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Houses With Tails

nnfiber writes "What if home owners could also own their Internet connection? Tim Wu, of New America Foundation and Derek Slater, Google's Policy Analyst, say this can be a new effective way to encourage broadband deployment — an important issue in 'America's economic growth.' In his post, Timothy B. Lee says: 'That might sound like a crazy idea at first blush, but Wu and Slater do a great job of explaining how it might work. The key idea is "condominium fiber," an arrangement in which a number of neighboring households pool their resources to install fiber to all the homes in their neighborhoods. Once constructed, each home would own its own fiber strand, while the shared costs of maintaining the "trunk" cable from the individual homes to a central switching location would be managed in the same way that condominium and homeowners' associations currently manage the shared areas of condos and gated communities.'"

32 of 307 comments (clear)

  1. Houses with tails? by gardyloo · · Score: 3, Funny

    Sounds like a red-light district to me.

  2. Yeah, and get flooded with "tech support" calls? by rehtonAesoohC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't think so!

    As soon as something on the trunk broke due to any reason, all the neighbors are going to come banging down my door as being the "tech-savvy" person.

    Neighbor 1: "Umm... the internet won't work anymore."
    Neighboar 2: "My emails won't send!"
    Neighbor 3's kids: "unmm liek i cn't tlk to my bff jill?"

  3. This is nice, but by blhack · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I really don't think that the average consumer is going to care about something like this.

    For most, a 5Mbps cable connection is much much much more than they ever will (or can) use. The only thing that will drive high-bandwidth stuff like this is media. Websites like this are certainly a step in the correct direction, but until we start seeing dedicated media appliances in peoples homes, it isn't going to happen.

    On top of that, think of something (other than streaming media) that your average home-owning consumer is going to use that would require large bandwidth. There aren't many. Sure, some of us geeks use services like Usenet or (and I've never seen this in practice, only rumors of it) bittorrent that are capable of filling up our connection but, relative to the amount of joe-sixpack/plumbers there are out there, we are a small small minority.

    Any devs wnat to make a "hulu" box with me?

    --
    NewslilySocial News. No lolcats allowed.
  4. how is this better then ISPs? by butterflysrage · · Score: 4, Insightful

    now, maybe as a renter my view of Home Owners Associations (HOA) and condos are a little flawed... but condering there have been cases where HOAs have stopped people from putting up solar panals, fences, planting trees, even a back yard clothes line... what is to stop them from likewise restricting and controlling broadband?

    sorry, your torrenting is degrading the value of our community internet, we are going to have to block that.

    instead of a half dozen telcos to deal with for net neutrality, you will have thousands on thousands of HOAs

    --
    the preceding post was not spell checked... suck it.
    1. Re:how is this better then ISPs? by tknd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Correct. The HOA is not interested in meeting your demands as an individual homeowner. The HOA's purpose is to meet the demands of the majority that show up to the monthly meetings. And guess who shows up to those meetings? The most anal and controlling homeowners. The result is an inefficient corporation that has no customers yet maintains books and funds that rarely benefit the actual homeowners.

      However when you have a customer and business relationship, the business has an interest in keeping you a paying customer. Even if you do sign contracts, the contracts will only apply till the end of the term. When you do have a legal issue with the business you have a contract with, you can take them to court and potentially get reasonable recovery. But if you sue an HOA you are technically suing yourself. The business also receives pressure from competitors in a well regulated market (yes this is not true for monopolies). So theoretically you should always have a second choice. With the HOA your only choice is to sell your property and move elsewhere.

      Some HOAs might be okay in terms of purposes served and not being run down by anal homeowners. But in my experience, even then the HOA provides little services that you can't manage yourself better. For example consider the common "pool/spa" arrangement. Suppose you pay the HOA $50 a month for this cost to maintain a pool and spa for the facility. The pool will probably be very small and outdoors. Meanwhile if you sign up at a local club at say $40 a month, you can get an indoor pool and access to other facilities. When you no longer need to access the club or are unsatisfied with the service, you can terminate your membership and/or find a new club. Any HOA run service is generally more expensive to maintain and you are stuck with it forever. When you allow a business to fill in this role, however, you will often get better service at cheaper rates or at least varying options of service at different rates. The only advantage the HOA has is that the facilities are located conveniently.

      Another example is HOA provided cable TV service. I know someone that has one of these and the contract basically states he can only use the HOA tv service, and he cannot order his own. This means he is stuck with the quality of service the HOA provides. Even if you live in an area where you only have 1 option for TV service, you can at least have options within that service to get access to other services like special channels or different packages. With the HOA this is not the case.

      I believe the implementation of HOAs is flawed in the US. HOAs have too much power and are beginning to grow outside of their purpose which was to basically force people to keep their property is decent order. Technically, the local government should be in charge of enforcing rules maintaining reasonable condition of properties, not HOAs. Unfortunately, HOAs are becoming too popular and people would never vote to pay taxes or allow the government to enforce such rules. Which is somewhat contradictory since the HOA dues are often more than what you would pay in taxes as well as more restrictive.

  5. Obviously never been to a condo assoc meeting by sunking2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just because you live near each other doesn't mean you play well together. Especially when money is involved. How could you possibly do this and not have someone ticked off for paying more than they think they should. Should my mother who doesn't even own a computer be subsidizing everyone elses usage? Or what happens when someone who believes in the RIAA moves into your neighborhood and then starts enforcing his beliefs on you. Sounds crazy, but how many people get fined a year because they have too much crap on their condo deck, or some other abserd thing. Oh, the arguments may or may not be rational, but that won't stop them. Especially in a neighborgood that spans a large age group. Instead of get off my lawn, it'll be get your porn of my internet.

    1. Re:Obviously never been to a condo assoc meeting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This will explain to all how dumb of an idea this is indeed:

      Where my parents live is covered by an HA. The townhouses come with decks installed, with short fences surrounding them, nothing special, just a 4' high fence with 1.5" spindles, a 2x4 railing and 4x4 supports. The decks are not attached to each other, nor are they shared, and they are separated by at least 10 feet on either side. My parents wanted a little bit more privacy, but understanding the HA wouldn't want them to raise the fence, they bought wood lattice and tacked it to the inside of the fence, cut so it fit neatly under the railing. It doesn't look bad, although IMHO, it's pretty pointless.

      Anyways, within a month, they received a letter from the HA advising them to take it down immediately or be fined as it's against the agreement. They fought the HA, saying it doesn't state you can't install anything on the inside of the deck. In the end, after several months with lawyers and lots of money, now the agreement is modified to have a special "no lattice" clause. My parents lattice has been grandfathered in, and nobody else has it.

      Just a sidenote: When my parents moved in they asked me what I thought. I said it was a horrible place because it has an HA. They said they were going to will the house to me so I could live there. I said "Great, but I won't live here. Hopefully it'll sell quickly before the HA comes after me for condo fees, otherwise I'll have to rent it." They thought I was being rude then.

      Now they think I'm sensible. :-D

      So, apply that thinking process to broadband internet and imagine what you have.

  6. Can't rely on homeowners' associations by Lightwarrior · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Once constructed, each home would own its own fiber strand, while the shared costs of maintaining the "trunk" cable from the individual homes to a central switching location would be managed in the same way that condominium and homeowners' associations currently manage the shared areas of condos and gated communities."

    So, that is to say - not at all? We have a hard enough time collecting homeowner's fees as it is. I can only speculate that it would be harder at a higher cost.

    And what are you supposed to do if/when one home stops paying its part? Not upkeep that portion of fiber? Have everyone else absorb the costs?

    --
    Mods: Disagreeing with me != my post Offtopic / Flamebait.
    World without hate or war, invaded. Tragic?
  7. Re:Any real benefit? by kriebz · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Part of your point, that telcos are lazy and negligent, is exactly why this is enticing. Maybe if the telcos didn't have to install new hardware on private property, the cost to roll out broadband would be cheaper. Of course, without the opportunity to gouge the customer on that new hardware, the enticement might be gone. This could also open the possibility of third-party bandwidth providers like WISPs, and not being pigeon-holed into one of 3 delightfully crappy plans.

  8. Re:Yeah, and get flooded with "tech support" calls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Neighboar 2: "My emails won't send!"

    Quit being selfish. It's not really fair to expect a wild pig to understand the ins and outs of networking.

  9. Re:Silly to create the organization by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why is this too much work? You're not talking thousands of homes, you're theoretically talking at most a couple of hundred which can easily be serviced by two routers utilizing XRRP or some kind of redundant routing protocol.

    Before long, you will be talking thousands of homes. Some enterprising group of guys will start a small business of 'managing HOA & condo communications'. The various HOAs will contract out to these guys, because it is easier (and may be cheaper) than trying to do it themselves. Eventually, that company will run all of the HOA/condo/subdivision comms in an area or city.
    Hey, look...we just reinvented Comcast!

    HOAs do this already. Frequently, the HOA is not run by the 'homeowners', but rather a faceless company that provides that same functionality.

  10. Re:Yeah, and get flooded with "tech support" calls by rhsanborn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In my experience, the people who ask others for tech help are the least likely to be willing to pay for it. And they certainly aren't willing to pay market rates.

  11. Bloody stupid idea by wcrowe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    At which point your neighbors will then begin to dictate what content will and will not be allowed on the connection, "in the same way that condominium and homeowners' associations currently manage the shared areas of condos and gated communities" now.

    No thanks.

    --
    Proverbs 21:19
  12. Quiet, you fools! by IonOtter · · Score: 3, Funny

    Holy Crap! This is like, a FREE GOLD MINE!

    Unlimited tech support opportunities! Exclusive contracts! Clueless users ensuring a steady supply of work! Bottomless pits of fodder for "Customers Suck" and "Stupid, Stupid Enduser" blogs! Angry phone calls at 3AM! People knocking on your door asking you to fix their plumbing and interwebs!

    This is a BOFH's Wet Dream!

    --
    [End Of Line]
  13. Great idea, forget it. by Bearhouse · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If would probably think this a great idea, if
    I had not lived in appartments or houses with shared facilites - parking spaces, pools, whatever.

    1. Everybody treats 'shared' resources with zero respect.
    2. Everybody bitches about the cost. Some don't pay.
    3. There's a regular shitfest disguised as a 'resident's association meeting' or something. Always dominated by a few activists whose opinions inevitably are the reverse of yours.
    4. The people hired by the 'association council' to do installation & maintenance are always more expensive and less competent than people you've picked.
    5. Whenever something breaks, it's always faster and cheaper to fix it yourself, so the vaguely competent end up doing everything if they want their hall lights, garage door, cable to work...

    So, I can do without the pool, but depend on this setup for my (vital for work) broadband?
    Noooooooooooooooo!

  14. Re:Won't work by cayenne8 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I guess this would be like the old 'neighborhood swimming pools' we used to have when I grew up...I think it might actually help a neighborhood sell houses these days.

    Hmm..do they still even have neighborhood pools anymore? It was great to meet kids around you...have fun during the summers...but, hell, that was so long ago for me, we even had a quality diving board...something I guess most kids of today haven't got a clue about except for maybe seeing one on the olympics.

    *sigh* damned lawyers....

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  15. Re:Yeah, and get flooded with "tech support" calls by PCM2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My mom lives in a gated retirement community, where the overwhelming majority of the population is seniors. Many of them have computers, which they use to do all sorts of things, from browsing the Web to making Skype calls to their family around the country. Few of them are really what you would call "computer literate." Most of them seem to know some guy who lives in the neighborhood who has taken it upon himself to be smarter than your average bear. They might not necessarily pay that guy out at "market rates," but when you start to add up free dinners, free bottles of scotch, etc., plus just being a well-known and respected member of your community, being the local "tech guy" has its plus side.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
  16. Re:Yeah, and get flooded with "tech support" calls by Tim+Doran · · Score: 3, Funny
    I agree there's some real value there, but you simply can't live on goodwill and scotch.

    Trust me.

  17. Re:Won't work by Have+Brain+Will+Rent · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Have either of these guys ever owned a condo? I made that mistake once - never again. Years to get simple repairs done, friends of the condo board getting repairs long before other people and often before people who requested needed repairs first, etc. etc. ad nauseam. Owning a condo is a good way to see some of the worst traits humanity has to offer. Let an organization like that control the quality or even existence of my net connection? No way.

    --
    The tyrant will always find a pretext for his tyranny - Aesop
  18. Re:Yeah, and get flooded with "tech support" calls by nabsltd · · Score: 5, Funny

    Of course you can't live on goodwill and scotch alone.

    You also need blackjack and hookers.

  19. Re:Won't work by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Informative

    And I bet the cable companies/isp's would not like the idea of joe sixpack competing with them.

    nope. there used to be a thing called "community TV" a neighborhood would buy a lot, set up a big tower with antennas and wire all the homes with "cable tv" and everyone paid $25.00 a year to it's upkeep and upgrading.

    Cable Tv companies came up with "franchise fees" when they entered into a market. They used this along with lobbying for legislation to make running a non profit free "community TV" system illegal. you had to be a business and pay franchise fees. This killed every system across America as the cable companies came in.

    Nobody is willing to lobby state and federal lawmakers to make it legal for neighborhoods to band together and put up a community tv system legally anymore. We just bay like good sheep and pay out $55.00 a month Cable TV bill.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  20. Re:Won't work by tripdizzle · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Its not the markets that are failing, its the mixing of free markets and protectionism that brought us to this point.

    --
    "A claim for equality of material position can be met only by a government with totalitarian powers." Hayek
  21. Re:Won't work by philspear · · Score: 4, Funny

    *sigh* damned lawyers....

    Yes, they do suck, but lawyers by themselves don't do much damage. It also takes stupid kids who injure/kill themselves at a community pool. It then takes greedy/stupid/bad parents to take advantage of the situation with the lawyer.

    Lets not forget that: lawyers are always going to be evil, but it's greedy individuals who use them as weapons against the community.

    Not really relevant, but for those of you who are now pissed off at those assholes, here's some youtube clips of people getting injured in funny ways at pools.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSYWqkhScU8&feature=related

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dj9lkqRDUNE&feature=related

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QrzHY345aKk&feature=related

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3A69-NaAXw&NR=1

  22. Re:Won't work by postbigbang · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Your premise is incorrect. Businesses aren't bankrupt, the stockmarket is recovering, and your drama is understandable but extreme beyond reality.

    Pushing nodes to the edges and the cost to the edges is a scheme as old as wired communications. The 'bells' that are out there today slowly swallowed up all of the coops that were out there. Interconnect wasn't very well done back then. Things have improved.

    Interconnect doesn't and hasn't ever followed the philosophy you cite. Ever. Utilities were once huge coops. Returning to that model might send a jolt of much needed electricity into the monopolies they've become.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  23. Do you *actually* have neighbors??? by jwiegley · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What idiot thinks that negotiating cost, authority, accountability and responsibility for a fiber trunk with any number of neighbors greater than zero is going to be feasible?

    What planet are you from? Because on my planet my one neighbor maintains an unsightly junkyard of decaying plumbing supplies in his backyard. My other neighbor always parks their cars in front of my yard because their garage is full of useless shit and they don't want cars in front of their yard. The neighbor across the street?? Well, he maintains two vicious junkyard dogs in his concrete/gated frontyard. They spend all day leaping at and barking at everything that moves. The neighbor next to him? he's abandoned one dead, totaled in a car crash, Toyota Rav-4 on the street like some sort of mad-max art tribute.

    And somebody thinks there's going to be some magical, happy, functional negotiation about a shared high-tech resource with these kinds of people??

    Puuuuhleeeease!

    --
    I will never live for sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine.
  24. Re:Won't work by Ian+Alexander · · Score: 4, Informative

    I hate to rain on your parade but every bear market of the last century has little upward tics every now and then, even while the overall trend is a race to the bottom.

    Here's a chart illustrating our current situation compared to the Depression, the 70's oil crisis, and the Dot-com bust: http://dshort.com/charts/bears/four-bears-large.gif

  25. Re:Segregated pools... by cayenne8 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "The same neighborhood pools that were segregated by banning blacks in the south as late as the late 1950s? And the modern cyber equivalent would be only the middle and upper middle class would be able to afford net access under this system leading to a permanent marginally employed and under informed cyber underclass of "untouchable" manual laborers."

    Well, there isn't segregation any more...as you mentioned, pretty much a thing of the past since the 50's, so not a concern.

    And not everyone can afford to live in every neighborhood, sorry, fact of life. No reason that people with good jobs and extra income cannot live in a nice area and spend a little extra disposable $$ on pools and high speed connectivity,eh?

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  26. Re:Segregated pools... by jcnnghm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Cry me a fucking river. Something bad happened fifty years ago. Get over it. Feeling sorry for yourself and thinking that other people should have to take care of you because you can't take care of yourself is stupid. If you want something, get off your ass and get after it.

    --
    You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. - Winston Churchill
  27. Not HOAs by Deadplant · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The whole point of this (which has been overshadowed by TFA bringing HOAs into it) is to separate the last-mile infrastructure from the IP service.
    (TFA is NOT the originator of this concept)

    Nobody in their right mind is suggesting that your HOA should be your ISP or that you should buy Internet service from anyone other than existing ISPs.

    What is being suggested is that we should stop this system of perpetualy renting the physical cables that run into our homes.
    Paying up front the true cost of running a fiber strand from your house to the nearest carrier neutral datacentre frees you from monopoly opression forever.
    In this scenario you can switch Internet or phone or even TV providers at the push of a button. That puts you in the position of power.

    - the cost of the last-mile is 60-80% of your current Internet service bill.
    - if you are going to buy your house rather than rent it then why not buy rather than rent your last-mile fiber?

    BTW, I'd like to offer to buy your driveway and rent it back to you for the next 40 years.
    Be warned, I may at some point be 'forced' to restrict the weight of your car so as not to unduly stress my poorly maintainted ashphalt.

  28. Re:Segregated pools... by mrraven · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Leftism in a nutshell no hungry homeless people with festering sores on the streets of Swedish cities like we have in the U.S. AND a thriving high tech economy with a more stable banking system, stronger currency, and high rate of growth than the U.S.

    All factual unlike AC's scurrilous unsupported smear he pulled out of his butthole.

    Next!

    --
    Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
  29. that was my thought by Trepidity · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Just about the only organization I have to deal with that I like less than the cable companies and phone companies is the local homeowner's association.

  30. Re:Won't work by bogjobber · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The markets are failing. The stock market had the bottom fall out of it. Nobody is lending money. Nobody is spending money. Nobody has any idea what real value means anymore. Credit markets are the tightest we've seen in decades. Nearly every measure of economic prosperity points to a worsening condition (and we're already in a pretty bad spot).

    It doesn't mean that the idea of the free market system has failed entirely, but the collapse of the financial industry had fuck-all to do with protectionism.