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Anti-Muni Broadband Bills Country Wide

Ant writes "Broadband Reports says that 14 and possibly more states that have or will pass(ed) bills banning community-run broadband. Free Pass shows a map breakdown of the states while Tallahassee.com takes a look at a newly proposed bill in Florida, backed by Sprint, BellSouth, Verizon, and Comcast, designed to bog down the muni-development process."

26 of 655 comments (clear)

  1. That's funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Here in the Land of The Free (i.e. Western Europe), we allow our local/community governments to do what the electorate want them to do.

    Aren't we naive....

    1. Re:That's funny by Phu5ion · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, well here in the Home of the Brave (i.e. USA), we allow our local/state/federal government to do whatever the large corporations want.

      --
      Slashdot is kind of like Playboy; we aren't here to read the articles.
    2. Re:That's funny by MindStalker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      For now, few may use it, but as time goes on more and more people are using it. This is basically the same argument as public roads vs private roads with toll booths. I can understand the argument for allowing private roads to be built on private land, even the argument to shutting out government competition. But in areas of high traffic like downtown, where most traffic is government anyways, its absolutly essential that government be allowed to build roads that everyone can freely use.

      What you say? Almost most roads nowadays are government controlled. What else you say, most broadband carriers are using lines that government granted money for in the first place?

    3. Re:That's funny by jspoon · · Score: 4, Insightful
      you'd be surprised at how easy it is to get the ear of your county commissioner, district attorney, or city councilman.

      Which is why the corporations are trying, in this case, to circumvent the local governments by using the state legislature to overrule them. The state level is where the interface between people and politicians start to break down. It's still possible to get elected by going door to door shaking hands and explaining how you plan to do your job. I personally know a state rep who does this and his party hates him for this. But the easier and these days more travelled route is to spend a lot of money on advertising.

    4. Re:That's funny by jocknerd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Here in the land of the free, we apparently DON'T like competition. We don't like choice. Its too confusing. If we liked competition, we wouldn't have just 1 cable company in an area.

  2. Best of both worlds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A good compromise would be to ban municipal wireless internet access unless no provider has established a commercial wireless internet access within 2 years.

  3. Re:Like I have always known... by TimeTraveler1884 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah, this is bullshit. Why not pass a bill that forbids commercial broadband providers from cornering the market and disallowing startup competition.

    Oh wait, that would fall under anti-trust territory and we all know that "utilities" are basically exempt from that.

  4. And it don't stop, and it won't stop,... by dnoyeb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No rest for the weary. Even if its voted down, it will just come back at the next opportunity. That is why we don't get tired or frustrated, we stand strong and casually vote this crap down as many times as we have to.

    Obviously community internet will lead to community controlled media eventually squeezeing out cable/phone and every other communication medium. I don't blame the companies one bit. But I will blame the government if they let this happen.

  5. I don't think governments should be competing... by Anita+Coney · · Score: 5, Insightful

    but on the other hand, I don't like rules that forbid a municipality from doing something which could benefit its citizens.

    While in the vast majority of instances, it might be appropriate to ban a city from setting up its own ISP, there might be a few towns which are being ignored.

    We have towns like that in my northern state. My father lives in a town with no broadband, heck, with NO local dial-up! To say that city can't set up its own ISP is ludicrous. The private sector has had decades to set up something but they've failed to even take notice. The city should be able to take action "for the common good" to set up its own.

    --
    If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
  6. This must be what they mean by "free market" by LMCBoy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ah, yes. The free-market system, unfettered from legislative "regulations". Behold its efficiency! Marvel at its ability to out-compete any misguided "Big government" attempts to duplicate that which the market can provide!

    --
    Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
  7. And they say profit motive is a good thing... by eno2001 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do you call this good? While I'm not 100% in support of community run networks (mostly due to the fact that there aren't enough smart people to run them securely in most communities), I think this illustrate the point quite well that governements no longer have power, the businesses do. After all, who has the most money? Your governments (state local and federal) or businesses? Considering the huge debt at the federal level and the deficits at state and local levels, my money (hehehe) is on the businesses controlling the most funds. And they say we have "big government", hah! It seems that during the past decade, as the tech sector has grown tremendously and gained the most wealth in a short time, more and more "laws and legal decisions" have been bought by them. We are headed rapidly for the corporate feudal system with our governments being democracies only in name. Wake up... we're only a few steps from complete fascism.

    --
    -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
  8. Re:Like I have always known... by JustDisGuy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ...it's all about the MONEY!

    Nope - it's not about the money. It's about control. This would make my open WiFi node illegal, closing one of the few remaining anonymity gaps on the 'net.
    --
    "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity." - Hanlon's Razor
  9. Re:Like I have always known... by digitalchinky · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So why not make it commercial and charge 1 cent for 1 year. If the law sucks, flex it.

  10. Exposes the lies to cost claims? by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 5, Insightful
    If the commercial companies claim that it costs $70/month to serve customers in an area, but a community group manages to do it for $30, what does this mean about the $50/month service that they're 'providing' in the high-profit areas?

    It's not just that they don't want municipalities competing against them -- they don't want groups competing against them who have open books.

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  11. Re:this is nothing new by corporatemutantninja · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I'm actually a little surpised to see Slashdotters so eager for the goverment to jump into this. Do we REALLY think the Government can do this better/more efficiently than private business? Forever? 'Cause that's what it will be.

    I think what's going on is that we're fed up with the DSL/Cable duopoly, which is entirely understandable because they're doing a bad job with bad customer service at high prices. There are few companies I hate more passionately than Time Warner Cable. And, yes, I'm including Microsoft. But to then go running off to mommy and da....oops, I mean government officials...crying "Fix it! Fix it!" is a little short sighted.

    Isn't what we really want just more competition? I guess I'd rather see government, whether local, state, or federal, offering various non-permanent subsidies to businesses that wanted to offer competing broadband capabilities. Perhaps only making those subsidies available in communities where current providers failed to meet certain service/price targets.

    --
    Actually, I was trying to be Insightful, not Funny.
  12. Re:this is nothing new by revscat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm actually a little surpised to see Slashdotters so eager for the goverment to jump into this. Do we REALLY think the Government can do this better/more efficiently than private business? Forever? 'Cause that's what it will be.

    I don't think the differences are so significant as to be noteworthy, and the benefits for the community are great. I know it's trendy to believe "government is always bad", but it's not always true. I've worked in enough corporate environments to know how screwed up and inefficient they can be.

    Isn't what we really want just more competition?

    Sometimes. But competition isn't the end-all be-all. Sure, it works great. Most of the time. But not all of the time.

  13. Re:Community or government? by C10H14N2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Communities form local governments to collect taxes and perform various and sundry duties for the community. If the community can run a fscking library, school, water works, police department, or any other services, why the hell shouldn't they provide a telcom service?

    This only seems non-obvious looking at cities like Los Angeles or New York. Go out to Tumbleweed, Idaho and suddenly the relationship to local government is pretty friggen obvious when your cousin is the judge, your neighbor is the mayor and aslo the gas station attendent. In that sense, community and government are utterly synonymous.

  14. Re:this is nothing new by fsmunoz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm actually a little surpised to see Slashdotters so eager for the goverment to jump into this. Do we REALLY think the Government can do this better/more efficiently than private business? Forever?
    Yes.

    This recorrent myth that "private business" is always more efficient and beneficial for the user doesn't even stand a chance under a closer look. I find it hilarious that these great saviours, the "private businesses", need good old government interference to forbid any effort of providing a community and/or municipal WiFi network access. I private business is oh so much more efficient, why do they need these? Their obvious higher quality and pricing should be enough right? Except that they are there to maximize their profits, not primarily to provide a service. If they can (and they always can, with the power that big business has over the corrupt politicians) keep prices high and provide shitty service, they will. Only if the bottom line is affected is the behaviour changed, and even then, trough price fixing and other cartle like tactics, nothing substantial changes.

    Internet access is becoming important enough to constitute a basic necessity (education wise, for example). As such the State should provide it. If private business can top the State offer, that's great! But, as the British pension fiasco showed, they seldom can.

    I'm not from the USA though, so I lack that "Sheriff and a saloon and many guns!" kind of view on individual liberty as opposed to colective beneficts dispensed by the Government.

  15. Re:this is nothing new by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Government frequently does the job better than private business.

    A recent study (I heard it on NPR) showed that the government-run VA provided better health care than the private competition. Something about knowing the patients would come back, enabling them to focus more on long-term and preventitive care.

    Social Security spends less on administration than most private retirement plans. And they provide expensive-to-manage disability insurance as well.

    Medicare and Medicaid provide health services with far lower overhead than private insurance companies; IIRC, spending 3% of revenues on administrative expenses vs. 30%. And that's with "free market competition".

    When the private supplier has a monopoly position, watch out. The suppliers are maximizing their profit, which means high prices and expensive service has to be justified by the revenue that it brings in (or the revenue that would be lost if they didn't).

    "Government subsidies" are another name for corporate welfare. And you can claim they won't be permanent, but they will end up like copyright, renewed and extended every time they're about to expire.

  16. Community Standards. by rednip · · Score: 5, Insightful
    When I first heard of these 'full profit for telecomm companies' acts, I thought, WOW, how completely self serving of those corporations. While I still think that the legislation is too giving to those companies, I decided to think of what could happen if government controlled Internet access. The community clubs which you speak of carry many restrictions about use, would you like your Internet to work the same way?

    I can imagine that in smaller communities and perhaps larger ones, that 'local decency groups' would force local elected officials to censor objectionable content. Since they would be you ISP it would be easy to administer community standards. I can imagine that political hacks in charge of the network creating 'routing problems' which block opposition candidates, or the local rumor mill. Heck the local police could check on your email, or see which sites you visit. While larger communities might have good separation, smaller ones might even have the police dispatcher as the overnight server support!

    I think that these laws should be written to include 'fair access' in the same way that local telephone companies are starting to open their own access, sort of a carrot and stick approach.

    --
    The force that blew the Big Bang continues to accelerate.
  17. Re:This isn't stopping Communities!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Learn politics. The local government is the orginised expression of the community. The whole purpose of the local government is to reprisent the comunity and take care of issues related to the community. If the local governement can do it cheaper than business, then so be it. Business better learn to compete.

    By the way, the lack of cheap Internet access stalls the local economy. So it's in the best interest of community businesses to support community networks

  18. Re:I'm not sure if I'll ever understand this by jeff4747 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Try to name three things the Government does good

    1. Water
    2. Power (electric)
    3. Sewer

    There's a long history of goverment doing each of these cheaper and more reliable than the for-profit companies that take over when these utilities are privatized.

  19. Anti-americanism by bagofbeans · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I posit that current anti-americanism is not a "hate America" or "hate Americans" posture, but "hate the imperialist behaviour of the current American government" in the name of the American people. I think Blair is being a dickhead too, but I don't translate that into a blanket anti-British feeling.

  20. Re:this is nothing new by Omestes · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I find it hilarious that these great saviours, the "private businesses", need good old government interference to forbid any effort of providing a community and/or municipal WiFi network access.

    Good point. And one that I would like the average Randian Libertarian /.er to explain. If they are so against the government regulating industry, why would they be for industry regulating government? And if corporations could do it cheaper, what is wrong with letting government do it, and then if they are correct the gov't won't be able to compete?

    Though if we had community cable/broadband, and it cost a couple bucks more, I'd choose it over the telco or cable company, just to support my community. I doubt that most people would do this, though, caring more about their pocket books than the state of where they live. If my neighbor takes my money for service, I view that as a better situation than some rich ass living in New York or California taking it.

    But then again I live is a rather small violently liberal community, one that passed a law to keep superwallmart out, and from undercutting the locally owned buisness.

    --
    A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
  21. Re:I'm not sure if I'll ever understand this by jeff4747 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Can you actually drink your tap water?

    Yep. There's nothing unhealthy in it. It sometimes has a metallic taste, so I'll run it through a filter on my end, since _ANYONE_ sending water through miles of metal pipes will result in water with a metallic taste.

    Please actually do some long term research rather than just pointing at messed up transitions pains.

    I have. Have you? Muncipial power companies in CA were forced to privatize their serves. They're still paying tons more per KWh. So how many years will this 'transition period' last? Oh, btw, in other countries were the power grid was privatized as much as 20 years ago, they still pay a ton more per KWh (even taking inflation in to account).

    Just because you don't see the $100 a month to pay for something doesn't mean it isn't there.

    Well, as a municipal utility you get to see the books. If you want to know how much of your taxes are going to subsidize it, you can simply read their annual reports.

    Every municipal utility I'm aware of cover their day-to-day expenses from their service fees. Some do get government funding to help for captial improvements, but many private utilties also get government funding for captial improvements.

  22. Re:They could ... by DavidTC · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I agree with you, but I think there's something you aren't considering:

    With public wifi, the costs are an internet connection, and various adapters. (Don't have to pay for locations, businesses love having a free wifi connection in their business.)

    With for pay, you added 'billing', and 'keeping track of who paid their bill', and all sorts of crap.

    Sticking up a public network might cost, oh, 300 dollars a month, with a startup cost of 5000 dollars. (Probably need a system admin, but, then again, they probably already have an IT guy for the government. Or just have the local high school students volunter to run it.) This is trivially within reach of any town over 200 people.

    Now add billing, and someone to keep track of it. Well, you could do that with income tax, except people don't pay local income tax. There are going to have to be bills sent.

    Now add the fact that keeping track of the people on the network is now a full time job...you need to keep track of MAC addresses or logins or something, and match those up with the billing.

    I mean, you've at least tripled the cost. You've probably added another full-time staff, and you've turned it into a business.

    I mean, imagine the street in front of your house, and all those people who don't use it. Imagine all the streets that you don't use, and how you pay for them. Now imagine that the government could keep track of who used what streets, at least statistically, and just billed everyone for their existimated useage...that would cost a lot more than just having the streets.

    Sometimes, just doing things for everyone is a hell of a lot cheaper than billing people for them. Yes, people without computers will pay for people who have them, but people in cities paied for phone lines in the country, and people without cars pay for roads, people without children pay for schools, etc, etc. A wifi broadband connection is peanuts compared to one road being built on the other side of the state, which you pay for all the time.

    OTOH, my local touristy city has an open wifi network on the square that I think was setup by the Chamber of Commerce. Or just three or four businesses on the square working together. (Of course, I'm talking about a football field worth of coverage here, not a city.)

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?