Court Ruling Points Way To Broadband Regulation
DarkHelmet writes "An article on CNET News indicates: 'A U.S. appeals court has rejected the Federal Communications Commission's request to rehear a case, in a move that could prompt local governments to regulate the cable industry.' The piece explains: 'The rejection could pave the way for municipalities to force cable companies to share their broadband Internet lines with third parties.' I personally can't wait for companies like Speakeasy to branch into the Cable Internet market and provide 10-100mbps service."
As long as prices keep falling (which I imagine they wouldn't if they weren't shared).
Day One Transcript: 9/11 Commission Hearing
So my question is: In this summer of threat, what did you do to protect, let's just say the Pentagon, from attack? Where were our aircraft when a missile is heading toward the Pentagon Surely that is within the Pentagon's responsibility to protect -- force protection, to protect our facilities, to protect something -- our headquarters, the Pentagon. Is there anything that we did at the Pentagon to prevent that harm in the spring and summer of '01?
-- 9/11 Commission Member Jamie S. Gorelick questioning Secretary Rumsfeld
VICTORY TO IRAQ! Victory to Palestine! Smash Imperialism! Smash Racism! Smash Zionism! Smash Capitalism! Victory to the worldwide socialist revolution!
I AM SO HAPPY!!
WHITE POWER POST !!
Flame me if I'm wrong, but wouldn't that be de-regulation?
How exactly would one company be able to offer more bandwidth than another? There's still a limited amount of bandwidth available. With DSL, you can have the lines to yourself, connected to your backbone.
Sure, with government regulation your cable bills will be cheaper, and your service better. Great. But once the government has latched onto this industry it'll never let go. We could soon see cable TV channels with an anti-war bias get censored off the air 'for our own good', and copy protection built right into the cable system (protected by the DMCA, naturally). Say goodbye to having non-fritz chip enabled machines (like Linux boxen) working on broadband. I hope it doesn't come to this.
You heard it here first!!!
/etc/hosts or C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts file, I no longer see those annoying ads!!! :))) Instead I see naked byootiful poon. Try it, you'll like it!!!
f I run Apache on my workstation and serve out a simple entertaining GIF (say a naked woman), then I put:
127.0.0.1 ads.osdn.com
in my
ApacheTroll
This makes it much easier for the good old Department of Justice to put wiretaps on these lines. This may mean that bigger authorities than the RIAA may throw their hat into the ring for fighting P2P networks, among other things.
_____
Thank you.
Linus Torvalds developed Linux while he was attending university in Finland. A decade later, Linux has gone nowhere but limited to geeks and obscure users.
Why has Linux not made it big time? The reason to this is because Linux developers and users do not have social lives, and most of them were beat up in high school for their interest in computers. I was a high school jock myself, and I spent a lot of time washing my school's geeks' faces in toilets and had them write my homework. The same tactic was used in college, where I managed to graduate with a 3.2 GPA all because of having someone else do my work.
Most of these geeks that I tormented in the past are now Linux developers, and the majority of them pretty much never leave their apartment except for work and maybe the odd family event, which is probably the closest they have to outside human interaction.
I currently work as a notable figure in state politics, and I make over $90,000 a year. Most of the now Linux developers I tormented barely make it past rent.
So quit trying to make Linux better, build some muscles, and get your once fellow kind to do your work, because if you do so, you'll end up like me.
Soooo, does this mean we are (in essence) taking all the wires that the cables companies have strung by eminent domain? Not that I'm opposed to nationalizing infrastructure, but I think we ought to pay them something for their trouble. Oh wait, I've already paid for that wire ten times over with my skyrocketing cable bill.
are a true American hero. It would be an honor for me to have my head sloshed around in a dirty toilet bowl by you, good sir.
It had been a long world tour for Diva-extraordinaire Janet Jackson. She had performed in excess of thirty shows in fifty days in over twenty countries. Fortunately, her globetrotting was coming to an end, only one more concert to go. Taking place in Australia, this final concert was destined to be the biggest. More than fifty thousand people were expected to attend, not to mention the millions that would be watching on pay-per-view.
Unfortunately, having that many people in one place at the same time was a problem. The only solution was to construct a stage thirty miles outside of Sydney in the outback. Janet thought that having the concert in the outback was a great idea. She wouldn't have to worry about stadium rental, security, taxes, noise laws or parking. Janet would just take a helicopter to and from the stage. Nothing could be better.
The day before the concert, Janet was at the concert location supervising the construction of the stage. Everything was going better than expect.
"You should not destroy the land," a mysterious voice said behind her.
Janet spun around at the unexpected words. All she saw was a small, skinny aborigine with bushy white hair wearing nothing but a loincloth sitting on a fallen log.
"What did you say?" Janet asked with more than a tinge of surprise in her voice.
"You should not destroy the land," he repeated.
Calming down slightly Janet, walked toward the old man and said, "I'm sorry if we're disturbing you, but we have a show to put on tomorrow. So if you don't mind, I have a lot of work to do."
Reaching into a small leather pouch that was tucked into his loincloth, the old man removed a hand full of gray powder. "You have been warned," was all he said as he flung the powder in Janet's face. "If you continue your destruction, you will pay a dear price."
Janet screamed as the powder struck her delicate features. She immediately raised her hands to her face to wipe off the strange substance the old man had thrown. When she pulled her hands away from her face, her vision had cleared and she saw no evidence of anything on her face. Janet looked around in a panic; the old man was nowhere to be found. "Did that really happen?" she thought. "I must be working too hard."
Some nearby workmen had heard her scream and ran to where Janet was standing. "Are you okay Ms. Jackson?" one of them asked.
"Did anyone see a little old man in a loin cloth around here?" she asked looking around.
The men looked all around and saw no evidence of anyone. "We're the only ones within miles ma'am. You might want to head to the trailer. The sun out here can been quite harmful."
Janet thought for a few seconds before answering, "I guess you're right. I'll go to the trailer and lie down for a while."
And with that, she walked to the construction trailer to relax in the air-conditioned comfort. While she napped, the construction of the large stage continued. Groves of eucalyptus trees were torn down to make way for the lighting towers. As a result, many animals had lost their homes and some their lives. While the devastation continued, the old aborigine sat on a boulder and wept.
Janet awoke a couple of hours later with a savage hunger. With all of the construction and the strange hallucination of the old aborigine, she had forgotten to eat lunch. She searched the trailer's small refrigerator, but only found a couple of cans of Foster's.
She decided to venture outside to see how the construction of the stage was progressing before she returned to her hotel suite back in Sydney. On her way to the door, Janet passed a small mirror that hung over the trailer's crude sink. She stopped to make sure none of her make-up had smeared while she slept. "That's funny," she thought. "My nose looks a little bigger." Janet shook her head to clear the cobwebs as she left the trailer. "I must be seeing things. I better take a long vacation after this show. The way thin
Well technically you could offer faster service. If you alter your cable modem's firmware you could get much higher speeds... But the company has tools to detect that and ban your modem from the network, and send you a nice letter. But since it's shared bandwith you can't really do that anyway.
n/t
6 minutes and this awful holiday is over
:(
If your ISP is different than the company that maintains the wires, they always point fingers at each other when there's an outage. People have discovered this over and over with DSL, and there's no reason to think it would be any different with cable.
In Austin there are three cable "ISPs": RoadRunner, Earthlink, and a local one whose name I forgot. Since they all use RR's physical plant, I choose RR since there's only one company to call and one company to blame.
The only solution to this appears to be structural separation (where the company that owns the wires is not allowed to be an ISP), but this has its own problems (like it would probably be more expensive).
I sure do miss Old Ike.
I was talking to a friend of mine earlier and it sounded like the Cable Broadband was about ready to do what Phone companies had to do years ago. Is it feasible, or even proper for each phone company to have it's own phone lines for it to use? If that were true, then every house would have 3 or more phone lines for the different companies your phones are on. That is worse than the current state where we have more phone numbers than people in the house. So, there was one phone company that owned all the phone lines, and then the government saw this as a monopoly and opened it up so we could afford to have more phones than people. Broadband, there has been one company that made all physical wiring, and only uses 10% of it and chokes out any competition. So the government will have to intervene and make it possible for companies to compete.
Don't knock competition. I'd love competition in the local loop, and you guys really have no idea just how lucky you are to even have a choice of cable or DSL.
But, on the other hand, you have a ruling which allows in the thugs of the Department of Justice. And that is a huge down side. We're all familiar with the stories of the various barely-legal taps that FBI have been indulging in under the Patriot Act. I'd be terrified at the idea that they could use that same bullshit legislation to place sniffers onto a shared medium with my 'net traffic on it.
Still, that's a good market - Start a cable ISP that does customer-to-company encryption. That way the Fibbies can't sniff the traffic off the wire, they have to go to the trouble of getting a warrant and sniffing off a switch at your office.
Of course, if Shrub gets elected again you can be sure that such an ISP model would be out-lawed - Entirely on the grounds of fighting terrorism, obviously.
"God, root, what is difference?" - Pitr, userfriendly
this article gave me a dirty sanchez!
With the current DOCSIS 1.0 spec, 10/100 is impossible. And due to the fact that most cable providers only support DOCSIS 1.0 right now, the only way you are going to see 10/100 to the home is over fiber... And I don't think that is going to fit into the speakeasy price plan of 19.95 a month...
Ultimately, everyone will be better served by competition in this market. The main reason I wanted comcast was to receive the local cable access channel. Small producers like myself are budding every day. With fast data pipes, channels could proliferate. Companies like Atom Films, Project Greenlight and the like could offer premium subscription services.
In case the benefits of this aren't immediately obvious, let me add one feature the /. crowd can surely appreiciate -- cable porn. (yeah, yeah I know there's Spice and the like but this way, there could be an Indie Nudes or Suicide Girls Channel)
Ultimately, producers of content could market directly to consumers. Aggregators (like current channels) could make the process easier. Expect an explosion of creativity . . .
harmonious design
my informers tell me there are WMD in N.Korea
if u hurry up u can prolly invade^H^H^H^H^H^H liberate them before election day
I think I'm in LOVE!!! Isn't she a fox???!!!!!111
Sincerely, Ayn Randroid (Unemployed) who never actually read Wealth of Nations
Ya man! What's hapenning? Whaz apaneeeg??!!!
...cable companies already had to share their lines? Isn't this how I'm able to get Earthlink Cable in my area (Rochester, NY) through Time Warner? (Earthlink is actually a couple dollars cheaper for us than Road Runner, since we don't have cable TV...)
~ Aero
You'd think that maybe we all would have learned something after the DSL fallout earlier in the decade.
"Well, good luck finding a judge that doesn't run a bestiality site."
"there could be an Indie Nudes or Suicide Girls Channel"
i read that as "indian nudes"... y'know, like nude indian chicks? man, that would kick ass! hell yeah, i'll be like outsourcing my dick and shit!
dirty sanchez! dirty sanchez!
Cablecos are notorious for being cheapskates. They brought us the $50 throw-away box, are unwilling to change, and charge an arm and a leg for any minor improvement. You can be sure that if they are to surrender their pipeline, that they will do the bare minimum to support any 3rd party. Sure, it may be good to have the ability to pick and choose between vendors, but ultimately someone is going to have to do maintenance on the pipe if it breaks. Hidden infrastructure and support charges will quickly kill any small service provider. They don't have the domain over the pipe, and they don't have the expertees. We tried this years back with ADSL. It was a total failure. How many of those companies are still around? None except Earthlink and a few others. The rest are.. you guessed it.. the telcos.
I would rather that the justice allow the companies to keep their lines to themselves, but simply disallow them a local monopoly beyond a 5-10 year period.
I am sure that more than a few would say that is silly, but we already grant the baby bells a monopoly to guarentee 2-way communication. They are also regulated and pay heavy taxes. For tv, well, 2 major satellites systems are in place (echo and direct). By disallowing monopolies in cable, it will encourage a great deal more competition. I would like to see disney or warner take on Comcast (comcast makes Qwest look good; very hard to do).
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Jesus stood up straight and swiveled his head 180 degrees on his neck, eyes glowing red behind the pale visage of a re-animated 2000 year old pagan.
Then it came, a slow creak from the bowels of his fetid lungs, the slightest breaths being pulled from the rotting flaps around the lance scar. With a protracted, murmuring growl he spilled "Here is your game, Srim Redie will unlatch thine future."
I kicked Jesus back into the garbage can and pissed on his rotting corpse. "Saviour my ass, this is no second coming, 2000 years of kicking around and you still can't show up on time for your janitor duties at shakeys." This, of course, was my attempt at covering how deeply i was chilled by his revelation about Srim Redie.
Srim Redie, as if you dont know, is the penname for a middle aged asian woman using an internet program that keeps track of her daily eatAndShits. Naturally she is quite pleased at being Srim Redie, but what about "here is your game?"
What could that possibly mean?
It was still a nice day, and I decided to take a step outside of the shakeys to see if i could calm my nerves from the unholy uttering of the name from Jesus. Besides, I had been kicking that dead-jews ass all morning and my foot was getting tired. I stopped and breathed some of the pink air cycles screeching by my brain, and grabbed a croissant from a nearby tree. What was the connection between these figures? What was it that I could supposedly find the end through? The only answer was to make a log of my eatAndShits, deep dry it, and feed it to Jesus.
When I got back into shakeys, Jesus was using his heat ray vision to evaporate the last few spots of piss of his uniform, after which he began his world-famous frankenstein impression, chasing children and animals into the salad bar, where the prep cook would dice them and serve them as salami. Jesus was a good guy to have when you were killing children, he was into it. That didnt stop me from wanting to kick that bastards ass, though. I am an assistant manager for shakeys #3188, and there would be no slackers under my roof.
"C'mon Jesus, get the fucking lead out, I know its hard to walk on your feet with those big nail wounds, but you should really try and heal yourself one of these days. If you dont get a move on, Im gonna dock you!"
Jesus, gave me one of his hurt-puppy/puppy herder glances and sprayed a mouthful of bile on the last toddler scrambling his way into the foodprocessor. I decided to let that go for now. Instead, I pulled out a piccolino, and clapped my bare feet together while Jesus accompanied me as a singer. The prep cooked danced, and we turned the cameras on, to attract some customers for our famous lunch buffet.
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they're gonna get dirty sanchezed either way
nobody escapes the dirty sanchez!
heh
disclaimer: i tried out that being a commie radical liberal thing. Only thing is, I could only make myself nominally believe in the economics but not in any of the egalitarian world-peace bullshit.
What exactly do you left-wing psychos have against Bush and the war effort? Seriously. Saddam was a bad guy. So what if the war was over oil anyway. He was a bad guy, and now he's gone. Law of the jungle, baby (as you liberals are so pro-environment, you ought to respect that): the strongest survive. If we have the power to take what resources we need, then go USA. I have incredible respect for Rome. I think we ought to engage in wars just for profit. We ought to loot, raid, plunder, and pillege.
I am a Christian. I believe in Freedom, Liberty, and the Republican ideals of limited, representative government set out by our forefathers. However, I believe in those things for citizens and citizens only.
I don't believe in a standing army, but i see no reason not to raise armies for the "campaign season," go off and say, pillege Gaul, perhaps take some volunteers to garrison, and set out an empire. It seems perfectly legitimate to me. However, it's not going to happen, so who cares? A guy can dream, can't he?
However, liberal left-wingers seem to think that Saddam is more acceptable than GW Bush. Why is that? Seriously -- I cannot understand the logic behind the liberal mindset. While I am what would be concidered a "classical liberal," modern (post-Kennedy) liberalism is such a scarey, Marxist-in-sheep's-clothing sort of thing that I really cannot understand why anyone would support this.
What really pisses me off though, is that assuming that it's a valid point of view, why do you hide from it? Come out and just say that your goal is global socialism and world government. Come out and say that you are not tollerant of intollerance and think that everyone should be forced to accept everyone else reguardless. Come out and say that the average, hardworking american trying to get ahead and live the life that God intended is "double plus un-good."
You god damned eurocrat appeaser UN-Ball lickers make me sick. I swear, if Billery Clinton ever runs for president, I will pray day and night for her assassination, because i refuse to let New Yorkers have a say in my daily life. I am certainly not going to let some French son of a bitch even be allowed think about what I do here. And it'll be a cold day in hell before anyone takes my guns or forces me to take orders from some god damned Marxist-Leninist Africoon like the current Furher of the United Nations.
"you can have the lines to yourself, connected to your backbone"
Are you being sarcastic or merely trolling? Either way you're a tool.
harmonious design
This is how it all started.
Bubble coming.
i'm not a liberal. i'm an anarchist.
governments can fuck off
religions can fuck off
it's every man's duty to tear down all those who would impose thier will on him
that is the truth
BTW, would you like a dirty sanchez?
dirty sanchez!
(insert western movie soundtrack here)
Everyone in your community goes through the same lines. The reason caps were originally put is because a handful of people can easily use all the bandwidth in the area if uncapped. This would leave everyone else with a pitiful service.
Hmmm... Pie...
Yea yea, not guilty, nothing to hide. There's nothing illegal about your girlfriend sending you naked pictures, or your porn subscription to youngfatfux.com, but lots of things we do/say day to day are potentially very embarassing. And what about that whole 'anonymity' thing? Why would they need to subpoena your emails or usenet postings when they can play man-in-the-middle and wait for you to give them the answers they're looking for?
[Fuck Beta]
o0t!
'The rejection could pave the way for municipalities to force cable companies to share their broadband Internet lines with third parties.' I personally can't wait for companies like Speakeasy to branch into the Cable Internet market and provide 10-100mbps service."
I agree, imagine the impact this could have on modern bandwidth intensive technologies!
I'd rather be a conservative nutjob than a liberal with no nuts and no job.
Court Ruling Points Way To Broadband Regulation
'The rejection could pave the way for municipalities to force cable companies to share their broadband Internet lines with third parties.'
Wouldn't that be deregulation?
Solidarity with the Iraqi resistance. End the occupation! End all borders! Sometimes imperialists get what they deserve.
The mutilated US "contractors" were actually mercenaries working for a private "security" firm, named USA Blackwater. The name "Blackwater" is derived from the nighttime water-entry commando activities of the Navy SEALs, because many of Blackwater's employees are former Navy SEALs or other ex-Special Forces military personnel.
The US, UK, and other militaries involved in the occupation of Iraq are relying heavily on private mercenaries to do "security" and other work that the Coalition forces are stretched too thin to do; another benefit of using mercs is that, because they're civilians, their deaths do not raise the official casualty numbers.
Some info on Blackwater and their employees
Jim DeHart Director of Facilities/Chief Design Officer 212 252-435-0012
Chris Taylor Director of Target Systems 213 252-435-0013
Jim Sierawski Director of Training 214 252-435-0014
Carol Confer Comptroller 215 252-435-0015
Yvette Cohens Accountant 216 252-435-0016
Brian Berrey Director of Security 217 252-435-0017
Danielle Morrison Director of Operations and Sales 219 252-435-0019
Carol Smeltzer Training Sales Coordinator 220 252-435-0020
Rob Howard Target Sales 221 252-435-0021
Linda Miller Target CAD Design 224 252-435-0024
Matthew Paxson Target Supervisor 226 252-435-0026 V Mail Only
Ken Cashwell Senior Training Instructor/Armorer 228 252-435-0028
Tony Vernon Facilities Supervisor 229 252-435-0029
John Carswell Supply/Procurement 204 252-435-2004
Julie Garza Kitchen 207 252-435-2488
Susan Behrens Reception 208 252-435-2488
Employees of Blackwater: Most should be in North Carolina
Gary Jackson President Gary served 23 years in the U. S. Navy as a SEAL, and worked through the ranks to earn a commission in 1989, retiring as a Chief Warrant Officer-4. His last job in the TEAM's was a 24-month tour as platoon commander of a Counter-Drug Platoon in the Caribbean. His leadership, diverse experience in planning and logistics, and incredible energy are the core of the Blackwater USA experience. "Our TEAM concept on the staff allows for each professional who trains at Blackwater to maximize his or her experience" Jim Sierawski jims@blackwaterusa.com Director of Training Jim has both a military and law enforcement background. He spent 22 years as a Navy SEAL, and retired as a Chief Warrant Officer-3 from SEAL Team EIGHT. Ten of those years were spent with an elite counter-terrorist unit. During his tour, he earned several decorations and awards. After retiring, Jim became a police officer with the City of Virginia Beach, Virginia. Jim was assigned to patrol division where he spent four years before joining Blackwater USA's team. His diverse experience in the fields of special operations, law enforcement, and security clearly qualify him to lead the Blackwater Training Center. "This is where the rubber meets the road, so to speak. We create customized and complete training packages that allow our customers to train harder and more efficiently and become better prepared for today's ever-changing world. When you come to Blackwater, come ready to work." Jim Dehart jimd@blackwaterusa.com Director of Facilities and Chief Design Officer Jim Dehart is responsible for all physical assets at Blackwater USA. He spent 15 years designing, building, and managing the U.S. Navy's most comprehensive and sophisticated small-arms ranges at SEAL Team SIX and Naval Special Warfare Development Group. Jim retired after 20 years as a Chief Gunner's Mate. Today, he is a leader at Blackwater USA because of his unwavering work ethic, creativity, and ability to execute. Jim heads up research and development for Blackwater Target Systems and designs complete range systems for our customers worldwide. Brian Berry brianb@blackwaterusa.com Director of Blackwater Security Consulting Brian has fi
The American Association of Retired People issued a fartwad: the Gay Nigger Association of America in a Four Letter Acronym Assault today. Nicholas DILLIGAF, AARP spokesman, read the following: "Friends, Americans, Countrymen, lend me your ears. And a few bucks. An essential, God-given right of all Americans stands threatened by cretins of the GNAA ilk. That's right: Socialist Security is jeopardized by their existance. Now, anyone with two shreds of common sense can see that Socialist Security is a godforsaken ponzi scheme. Private citizens would be nailed to the wall for even trying such an audacious stunt. I guess being the government, you can just legalize it. What matters to you and me, though, is that, like any pyramid scheme, Socialist Security relies on continued population input. And that's why the GNAA, and all other outbursts of creeping faggotry have got to be stopped. If men continue to plant their seed where it cannot grow, who will feed the Socialist Security beast? We certainly cannot resurrect the family unit, and expect parents and children and relatives and communities to care for one another; we've got to make sure that the demolition of the family and all other outmoded values continues. Faggotry, in this sense, is an idea carried just a little too far. We want people to be heterosexual, and sew their wild oats with measured indiscrimination, so that we will continue to have a population input of people from properly disintegrated families to feed the Socialist Security machine. In summary, ignore the GNAA, knock up some chick, but don't worry about actually making a family of the situation, and ensure that Socialist Security continues to snowball beyond its current Real Hard Problem state and achieves the ultimate goal of Problem That Could Destroy America. Thank you for your attention. "
You forgot anal probing.
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Wait, is this real? Or another April Fool's joke? I can't tell the difference anymore. Maybe I'll just go put my tinfoil hat on and not worry about it.
I dropped them like a hot potato a couple of years back once broadband came to my area. Their support absolutely sucked then, and I hear it's not much better now.
First off, cable companies are already regulated.
In fact, the broadband market should already be very well opened to competition through regulation. It's been many years since The Telecommunication Act of 1996 was passed to do open their markets. The question is why is it not working out like predicted? There are a few companies that are moving into very specific cable markets, like Knology. However, this act was supposed to open up all markets (telcomm, cable, wireless, satellite) to anyone who wanted to sell services over existing bandwidth.
The fact we aren't seeing more competition can only be explained (a) if there are no interested firms, (b) if existing customers are too apathetic to new/quality services, or (c) if the regulation of the act are not being enforced. Does anyone know how the regulations of this act have played out in the past eight years in corportate practice? The article seems to indicate that FCC has been dragging their feet enforcing at least the cable market.
As far as I can tell, the regulation of TA1996 should be more than adequate for competition, in theory. Maybe future regulation will be a federal push encouraging existing carriers to roll out broadband to rural locations, although most people have satellite out there.
Oh, and what bias do you want? Corporate or government? Are the networks fair and balanced now?
As my post will surely demonstrate, I'm not that familiar with how cable/DSL networks work.
Is it possible for cable companies to use some sort of demand based throttling ie., allow me to use as much bandwidth as my line/modem will allow until others begin to do the same? If the maximum possible bandwidth for my run is something like 45mb/s, allow me to use 20 of that until other people begin to use up the remaining 25.
Another example might be when I download ISOs. The first one d/l at ~345KB/s, when I go after the second one (different server), the first one drops down and the two seem to share the ~345KB/s, d/l at 165 and 180. When I went for the third one, they went down to ~115 each.
Could the cable companies set minimum thresholds to determine when to throttle high b/w users?
wtf are you getting at? Maybe I'm just drunk, and couldn't get past your first few paragraphs that were rather self contradicting. Asides from the fact that North Korea - yes the assholes devoloping nuculuare (I know my spelling sucks, sorry) weapons - are a much bigger threat. Asides from the fact that -they- (black helicopters - Bush and associates) used a horrible act that took many inoccent lives of people just GOING TO WORK as an excuse to stip OUR libertys away an thus VALITADING the "terroris" (not sympothetical - you got a problem with a government? kill soldiers - start an uprising, whatever, but people doing their job you do not know are NOT collateral damage). As a "rebublican", by definition of a conservative, I find the current occuptation an attempt at a regime. Stick your dick in your ear - the last thing we need is to follow the Romans, but ignorant assholes in charge are doing their best to use a horrible situation to do so. Lick me where I pee - sorry, but your a jackass.
Soviet Russia, broadband regulates you.
I couldn't resist.
Jesus H you dumb modders, the guy has a point.
Weird, parallel universe. Reminds me of that cartoon where the cat won't eat the mice, mice won't eat cheese, and the dog/accountant exclaims "it just don't add up!"
Not that I saw in here anyway. Lets see how these things operate, shall we?
First off, your downstream is going to be in a 6mhz channel bandwidth (thats the size of a tv channel, bandwidth wise.) Typical downstream is going to use 64 QAM, which is ~5 bits per hz. Basically ~27-28 megabits in 1 - 6mhz space. Now, if you use 256 QAM, this increases, probably around the ballpark of ~38mhz (its late, I'm tired)
Now onto upstream. Docsis dictates either 16qam or QPSK (4 qam) for upstream rates. 16qam = 3.5 bits per hz, qpsk = 1.5 bits per hz. Keep in mind, distance can be a factor in this as well. (yes, its not just dsl anymore for distance limitations, never has been when its comes down to modulation.) So you're probably figuring, great. we have 9 megabits to play with right? Well, in transport, yes, but not with a cable modem system.
In Docsis 1.0, most you could have for an upstream channel size is 1.6 Mhz. 1.6 Mhz * 1.5 bits/hz is going to leave you with about ~2.5 megabits.
In Docsis 1.1, you get 16qam and ability for 3.2 mhz channel sizes, so that'll leave you with about ~8-10 megabits. Since you can only cram so-many channels into a 6mhz block for upstream, you end up being fairly limited. The only way this will substantially increase will be if Docsis 2.0 is deployed around. Docsis 1.1 and Docsis 2.0 are more fun creatures, crypto signed firmware files by manufacturers.
Now, if you can co-lo your own CMTS(s) you can do docsis 2. Otherwise, you'll be waiting for cox/comcast/rr/whoever to upgrade their gear. I think also starting with docsis 1.1, they can make provisions in the cable modem for what vlan you'll fall into in the config file, but guess what? It won't matter what provider you have at that point if they can't co-lo their own CMTS. We'll use cox for an example. If I just have bandwidth running to them and they setup config with specifics and I'm their competition, but we're using same wire, unless its allocated different frequencies, you'll be sharing your preferred ISP w/ everyone else who uses their own ISPs. The only thing you'll really see with is maybe some dropped prices (which I'd hope) and possibly more downstream speeds. Otherwise, there just isn't the bandwidth to support it unless theres a massive upgrade to docsis 2.0, good luck seeing that in the near future. Also, if you are a cable co and maintain a cable plant + head end, you probably don't want someone else to bring their equipment in that knows nothing about the cable network, much like telco, all this needs to be engineered correctly.
The boundary lines were drawn in all the wrong places.
After a promising start, competition in the DSL market has nearly dried up because the local telcos that own the wires in the streets have absolutely no incentive to cooperate in good faith with CLECs that compete with the telcos' own DSL services. Look at how they always phrase the subject in public. They get indignant and act as if the government is trying to make them give away their wires to their competitors for free when that is not the case at all! Every CLEC pays the local telco for the use of their wires, and no one has ever suggested that they not.
If the boundary lines had been drawn where they belong -- right at the ends of the wires that run along public streets -- things would have turned out differently. The wires would be owned by a fully regulated entity that would be barred from any business other than renting access to those wires to any service provider able to pay a standard tariff. While they would still have an incentive to inflate their costs in order to inflate their tariffs, regulators have a lot of experience in scrutinizing the books of common carriers. And since the only part of the path that would be regulated are the actual wires, regulatory overhead would be kept to an absolute minimum.
Everything but the wires themselves would be the province of competitive, unregulated carriers that would set up the DSLAMs and routers and market their services to customers.
It's a simple and obvious way to do things, but this is not what Congress in its wisdom decided to do in 1996. Why is anybody surprised at how things turned out?
Sounds great! We bust up a monopoly and things will get much better! Just like it did with the phone company! Oh wait, my local and long distance phone bill is now huge compared to what is used to be, and service is the worse it has ever been. I guess some consider that progress.
And why is SD always pumping up Speakeasy? My personal experience with them was that anything that goes wrong is the customers fault, followed by collection agencies. They're crooked unhelpful slobs like everyone else. I had a router go bad, I replaced it. Speakeasy refused to provide configuration information (Customer installed equipment) and insisted I buy an unwarranted router from them at 4 times the going price. Yeah, great service.
slashdot troll = you make a compelling argument I do not like the implications of.
Open access (ISP competition) would be good but regulation cannot create this competition. Rents for pipes will either get set too low or too high, and either the pipe or the ISP's will eventually die. The chance of government bureaucrats getting prices right are very poor. Having structural separation can create ISP competition, but there will still be finger pointing and a monopoly pipe.
Once you have pipe competition, then there is a market, and no government regulation is needed. The pipes can then partner with competitive ISP's to better compete against the other pipes without a need for open access regulation.
The chance of the 9th circuit getting anything right are also very poor.
The companies that started home broadband, put up huge money, and took huge risks. I don't know that any of them are in the black from their investments yet. Most are out of business: TCI, @home, AT&T broadband.
Now, 3rd parties just get to walk in, and take advantage of everything that's been done with no effort and no risk.
Doesn't seem fair, or maybe I'm missing something.
What if my provider allows me unlimited downloads or let's me run a commercial website for a really low rate. Won't that affect my neighbours? I'd imagine the cable providers negotiating a rate with the incumbent cable company, but what would be a fair rate. The incumbent cable company can't just say take this very high rate or leave it.
... that AOL and Time-Warner had to make with the feds in order to merge. I don't believe any other cable companies out there are required to open access. I know that the ones here in Indianapolis aren't - with the exception of the local Brighthouse Networks franchise, which used to be a Time-Warner franchise.
Utilizing magnetic schemata since
Typical Downstream of 256 QAM = 37 Mbps after overhead, and Upstream is QAM16 = 8 Mbps after overhead. Typically you don't see those results, because you have to add in the factor of noise and losses due to distance and node combination. That downstream will typically be shared between 1000-1500 customers and the upstreams are shared from 0-300 customers.
For one thing, a fully regulated entity wouldn't have much incentive to upgrade the lines. Plus, while this might work for some industries, take into consideration all the carriers. No one (taxpayers or otherwise) should have to pay for nationwide WiFi service, for example.
I just want to know when they are going to stop forcing customers to pay 50 bucks to come install it on your pc and when they are too dumb to understand your OS (when w2k was new, I can't imagine the look on their face if your running Linux) and don't know how to renew an IP address and still charge you, man that pissed me off.
I'll use the "road's" bandwidth and set up my own toll booths & just pay th' gubernment a cut. Down with these toll booth monopolies!
This is traditionally a conservative/libertarian (yes I know the differences) argument; but can go either way really. Often time they use NPR and PBS to backup claims that government run media is biased.
The truth is, that this type of regulation is not going to affect content such as this much at all. The original poster does have his tinfoil hat on. But I resent you calling this a liberal issue when most liberals would in fact approve of it. Original poster was most likely a troll in fact.
Photos.
If I can't afford it.
There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
most of us won't be able to afford it.
-- Lemmy
If it will finally get me any sort of broadband. Do you think this would encourage cable companies/phone companies to finally role out to the last mile (I live 3.5 miles from the CO)
The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum. - O'Toole's Corollary
Flamebait? Must be a Speakeasy employee. It really hurts to see the truth posted, isn't it?
Who else made it in State Politics by beating people up.
This is more like the railroads back in the 1800's. Railroads are now required to carry others' cars, in fact they pay rent for the cars on their track.
At one time there were hundreds of small railroads, many of which owned only a single line from PointA to PointB. Their anticompetitive tactics often included predatory pricing, delay of competitors' shipments and outright refusal to carry a competitor's engines or cars. Companies with a monopoly on routes important to others sometimes charged 10X the going rate, "because they could". For another example, railroads commonly charged farmers exorbitant rates to store and carry their grain because they had a local monopoly on storage and transportation.
According to this, this problem was the impetus for the original Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 (ICA), and also the original Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890. The latter act is also the basis of the federal actions against Microsoft, BTW. Some other interesting links are available here. This article briefly shows how the development of the railroad system beginning in the early 1800's was a major factor in creating the entire US legal structure we now take for granted, including racial integration, worker protection, eminent domain, elimination of 'blue laws', liability/tort law and public/private partnerships.
The ICA established the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC), which was responsible to set standard rates for railroad passage, and required every railroad to carry others' cars at a reasonable cost.
At present each railroad pays rent for each car that is recorded as being on its tracks to the car owner, but can use it to earn revenue from a shipper. Thus every railroad is motivated to get the car filled with something and send it off to another place, to either earn money with it or stop the rent accruing. Many cars are now owned by individuals or holding companies, who buy the car and send it out on the track in hopes of receiving rent.
It's easier to be a result of the past, but more fun to be a cause of the future! http://www.spacefinancegroup.com/
Double the capacity of the CATV network without having to touch the cable infrastructure.
http://www.pulse-link.com/wire_current.html
Properly done, regulation still provides plenty of incentives for the regulated company to expand and improve its business.
Is a regulated monopoly more efficient and innovative than a true, competitive free market economy? Of course not, but that's an apples-vs-oranges comparison. If there were true competition in the provision of local transmission to my house, we wouldn't need much (if any) regulation. But while the local telcos would like us to believe otherwise, we just don't have that kind of free-market competition, at least not yet. And until we can get it, regulation will be a necessary evil.
What isn't reasonable is for a telco to charge wholesale prices to CLEC DSL providers that are higher than the retail prices for the telco's own DSL services, and/or to drag their feet in providing competitive access, yet this is exactly what the telcos routinely do. And they get away with it.