when you realize that those curves are attempts to describe a general patter of human behavior, and that pattern comes from a SURVEY of humans. They never tell you that in your econ book.

      Surveys of anything does not change the basic element that human beings are free by nature and are inherently unpredictable.

      Natural monopolies. I challenge you to find ONE example of a TRUE natural monopoly. Remember, monopoly means one seller. I refuse to accept any other definition. Find me one example of a natural monopoly where only one seller exists at any given time. Caveat: you cannot say "Only Pepsi sells Pepsi" That is not a monopoly, but equivocation. Further, technology that is patented cannot be sold by another company. It must be a good or service that COULD be sold by another company but for whatever reason no other company sells that good or service.

      You will find that this scenario has NEVER existed in the United States EVER. Even if 99.9% of Americans use Windows 95 because they love it intensely, there will always be that .1% who choose otherwise. That is NOT a monopoly contrary to what the government and your textbook might say. As long as people are free to choose another seller of a similar and competeing product, some always do.

      Also, economies of scale is complete bullshit. There is not one market, ie the entire US. Or world for that matter. Just look at operating systems. Just because Windows controls 95% of the market does not mean it is too expensive for another company to enter the market. Economies of scale presume the only facto deciding buying and selling of goods is the cost of production. It further assumes that the only factor affecting cost of production is efficiency. Things like quality, and the inherent unpredictable nature of humans is not part of that equation.

      The best example of why this theory is nothing but useless crap is the entire .com bust. All those companies run by people like you with their econ textbook in hand tried spending tons of money to conquer the economy of scale, to capture that market share. It ended up being pointless.

      Read up on the concept of MICROMARKETS to realize why this entire concept of economies of scale is pointless.

      A LOCAL monopoly does "straddle" the line because you mix definitions. Because joe schmoe in east bumblefuck doesn't want to drive 20 miles to find another seller of hog food doesn't mean his local seller has a monopoly. Further, a local phone company has a monopoly because either the government says so, in which case it is a monopoly by force, or no one has bother to compete in which case it is not a monopoly because that person can move elsewhere to find a different seller.

      Your definitions of local monopolies presumes that people are static and that their freedom to move is not part of the equation. Of course you don't realize freedom is inherent to economics, your definitions of economics presume people HAVE no freedom.

      As far as regulated monopolies, I of course agree with you there. Of course, you seem to justify them somewhat... Using rather utilitarian means. But, as any economics professor will tell you, legal barriers to market entry simply cause the creation of a black market.

      The primary problem I have with this pseudo-science study of economics is that inability of its adherents to realize the human factor involved in it. This has lead to so much bloodshed in the world it is sickening. Ideas that look good on paper have left millions dead at the hands of those who attempt to force free people to conform to their little dreamy visions of reality.

      This discussion of monopoly also is a great example of newspeak. You can forward any idea by changing the definitions of words. Economics in particular is very guilty of this form of obfuscation. Once upon a time, it was considered only natural that people could trade whatever they had with whomever they want. That is, until our college youth started to read economics textbooks.

      Ahh.. Progress. At least we know there is a whole new crop of business inept college students to make money off of in the next techno bubble. Thank for being able to sell short.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    2. Re:Economics 101 -- Monopolies by Valdrax · · Score: 2

      Ooooh I am so impressed you can quote from a textbook you college student! Gee, if ONLY I was smart enough to have bother remembering all those definitions for my Economics 101 test instead of failing out of college.

      It must be burdensome for you. No with the usual opening petty jabs aside, let's get to the actual debate.

      The problem is that most economic forcasting can be likened to Newtonian vs. Quantum mechanics. Economics can currently only predict the actions of the market at large. Individual contributors to the market are, as you say, too unpredictable to accurately gauge. For the most part, they are free to act as they see fit. A consumer who likes buying movies typically doesn't fit much into the behavior of the market for CDs, except when they buy a CD on a whim. While people who study marketing study what makes a person buy something on a whim, the ultimate actions of the agent in the market as completely unpredictable to them.

      As long as economists cannot examine the fine bits of chaos in the system, they have to step back and look at the abstractions.

      The bits about monopolies that I described are one such abstraction. A true monopoly is as abstract of a figure as a Platonic solid. While economists create their models in a "perfect" abstracted world, they do not capture the full truth of the real market any more than a wind-tunnel simulation catches the actual behavior of the implemented design in the real world with its flecks and scratches in the paint creating miniature disturbances.

      What I'm trying to say here, is that we have a semantic argument. Your claim that no monopoly exists in the world is like claiming that there are no cubes or spheres in the world. On the one hand, the perfected Absolute does not exist, yet what people commonly refer to as cubes, spheres, and monopolies do exist.

      Of course there will never be a business that controls 100% of its market unless no one tries to bother. That there are barriers to entry does not mean that people won't try in spite of them. To say that as a result monopolies don't exist is ignoring the common use of the word just to make a semantically stacked argument. When you claim that the only monopolies that are monopolies are ones where other companies are not allowed to even try to enter the marketplace, you're also changing semantics away from real-world use to make your argument a tautology.

      As for Microsoft, it's irrelevant whether or not Microsoft has less than 100% market dominance. In legal terms, they are still a monopoly. They have enough of a dominance to be able to play the sort of predatory pricing games that true monopolies are supposed to be able to play should a competitor try to enter the market. They can set their price to maximize profit without fear of getting undercut by a competitor. They can instead cut their prices to levels below their competitors. Most importantly, they can leverage their monopoly in one market to support gaining control of another.

      As you say, economies of scale rarely result in natural monopolies in the real world. In general, economies of scale usually result in oligopolies, like the airline industry. Many local monopolies have sprung up as a result of economies of scale, since competitors cannot effectively create their own production bases in the same area. (I'll get to local monopolies in a minute.) Power companies are a fine example of this.

      Plus, economies of scale tend to only work when products are undifferentiated. Microsoft can never truly own 100% of the market because some customers will demand a different feature set than they can provide. In the few industries where products are undifferentiated and when economies of scale work their favor, none can achieve that kind of power today because of anti-trust laws, so examples are hard to find. A look back into history can reveal a few notable natural monopolies that were created though the aid of the aggresive price fixing tactics that economies of scale allow. The history of Standard Oil is pratically one of the textbook examples of monopoly abuse that took place without government assistance.

      As for local monopolies, the farmer who needs hog food is a poor example of a local monopoly. A better example might be a local hospital. When an emergency strikes, they are the only entity that can move quick enough to service the medical needs to the community surrounding them. Though the farmer could go further for medical attention if he didn't like his community hospital's prices for regular medicine, they're the only people that can help in time for a farming accident.

      You seem to have a rather out-dated view of utility companies. Deregulation has been removing government barriers to market entry for the past 20 years and in fact has been forcing open monopolies when competition did not magically appear. It's been quite a disaster in my home state as the regulations to force cooperation from the once monopolies has been pretty ineffective, and the competitors have been just as bad at customer service and pricing as the old companies. Furthermore, they've lifted some of the old price caps which had been keeping the monopolies in line, giving the odd effect of causing competition to raise prices.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  82. Atlas Shrugged by AiX2 · · Score: 1

    I'm midway through Atlas Shrugged right now. My gut reaction is that fiber optic cable = rail. The squeeling for open competition could come straight from the looters' mouths. Can someone tell me how the Baby Bells profiting from their own cable is wrong? Public interest be damned; they laid it, they can do what they want with it.

    1. Re:Atlas Shrugged by SpacePunk · · Score: 2

      If the bell system had footed the complete cost of the wire you'd be almost right on the mark. BUT, they did not. They put the wiring in, then charged back the cost to the U.S. taxpayer in the form of tax breaks. This isn't like Dagney puttin in rail that's paid completely out of the coffers of her railroad... It's like Dagney putting in rail, charging the cost to the taxpayers, then claiming ownership of rail her company never paid a penny for (now THAT is looting).

    2. Re:Atlas Shrugged by mr_infiniti · · Score: 1

      I hope you read The Fountainhead first? It's the first part. Read Anthem, too...the album 2112 by the rock group Rush, is based on it.

    3. Re:Atlas Shrugged by Steve+B · · Score: 1
      Can someone tell me how the Baby Bells profiting from their own cable is wrong?

      Simple: The Bells looted their way to a monopoly by getting the government to prevent anybody else from stringing up their own wires. Duh.

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
  83. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  84. Yes you don't own any stock.. by nyet · · Score: 2

    .. because you are obviously very young and VERY naive.

    As others posted, the Baby Bells were GRANTED monopolies. The huge opportunity is already there.. allow others to give you broadband over land lines. DSL/Cable is expensive because each carrier has a defacto GOVERNMENT enforced monopoly.

  85. Duopoly by yerricde · · Score: 1

    much the same way DSL is still going to have to compete with cable modems

    A duopoly can still be anti-competitive. If you don't like the DSL monopoly's service, and you don't like the cable monopoly's service, and you don't have $1,000 per month for a T1, what is your other option?

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  86. Consider the Implications by Veteran · · Score: 2

    Yes the phone companies own the wires. HOWEVER.

    Using precisely the arguments which won this case the regional Bells can now put every other dial up ISP out of business. You will use your local Bell for your dial up or you can kiss your internet connection good bye. Since AOL etc. are dial up ISP's they're gone too. We'll shortly be back to the days of "We're the phone company - we don't care, we don't have to."

    The free market breaks down when you are dealing with a monopoly because - by definition - there is no competition to keep them in line.

    This is blindingly obvious - but somehow that point seems to elude most people's mental grasp.

    No structure created by mankind reaches to infinity, and that includes the idea of a free market. There are boundary conditions under which the free market breaks down and becomes destructive; it is important to understand what those failure conditions are.

    1. Re:Consider the Implications by Dimensio · · Score: 2

      I really don't see this as a possiblity. Dialup simply requires that you be able to dial into a machine on another end over your phone line. You would still need a connection from your phone company to dial out, but the issue at hand is over a specific service provided through the line...dial-up simply uses the normal analogue line, which you're already paying the phone company for, not your ISP.

      Your local phone company trying to do something so that you couldn't dial out to another ISP would go into anti-trust and anti-competetive. I don't think that would go over well, at least not with some of the less corrupt government agencies our there.

    2. Re:Consider the Implications by Veteran · · Score: 2

      No, what I said is precisely true. The ruling absolutely re-establishes the situation which existed pre breakup; Bell controls what may and may not be done over their wires.

      The Bells don't have to worry about anti-trust; the ruling effectively grants them their absolute regional monopolies back.

      The key issue is ISP's - Bell collects a line charge regardless of who the ISP is - dial up or DSL. My DSL connection uses my local computer user group as the ISP but the bulk of my payment (all but $5.00 a month) goes to directly to SW Bell as line charges. What the ruling does is force me to send the other $5.00 to Bell also. This will put me on SW Bell as an ISP - disrupting my home page, email address, and greatly lowering the quality of my connection to the Internet. Bell hates my local computer group because they make them look so bad as an ISP.

      It makes NO difference whether the signal is analog and dial up or DSL the situation is legally identical.

      You can expect the Baby Bells to start squeezing other ISP's out - they'll start with the weakest - who can't fight back effectively in court and use the precedents of this case and the victories over the weak ISPs to get rid of the strong ones like AOL.

      This will happen, and the government won't say a thing; AOL - Time Warner will run the cable modem market and Bell will be the phone ISP - those will be your choices. Bell will argue - and the courts will back them up - that they don't get to use the cable company's connections to houses - so AOL - Time Warner doesn't get to use the phone lines.

  87. Death of the Internet by badnews · · Score: 1

    ... film at eleven!

  88. Viscious by Decimal · · Score: 2

    When I first read the headline, I read it as "Baby Bells Viscious Over Sharing Rules" and thought, "Isn't that the truth!"

    --

    Remember "Bring 'em on"? *sigh
  89. It's all part of a pattern... by mr_infiniti · · Score: 1

    The bottom line in all this is that Americans (the Consumer) will pay more for: high speed internet (self-explanatory to this crowd), steel (y'know, computer cases/parts, things like that), softwood lumber (new homes/renovations - your new sundeck, etc.), farm produce (hey, the Farmers are getting paid even if they grow nothing...), etc., ...and that's after the Republicans first year in office. Who knows how many more votes will have to be bought before the elections in November and how many more favors will have will have to be paid off in the next three years. Or seven years, if they "maybe" win another term... You probably don't need to be some sort of insider to tell that the bigger and more powerful corporations are the ones who are behind The Republican Party (of which Bush is only a mere figurehead...it's not like he's the mastermind behind the policies being implemented or anything). Microsoft gets a slap on the wrist from the new administration's DOJ - consumers suffer. Enron falls apart just after the Republican's win (and their largest financial contributor...hmmmm)- consumers suffer... Figure out who the absolute biggest corporations are in America, and bet that it'll somehow cost you more for their goods/services in the next three years and their practices will be cloaked in invincibilty.

  90. Comparison requires true substitutes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cable is not a subtitute for DSL because you are forced to share a line with your neighbors, making it easy to packet sniff their communications. One can easily monitor e-mail, http and other internet communications and activity. With DSL, you are directly connected to the Central Office (CO), so your neighbors cannot snoop.

    Where I live, SBC/Ameritech (Incumbent LEC) only offers ADSL with a dynamic IP. This is not a substitute for SDSL with a set of static IPs, which I get through Covad (Competitive LEC). This means that if the ILECs succeed at putting the CLECs out of business, I along with possibly millions of small businesses will have to

    (a) Pay 4x as much for a T1 or fractional T1.
    (b) Try to survive without SDSL, absorbing the impact it has on the bottom line, which can varry from business to business.
    (c) Go out of business.

    I suspect that many will be forced to choose option C.

    Fortunately, when Northpoint went out of business, most of us were able to get back online within a few weeks, thanks to Covad, Rythms and other CLECs. Unfortunately, if they go out of business, we may have no place to turn, as the ILECs and Cable DO NOT offer a viable substitute.

    I believe the court, as well as many others in regulatory agencies and congress, error because they think that anything faster than dial-up is exactly the same in market terms.

    JMHO,

    OpenStandards.net

  91. Niche Requirements? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Speak for yourself. I'm on dialup, but I've been looking into DSL and Cable. The ability to freely run my own servers would probably push me towards signing up. Faster downloads would be nice, but that alone won't convince me to octuple what I pay for internet access. (I pay $8.425 per month; the best deal for DSL with static IP I've found is $65 per month, but that explicitly prohibits running servers.) The lack of competition is really bugging me, because I would be willing to pay for every bit of my bandwidth usage up and down, as long as it's unimpeded. This is not a niche requirement. It's what ISP's are supposed to be about.

  92. Sounds about right to me, Republicans are scum. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The move to strengthen monopolies and topple the American form of managed competition has been going strong ever since Reagan. Patents used to be almost impossible to defend in court until Ronny RayGun and his Immoral Minority started fucking the eyesockets of the American people with all this righteous conservative bullshit. But hey, they did got the votes, right. Who's to blame, the clowns in the blue suits or the slobs who dittoed them into office to keep the damn niggers, drug addicts and faggots at bay. If the American people find themselves in chaos in the coming years, it's their own fault for playing this dangerous game of naivete.
    When the economy does go to shit because Americans have finally recreated the conditions that led to the 1930s depression era, all this shit about unbridled winner-takes-all, might-make-right because competition is its own ends is going to look pretty pathetic. This is not how America became a great nation.

  93. other isp's can still offer dsl despite ruling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i work for an independent telephone company (ilec) not one of the bells but a much smaller one (20,000 voice subscribers) and we offer adsl to our customers. we dont share our lines with other ISP's (the copper to the customers home) but we do allow other ISP's to offer adsl to our customers by selling them an ATM DS1 or DS3 from our DSLAM to their DSLAM - whereever it may be - and then configure our DSLAM to route Joe Blows ADSL PVC to the new ISP's DSLAM for them to deal with. It works and is much easier to deal with than allowing another ISP to colocate equipment (and cheaper for the ISP). I know bellsouth does this as does a few other incumbent phone companies in my area.

  94. Line Sharing by worldthinker · · Score: 0

    I'm a little confused. Didn't the Telecom act of 1996 mandate this so if it has the force of congress and not just a regulatory commission, how is it a court could throw this out???

  95. Re:Ballence between Democratic and Captialistic fo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You sir, are a moron, with an overly high self opinion. I'd reccomend doing your homework, before slapping your dick on the table.

  96. Re:Competition does not cause delay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your phone company investing capital does not cause them to be required to share access. They are already required to rent out last mile copper, and any CLEC is free to roll out DSL in your area. The CLEC does not depend on any equipment from your phone company, other than the wiring. Denying access doesn't speed up deployment by your phone company. Don't kid yourself.

  97. I lose my DSL by Sean+Clifford · · Score: 2
    Great, now I HAVE to get DSL from BellSouth. I've been using a Mom & Pop ISP that has given me great service, great bandwidth, a cheap IP, and doesn't block my ports. Bayou.com, I salute you.


    Anyway, WTF does it take to get decent, non-nosy, affordable broadband? I don't want to leech or serve. I just want to telecommute, serve a web site, and game in peace.


    Now off to Memorial Day celebrations where we remember the billions of bots and soldiers who have sacrificed their lives in LAN parties throughout the world. This is best done by sacrificing more bots with a LAN party of your own.


    Won't somebody stop this cycle of violence?

  98. hmm by I+Want+GNU! · · Score: 2

    this is a potentially troubling development, hopefully something will be done if prices skyrocket, of course windows prices did and nothing happened except a wrist slap

    GNU