Slashdot Mirror


Telcos Want Big Subsidies, Not Line-Sharing

It seems that a recent survey of global broadband practices by Harvard's Berkman Center at the behest of the FCC has stirred the telecommunications hornet's nest. Both AT&T and Verizon are up in arms about some of the conclusions (except the ones that suggest offering large direct public subsidies). "Harvard's Berkman Center study of global broadband practices, produced at the FCC's request, is an 'embarrassingly slanted econometric analysis that violates professional statistical standards and is insufficiently reliable to provide meaningful guidance,' declares AT&T. The study does nothing but promote the lead author's 'own extreme views,' warns a response from Verizon Wireless. Most importantly, it 'should not be relied upon by the FCC in formulating a National Broadband Plan,' concludes the United States Telecom Association. Reviewing the slew of criticisms, Berkman's blog wryly notes that the report seems to have been 'a mini stimulus act for telecommunications lawyers and consultants.'"

10 of 340 comments (clear)

  1. Fascism, DUH by czarangelus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power."

    America is, and pretty much always has been, a fascist nation. I think the recent bailouts of the banking giants and car manufacturers should prove that it is fascist now; Andrew Jackson himself was fighting fascism when it came to central banking back in the 1830's. War and weapons define the American economy. Boeing and Raytheon and Xi could be considered the ultimate achievement of which a fascist society is capable.

    Lew Rockwell is fond of referring to the central government as the Welfare-Warfare state. Our country has always defined itself through these two socialist conspiracies against mankind - welfare both corporate and personal, which stunts economic growth and creates a class of victims wholly dependent on the largess of their tormentor - and warfare, which is the extension of corporate power through the state in order to secure resources overseas. We should abandon this socialism, this corporatism, this fascism - and create a government that exists only within strict Constitutional boundaries. Nothing else will do for the good of mankind.

    --
    When a true genius appears, you can know him by this sign: that all the dunces are in a confederacy against him.
  2. Re:More competition needed by portnux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And the broadband companies take legal action to prevent private citizens and communities from creating their own broadband systems why?

  3. Attn: Telcos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ahem.. (clears throat). FUCK YOU!

    The taxpayer gave you Millions if not Billions back in the 90's for infrastructure upgrades. And now, a decade later, with YOU posting record profits, and infrastructure being upgraded at a rate comparable to snails pace, you have the gall to ask for more money from the taxpayers, i.e. your CUSTOMERS?

    Pardon me Big Telco, but FUCK YOU!

  4. you're a middling propagandist by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    you have the emotional appeal down solid, its pretty good chest thumping stuff

    but you're underpinning your inflammatory rhetoric with poor a set of facts

    good propaganda never lies, it traffics in half truths. so, for example, you don't want to say the usa has ALWAYS been a fascist state. not mainly because thats a lie, but also because you undermine your final appeal for a return to constitutional roots... well, if those roots are so strong, how come the usa has "always" been a fascist state? its a contradiction. you can't refer to a strong set of principles that never actually worked

    no, you need a sympathetic narrative, a demagogue's best friend: its better to refer a mythological past where everything was perfect, the founding fathers reigned supreme. then evil influences crept in. in your particular fantasy, that would be corporations, and they subverted and ruined the garden of eden

    so instead you want to say the usa WAS ONCE a solid strong democracy. instill chest thumping patriotism here with strong quasihistoric visions, you know the drill. then change the tone and talk about how money was thrown around and morals and integrity were corrupted, the founding fathers betrayed... good hollywood stuff

    good luck to you sir, you're well on your way to being a solid propagandizing demagogue. you have the emotional appeals down solid. now just hone up on the half-truths and you'll be a rabble rouser supreme!

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  5. Separate ISP's businesses by sanosuke001 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1. Separate the ISPs into separate entities. Phone service in one company, internet service in another, television in a third.
    2. Separate the ownership of the infrastructure into another company
    3. Make the three companies from part 1 pay company from part 2 for access
    4. allow any other company access to part 2's lines for the same fee as it charges part 1 companies
    5. don't EVER allow them to merge again

    --
    -SaNo
  6. So that would be..? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So that would be AT&T, Comcast and Verizon as opposed to AT&T. Comcast and Verizon, then.

  7. Re:I see what they did there... by mcgrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Bush administration gave this welfare to the telcos, not the Obama administration. The telcos are trying to get more corporate welfare from Obama. Blame Obama for giving my tax money to the telcos when he actually does it, not when the telcos are standing on the corner with a cardboard sign that reads "will lobby for cash".

    For Christ's sake, man, open your eyes. Bush was a disaster for this country; indeed, for the entire world -- for everyone but the corporates and the uber-rich.

  8. Re:I see what they did there... by tsm_sf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What we need is a publicly owned infrastructure and privately run services.

    --
    Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
  9. Re:I see what they did there... by cc_pirate · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What crap. Trickle down is a failure.

    We just saw the era of lowest taxes on the rich and corporations since the introduction of the income tax and the highest level of corporate welfare ever as well... and the job generation rate during that time was one of the LOWEST EVER.

    So please stop espousing the idiotic opinion that somehow giving the rich more money means the rest of us get more money. It doesn't work that way now if it ever did and the DATA doesn't lie.

    --

    "There are laws that enslave men, and laws that set them free. " - Sean Connery as King Arthur

  10. Re:I see what they did there... by uuddlrlrab · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Trickle Down Economics: Since 1981, Reaganomics has been unzipping the secrets to arcing, golden streams of wealth, allowing it to flow freely and splash down on all peoples of the middle and working class, so we may bathe in its warm and slightly bitter essence, and glory in the amber fountains of our masters. Here, have a towel. Wait, go buy your own.

    --
    Odi profanum vulgus et arceo