Rupert Murdoch Wants To Destroy Australia's National Broadband Network
pcritter writes "With the Australian Federal Election looming, Rupert Murdoch, the owner of Australia's biggest newspapers, is looking to unseat the incumbent Labor government over its centerpiece National Broadband Network policy. The media mogul sees the NBN as a threat to his media empire and has ordered newspapers to attack the project at every opportunity. The NBN seeks to bring 100Mbps Fibre-To-The-Premises internet to 93% of the country with wireless and satellite for the remainder. It currently reaches 4% of the population and is slated to complete in 2021. The conservative opposition has promised to dramatically scale back the project."
Honestly, I'm sick of technological advances being blocked because it hurts someones bottom line. Something something stock whip makers.
If the NBN affects his business then his business is archaic and newscorp can adjust or die...preferably the latter
I thought they did things "upside down" not "backwards" in Australia.
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Scream bloody Murdoch.
Ezekiel 23:20
NBN's 93% FTTH is like a bridge to Tasmania - expensive, practically unnecessary, and a harbinger of eye watering tolls... Who wouldn't poke fun at it?
Just a shame I'm not in a marginal enough electorate to get in on the early rollout.
The whole thing is likely going to collapse under its own weight anyway.
Well, from what I just read, it shows the press council got three complaints in 2011, about three articles during June and July. The complaint was that the articles were inaccurate and misleading.
The press council agreed the articles were inaccurate and misleading, although the articles were full of verifiable facts. So now, stating facts in a news article is misleading. Using the latest published numbers is misleading. Quoting a customer, who when asked agrees with the tone of the usage of his words, is misleading.
If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
The timing of this post on the front page is a little too timely. The prime minister Kevin Rudd today announced the date the federal election is to be held. It will be September 7th. Me thinks the poster is quite possibly a card carrying Australian Labor Party (ALP) member.
There seems to be a lot of scaremongering going on in regards to the Liberal National coalition's NBN policy. The ALP is promising fibre to the building in all cases except for where it is completely infeasible (e.g. remote towns out in the desert etc.). Sounds great but it will be expensive. Probably somewhere well over $50 billion. The coalition is promising fibre to the node with fibre to the building available at cost to the user for those that need it. Coalition's will be a fair bit cheaper as it won't be funding fibre to every building.
The ALP's NBN policy page
The Liberal National coalition's NBN policy page
Debate over which of the two policies is superior is healthy but blatant biased scaremongering is not.
Seriously? The coalition's plan is "Let's take the Labor Party's plan, and shave a couple percent off the price by dropping the most important bit of the project!" (ie, converting from FTTH to FTTN and leaving everyone stuck with telstra's awful ancient copper system connecting to a large and unsightly roadside active cabinet)
If the NBN is going to get done, lets get it done properly, instead of doing some half-hearted poor job of it.
Murdoch's Pirates. It is useful to keep in mind News Corps' very sleazy business culture.
religious fanatics by pointing out that a high speed broad-band network will be primarily used to speed the delivery of pornography to children.
What's a lie, that the Labour NBN policy is a good idea, or that Murdoch uses his media empire to oppose a policy that he thinks will hurt his business?
As an American, I don't know enough about the NBN program to say. If Labour sucks then let Australian voters throw them out.
Murdoch is another story. Excessive media consolidation is a major problem, and Murdoch's tentacles are not confined to your continent. The US used to have regulations that limited the extent of media consolidation, and ensured greater freedom and diversity of the press, but they were thrown in the trash. No one person or organization should control so much of the news that people get.
The UK has fixed that. If we had such a program in America we could ensure that at least 50% of Internet content was evangelical preaching.
i will light up your dark fibre heart.
Democracy or policy set by Murdoch? The conservatives are all for it because they know, if Murdoch really wants it he'll give them every media opportunity they need while denying everyone else except maybe unfavourable attention.
Welcome to Australia the Italy of the East. I'm waiting with amusement for the australian variant of "tutti frutti".
To me, as an American, that's the real issue. I don't know, and frankly am not terribly concerned, about Australian NBN. Murdoch as the latter day Hearst is another story.
They already have an internet filter so that argument won't work.
The problem we have here in Australia is that both choices in party suck, it's like choosing between syphallis and herpes. You don't want either of them, but once you've got em, they don't go away.
Australia. You mean the country/continent in the Southern Hemisphere, right? Because it really sounds like you're talking about America.
Of course Murdoch hates the NBN, he owns the largest Cable TV network in Australia! Who would be paying to watch shows over the cable network when they can download them over fibre? Or worse yet, pay money to netflix to stream them to their houses directly. It's a massive threat to FOXTEL.
The government's role here is basicly to put up the money and get the thing built. To use a vehicle analogy they are contracting out to get highways built but have no role in the trucking companies that are going to use it later.
The entire thing is being done to repair an earlier government mistake anyway - of giving a communications monopoly away with not strings attached so the best way for that monopoly to make money was just sit on it and patch bits that broke since 1996.
Here in the USA he is trying to destroy the entire country.
Look at it again, it's a list of hopes and not a policy. The major hope is that Telstra will give away a lot of stuff for free - as if that's going to happen.
They were mostly designed to prevent foreign ownership which is why Murdoch is now a US citizen. The corporation itself is still technically foreign and based in Bermuda or somewhere to avoid US tax but that doesn't matter if a US citizen is in charge.
In the US we have at least 50% of TV and radio broadcast time and bandwidth dedicated to preaching (some of which is presented in the form of right-wing political propaganda), the remainder is divided between singing contests and "news" about the Kardashians.
For the guy who owns Fox News, Karma works in weird and wonderful ways.
Lets do the math:
FTTN will need power and optical rolled out into suburbia.
Each node will be ejecting fancy new vectoring or better tech into existing final very old copper runs of 200~2000m.
Australia will have have to look hard at each adsl user. That long run of existing adsl copper from the 500m-4 km exchange/rim (~digital loop carrier) will have fight with the new nodes.
What will a new 300m-2km run of vectoring copper do to existing adel 1/2 users?
Hint - every user will have to get a node connection for internet if vectoring is used near existing adsl connections:)
Thats a lot of nodes to build out in suburbia per 500-2000m suburban copper loops.
The short runs of copper are corroded, crushed or have a few too many joins and will need ongoing care.
Australia did over provision copper, but that was a long time ago ~100% redundancy (~2.5 pairs per home) is now very low.
What is left is over used or of unknown quality re low number of working pairs.
http://www.abc.net.au/technology/articles/2012/11/27/3642266.htm
Our solder joints are old, oxidisation is ongoing, alien crosstalk (ATX)....copper diameter (in Australia 0.4mm is common)... the list of copper issues in the ground is Australia is not like some 'new' lab network.
http://www.ti.com/sc/docs/products/network/vdslwp.pdf has some numbers over longer runs on page 32.
http://delimiter.com.au/2012/04/30/fttn-a-huge-mistake-says-ex-bt-cto/
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
One is a policy, another is a bit of a wish list before the policy is fully thought out. If you look hard enough there's bound to still be a podcast of the ABC radio interview with Malcolm Turnbull on the morning it was released, where the answer to nearly every question was along the lines of "we'll get to that later". If the Libs, Nats and LNP win and form a government I'd give it about a year before they have a plan. Whether it's better or worse depends on circumstances and how much pressure the Nats who want broadband in their electorates apply and what numbers they have. The preview we've seen is only going to work in areas with a lot of evenly spread telephone exchanges not far apart so is really only a Sydney solution.
The main purpose of the NBN as far as I see it is to do an end run around Telstra who is just happy to sit on infrastructure that hasn't changed much since 1996 and not let anyone else do anything better. Most of the vast cost of the NBN is about buying off Telstra. It's about fixing a mess that was dumped on the country in a desire for short term gain with a fire sale in times when the government didn't really need the cash. If Telstra had a board of better quality than a politician's wife, a failed historian and a union busting failed farmer things may have been different, but it's about sitting on stuff and not letting anyone else in instead of competing on the basis of improvements or service.
I hate that evil old rightwing cunt. I hope he dies of cancer.
Hi ebno http://www.nbnco.com.au/nbn-for-home/how-it-works/how-it-works.html might help a bit
If you have a tech question have a text/google search of the NBN section at http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/forum/142
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
And Australia (under a conservative Gov) made a special provision so Murdoch could keep his 70% of national newspaper ownership (yes, 70%) while no longer being an Australian Citizen!!!
What great new applications does a household 100 megabit connection permit? I am genuinely curious. The best I can think of is widespread piracy. As for video, people are willing to tolerate a few megabit, 360p video. Even blu ray only needs 36 megabit. Verizon Fios has been offering 50 and 100 megabit connections, for at least a few years. At least of few million people in America have access to such connections. If there was an obvious economic use of >100 megabit internet connection, some people would be aware of it by now.
Oh c'mon, don't let boring reality get in your way! It's Murdoch! slashmind says must hate!
What does he think he is? Australian or something? Foreigners should not meddle in Australian internal politics.
Selectively telling the truth is one of the most time-tested effective ways to tell a lie - just spin a good narrative and leave out the parts of the truth that prove your position to be false.
So no, "having lots of facts" does not even come close to showing that something is not inaccurate and misleading. (Discalimer: I have no idea what the truth of the matter in this instance was, just stating a general trend)
--- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
Well, from what I just read, it shows the press council got three complaints in 2011, about three articles during June and July.
OK, well here's some much more recent and relevant food for thought:
Murdoch sends trusted general 'Col Pot' to bring down Rudd over NBN
Is that specific enough for you?
The coalition's NBN policy is realistic and more affordable than the labour fantasy which is completely unaffordable.
The Coalitions NBN policy is to deliver yesterday's solution, tomorrow, for marginally less than it would cost to do it properly.
Actually that describes most of their "policies" (such as they are).
Ah, but we know full well that such filtering doesn't actually work and never has.
What, then why do we have it? That's not the topic under discussion here, next question please.
--- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
As an American, I don't know enough about the NBN program to say.
In a nutshell, the NBN is a plan to deliver fibre-optic telecommunications infrastructure to most of the country. It will build (and own) the physical infrastructure upon which retail ISPs will deliver their products.
If Labour sucks then let Australian voters throw them out.
Labor does, indeed, suck, and Australian voters are probably going to throw them out. The problem is if they do they're going to replace them with a party that takes everything that sucks about Labor, and says: "You boys are just playin'. Let's crank this shit up to 11!".
Australia. You mean the country/continent in the Southern Hemisphere, right? Because it really sounds like you're talking about America.
For nearly twenty years Australian political leaders have looked to America and thought "that's awesome, we need some of that over here".
If you're trying to outdo us Yanks in corruption, forget it. Murdoch became a naturalized US citizen by an act of congress, rather than following the path that tens of millions of people who don't have lots of money to bribe congress have followed over the last few centuries. He became a citizen (in name only obviously) because there is/was a law that only a US citizen could own a US TV station.
Quoting customers can be misleading.
For example, there is a propaganda piece called 180 made in 2011 which has, as a central premise, the idea that people today are already forgetting who Hitler was. Soon after it opens there is a montage of interviews, as person after person is asked and claims no knowledge of the name or the events of world war 2.
Misleading, of course - because what the producer actually did was interview many, many, many people and only show those interviews which agree with his point. For every person he could find who had never heard of Hitler, there may have been a hundred who had - and he just didn't show them. At no point did he misquote anyone, yet he was still able to give a false impression about historical knowledge in the casual US population.
Until the religious fanatics realise that it is far easier to pass a law imposing mandatory filtering on a government network than it would be to impose the same filter on a private network. I imagine "No tax money for porn!" would be a good rallying cry.
I find it weird that with most of the public able to gain access to so many news sources that papers under the Murdoch banner would dare to publish the rubbish they have been. It's rather easy to loose a consumer and extremely difficult to attain one, publishing false information in a news source is the best way to create a situation where the populous decides at whole to boycott the publications and to even go further and mock those around them until they follow suit. Being scared of loosing market share and doing the actions they are would seem to me a reason for them to loose it. [emphasis added]
Hardly. Most people watch/read whatever news source feeds their biases. It can become a vicious cycle too where people's bias inclines them to a certain source, that source then feeds their biases and makes them more biased, etc.
I'm not saying that I'm above watching/reading news sources that feed my biases, but I at least try to sample the other side once in a while, and listen to counterarguments against my side's positions. I personally know plenty of people on the other side who do likewise.
However, for many/most people politics becomes a team sport. They identify with "Team Conservative" or "Team Liberal", and cheer every victory for their side like it was the home team winning. That's fine for sports, but a lousy approach to politics. It makes people especially subject to manipulation as they don't choose their team's positions, but will always support their team. Either side could decide that roasting small children for holidays was a fine idea, and many people would support it.
...nationalise his media conglomerate in Australia and break it up.
No single person should be able to decide who will or won't be the next government.
Science is all about firing a drunk pig out of a cannon just to see what happens.
One part of many. Whether it's tobacco companies, the sugar industry, the media moguls - if you haven't realized that we live in the middle of a war between capitalism and humanity, you're living under a rock.
Corporations intentionally damage us, for profit. We are sold products known to damage our health because it's profitable. We have patent and copyright laws that are batshit crazy, because corporations think this will save their monopoly rents. In the US, corporations are fighting local governments who want to provide their citizen with services that the corporations fail to offer (like broadband in the hinterlands). All over Europe, we sold the public companies that our parents and in some cases grandparents had built up and paid for with tax money to private companies, and in most cases the results were rising prices and dropping quality. There are a number of movements to buy it back - that alone should tell you how successful the whole thing was for the public.
William Gibbson said in an interview that he stopped writing cyberpunk stories because if he had written what is reality today as fiction back then, people would've called him insane.
These are the final days of mankind. Not in an apocalyptic sense but in the sense of the end of our reign as the supreme creatures on this planet. Our overlords will be creatures we created, but it won't be robots or Skynet, it'll be virtual entities like corporations, governments and other faceless entities that you can't kill with a shotgun. The fringe-liberals are misguided, stockpiling food and ammo won't do you any good in this war, because it's not fought that way.
Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
In the meantime, always oppose all things Murdoch.
I so look forward to that evil turd dropping dead so I can dance on his grave.
No level of hell is too deep for this pathetic sociopath.
He might be a mogul, but he will always suck ass like a loser.
I am curious to know if Rupert Murdoch has ever done anything good - or even tried to.
I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
Ohhhh, so Faux News tells the truth, everyone else is lying all the time, right?
Sorry bucko, you're as guilty of being a tard as those you accuse. Take your own advice before coming in here and trying to sound all smart and educated and talk down to everyone else.
It would mean we are becoming human.
Anarchy will never work because we /ARE/ human beings. To a close approximation, we have /ALWAYS/ been human beings.
What you are really saying is that "it would mean that human nature is changing into what I conceive it should be"
Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
US mainstream news is horrible; it does not matter which story or what "bias" you can find in the whole farce. FOX uses truth when it benefits their propaganda's agenda otherwise they filter, distort, or lie. The others probably had other agendas besides defending the NRA - I won't bother to speculate as to their motives (besides just ratings) because the whole thing is distraction from real issues.
As far as I was concerned the issue was simple- Zimmerman talked big and thought he could dish it out but was a coward who couldn't handle being on the receiving end. Every coward who can't handle an ass whooping is going to preemptively murder -- with great profits to those who bet on the cowardice of the younger generations.
Democracy Now! - uncensored, anti-establishment news
can remember a time where to be moded up, you needed to have great depth in your thought or informative support with links, or really, really clever/funny.
[Citation needed]
George Soros
DRINK!
(How many news outlets does GEOOOOORRRRRGE SOOOOOROOOOOS! own, again?)
Ooh, moderator points! Five more idjits go to Minus One Hell!
Delendae sunt RIAA, MPAA et Windoze
Rupert Murdoch Wants To Destroy Australia's National Broadband Network
Nuke it from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.
To me, as an American, that's the real issue. I don't know, and frankly am not terribly concerned, about Australian NBN.
There's actually one good reason for us to care about their NBN project as Americans -- since Australia is highly similar to the USA in many ways, we can use their successes as evidence if we want to get similar projects moving in individual states or regions.
Now mostly at Usenet:comp.misc & SoylentNews.org (it's made of people!)
Not only will news and current affairs be restricted by the government, so too will access to any data, that the government want to restrict.
Yeah because the for-profit news outlets we have no are so good we cant afford to lose them...
I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
Blame Howard, he has the massive hard on for american style ruthlessness, funny that he was so anti-gun though.
"+5 Insightful" WTF?? Obvious troll is obvious.
The boring reality is that Murdoch wants us to pay him for any content we don't create ourselves. And he doesn't really want us creating any ourselves.
Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
Translation: "At first I was just making shit up, and then I found a blog post from someone who says Slashdot is no longer cool, but since it's a link, we can ignore the fact that he, too, is making shit up."
Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
Labor hasn't done that bad of a job, there's just a lot of people who hated Julia Gillard for no rational reason (I.E. rich single men complaining that she'd lost touch with the average Australian family).
The real problem is that the Liberals are even worse. Tony Abbott is nothing but a frontman for the party powerbrokers, he is even more spineless and weasely than the average politician. The biggest thing he has going for him is the fact that people hated Julia Gillard. But he's lost this edge now that Kevin Rudd is back in charge.
Seriously though, I dont mindlessly hate the Liberals, just the current form of the Liberal party. Abbott talks about "faceless men" in Labor yet expects us to ignore the strings attached to Abbott. If the Liberals really wanted to win this election, they'd sack Abbott and put Malcolm Turnbull in charge, but the "faceless men" of the Liberal party wont do this because 1) Turnbull is too much of a centrist for their liking, 2) Turnbull will not blindly follow their agenda.
Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
Don't worry, I'm sure the suburbs that are important to the LNP (Toorak, Double Bay, etc...) will somehow get FTTP before they pull the pin and make it FTTN for everyone.
Now that I think about it, that's probably why they want to kill it, sour grapes that the deal done with the independents after the last election was that rural areas had to be done first.
Sara
Designer, Gamer, Macgrrl in an XP World
The fortune cookie at the end of this page basically sums it up:
When you don't know what you are doing, do it neatly.
Sara
Designer, Gamer, Macgrrl in an XP World
He wants to attack the project at every opportunity, but such a blunt approach should not work against citizen that use their brains. Unfortunately we are probably to rediscover that mass medias have a brain suppression feature.
Big business is more dangerous to your rights, and to society in general, than big government is.
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
Ebno another good site is http://stevej-on-nbn.blogspot.com.au/ "NBN Issues, Commentary & Opinion. 30 yrs in I.T. and Telecomms"
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
Labor hasn't done that bad of a job, there's just a lot of people who hated Julia Gillard for no rational reason ...
Seeing her on TV baying for Julian Assange's blood - actually a pretty good reason.
The real problem is that the Liberals are even worse. Tony Abbott is nothing but a frontman for the party powerbrokers, he is even more spineless and weasely than the average politician. The biggest thing he has going for him is the fact that people hated Julia Gillard. But he's lost this edge now that Kevin Rudd is back in charge.
Seriously though, I dont mindlessly hate the Liberals, just the current form of the Liberal party. Abbott talks about "faceless men" in Labor yet expects us to ignore the strings attached to Abbott. If the Liberals really wanted to win this election, they'd sack Abbott and put Malcolm Turnbull in charge, but the "faceless men" of the Liberal party wont do this because 1) Turnbull is too much of a centrist for their liking, 2) Turnbull will not blindly follow their agenda.
Sadly true.
It's NOT a conspiracy... it's a plot.
That's fine but it's ironic to defend shoddy journalism (Slashdot's) just because it attacks the shoddy journalism of someone else who you don't like. It's a massive leap from;
"Two years ago press council agrees three articles on the NBN are misleading"
to
"With the election looming Murdoch has ordered his newspapers to attack the NBN at every opportunity"
Exactly - the current speeds talked about are far less relevant than the shift of the underlying infrastructure to stable, passive, water resistance fibre from the current power sucking degraded copper with high maintenance overheads that requires cabinets closer and closer to the end consumer.
I'd also wonder if anyone is going to bother stealing fibre cables to sell the raw material for $$$. Oh that only happens with copper?
If the Liberals really wanted to win this election, they'd sack Abbott and put Malcolm Turnbull in charge, but the "faceless men" of the Liberal party wont do this because 1) Turnbull is too much of a centrist for their liking, 2) Turnbull will not blindly follow their agenda.
They cannot replace Abbot as they have been heavily spruiking their 'stable government' platform based around the "Keven overthrow -> Julia -> leadership challenge" events in ALP. Too bad for them he is a muppet compared to Rudd with the silver tongue. Will be interesting to see how the country votes.
I think the general public will manage to change the government without any prompting from "big media" in the election which has just been announced for about 1 month from now (the 7th).
There is a difference between destroying something that already exists, and blocking something that is still in the planning stages. The headline is wrong -- Rupert Murdoch is not destroying or seeking to destroy anything.
Additionally, there is a difference between competing private networks and a single government monopoly. We have recently seen that an imperial government can coerce private media companies, to obtain information about users and subscribers. How much easier it would be if there is a single broadband network run by the very government that seeks to gather the information.
There seem to be very good reasons why a government should not be given a monopoly over broadband networks for the entire country. I think China has such a system, and maybe it works for them, but quite a few of the Chinese do not seem content to let their government filter their access to the internet. Murdoch has had decades of experience dealing with China, so maybe he knows something about closed media systems.
yes, this works for the water supply too. it's exactly why we have huge water pipes to every street corner and the people - the consumers - get to decide whether they want a cheap garden hose to connect up their house or a more expensive fancy metal pipe.