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Major ISPs Threaten To Throttle Innovation and Slow Network Upgrades

An anonymous reader writes "In a letter released on Tuesday and addressed to the FCC chairman, a group of the U.S.'s top ISPs have warned that if the FCC re-classifies the internet as telecommunications, then innovation would slow or halt and network upgrades would be unaffordable. 'Under Title II, new service offerings, options, and features would be delayed or altogether foregone. Consumers would face less choice, and a less adaptive and responsive Internet. An era of differentiation, innovation, and experimentation would be replaced with a series of 'Government may I?' requests from American entrepreneurs.' They add, 'even the potential threat of Title II had an investment-chilling effect by erasing approximately 10% of some ISPs' market cap.' Ars Technica highlights earlier doomsday predictions by AT&T. The FCC is scheduled to vote May 15 on the chairman's recent proposal encompassing this reclassification option that the ISPs vehemently oppose." Reader Bob9113 adds that a protest is planned for the same day by those who oppose the FCC's plans.

286 comments

  1. If you regulate properly, we'll stop our business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sounds like a serious threat. Better cave.

  2. Lies by Squiddie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They weren't going to upgrade anything to begin with. Their strategy has so far been imposing limits and charging more. ISPs were never planning to innovate or upgrade.

    1. Re:Lies by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They certainly lack any specific examples of what types of upgrades they are planning that would not happen.

    2. Re:Lies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Just to add some data points. In the past 10 years in my area, Comcast has boosted their "blazing fast internet" from top-tier of 8Mbps to a whopping 50Mbps. Note that the fine print is "up to 50Mbps", meaning you might get that fast download if you try to download a pdf at 3am. The only competition here is CenturyLink, who also advertise "up to...", and generally fall very short. I had CL's 20Mbps, fastest I ever got was closer to 10. Not only are they dragging their heels in the name of profit, they are also great at getting away with false advertising.

    3. Re:Lies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They stopped innovating with: "It's way faster than dial up!"

    4. Re:Lies by fermion · · Score: 2
      Exactly. There are large potions of reasonably high density places in the US that has no internet choice. The current system has resulted in slow expensive internet because of lack of competition.

      What would happen is if the lines were developed separately from the service is that there would be greater incentive to lay more fiber because it could then be sold to firms that were able to develop more flexible packages that would attract more customers. The current incumbents are limited in what they can do. For instance if they have a limited plan, everyone complains that they are throttling. But an independent could push a limited plan as their way of creating a competitive plan.

      What the incumbents are afraid of is that third parties, not Google becuase they only go to saturated markets, will start laying fiber and selling access.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    5. Re:Lies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But here's the rub, they've already had over $200 billion of tax payers' money to do so. As well as exclusivity of areas granted by the local governments.

    6. Re:Lies by interkin3tic · · Score: 4, Funny

      They didn't say that would be the ONLY thing preventing upgrades! Other things that make upgrades and innovation unaffordable include:

      - It's wednesday
      - But... MONEY!
      - The old infrastructure isn't currently on fire
      - All the engineers and accountants got super-fast internet first and they starved to death looking at high-def porn
      - Still mad that they sent you all those AOL discs and you're not still using AOL. They worked really hard on that.
      - You spend most of your time and bandwidth looking for something to watch on Netflix. Providing you faster internet would just make that worse
      - The executive board REALLY likes cocaine and boats.
      - Do you KNOW how hard it is digging in the dirt to put in fiber?!? You try it sometime! It's like digging through concrete!
      - The rules of Monopoly the board game don't say anything about reducing rent just because people really don't want to pay if they land on Boardwalk. Everyone insists ISPs are a monopoly but don't want to play by the simple instructions. That's just hypocrisy.

    7. Re:Lies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sometimes the problem is "local"....

      In the wireless industry, to make that stuff work for the consumer, those companies have to place antennas where people are. So if you want cell service in Yosimite while hiking in the back canyons, expect to see a tower.

      OH NO!!! scream the environmentalists. WE CAN'T HAVE A CELL TOWER SPOILING OUR BEUTIFUL SCENERY IN YOSIMITE [all CAPs is intentional here]

      So little cell coverage exists in some places...and people scream about NI SIGNAL IN YOSIMITE...and don't realize what's going on int he background.

      The same story can be told about certain small cities in California [removing names here to quasi-protect who I am and what I really know about them]

      Some small cities do not want to ruin the "eye appeal" of their towns with cell towers or even antennas. So you stroll the shops and streets of downtown small city California and your cell signal is lousy. You complain to the carrier. The carrier hoefully listens to you. Then the carrier goes back before that city's controlling boards, usually on an annual basis. "Here's the issues we see with cell service in your city", says the carrier. The City responds, "No, you can't have any new cell towers or antennas"

      So who gets screwed in that process? You...the customer. You really do want that service...and you want it everywhere. It is a marvelous modern tool that makes life better or worse, depending on the situation. The problem with your wants is that others don't care about your wants. Politicians have their own agendas. Environmentalists have their own agendas. Somethimes those agendas are so radical or extreme that no progress at all can be made.

      Sometimes the problem is as simple as people not understanding they have to "give a little to get something". Antennas are getting smaller. They can be painted to match a building even though they might be "obvious" in the construction of the building. Antennas can be disguised, usually poorly, but the "eyesore impact" can be minimized. Sometimes cities and environmentalists just won't budge on these issues.

      When it comes to broadband, either residential or commercial, delivery is the major issue. Monopolies do exist in the US because the cost of duplicating the same infrastructure for each service is very expensive. Then there is the cost os everyone digging up streets, obstructing traffic, digging in your backyard, etc. I once saw an old photograph of a early 1900s telephone pole in a very small city that looked worse that a bad tree with all the wires string on that pole in multiple horizontal tiers. Unfortunately nobody has any economic (or even legal??) interest in consolidating "N number of carriers" on to a common transport infrastructure in the US.

      So the next time you complain about not having cell service or adequate choice in broadband providers, may be you need to think hard about how those services are delivered. May be it's time to completely rethink the delivery methods, the desired delivery features, the economics of delivery, and the legalities surrounding delivery.

      The biggest problem is getting the politicans and the businesses to agree to such a design. Seriously.

  3. Like that scene from Blazing Saddles... by bazmail · · Score: 5, Funny

    where the new sheriff holds a gun to his own head and threatens to pull the trigger in order to get everyone to back off. I think it will work this time too as the FCC et al do their usual backing off party trick.

    1. Re:Like that scene from Blazing Saddles... by kmg90 · · Score: 2

      It's amazing how a comedy from the 70's can be used allegorically...

    2. Re:Like that scene from Blazing Saddles... by CreatureComfort · · Score: 2

      It's easier to believe when you realize the entire movie was filmed to be an allegory. Much of Mel Brooks' body of work is such.

      --
      "Unheard of means only it's undreamed of yet,
      Impossible means not yet done." ~~ Julia Ecklar
    3. Re:Like that scene from Blazing Saddles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      obligatory "These people are sooooo stupid."

    4. Re:Like that scene from Blazing Saddles... by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's amazing how a comedy from the 70's can be used allegorically...

      Not when that comedy is Blazing Saddles. Thinking of it as "just a comedy" is to seriously underestimate it.

    5. Re:Like that scene from Blazing Saddles... by geminidomino · · Score: 4, Funny

      Damn you, now I want to watch Blazing Saddles...

    6. Re:Like that scene from Blazing Saddles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can if your ISP don't throttle your bandwidth to support differentiation, innovation, and experimentation elsewhere.

    7. Re:Like that scene from Blazing Saddles... by TheAngryArmadillo · · Score: 3, Funny

      > Damn you, now I want to watch Blazing Saddles...

      Not over 'broadband' you don't.

    8. Re:Like that scene from Blazing Saddles... by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      "Listen to him, men. He's just crazy enough to do it!"

    9. Re:Like that scene from Blazing Saddles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What would you suggest we think of it as? High drama? Science fiction? Action/adventure? Suspense? Thriller? Horror? Political intrigue?

    10. Re:Like that scene from Blazing Saddles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean like this: http://i.imgur.com/lJT5TP4.png

  4. Less choice? by smooth+wombat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Consumers would face less choice,

    How would that even be possible? We only have 4 main providers in the U.S. Are these folks saying that if they were reclassified they would start merging with one another?

    One can only hope they go through with this threat because the government would be able to step in and regulate them as a monopoly, forcing them apart like they did with AT&T and for a few years we'd once again have multiple ISPs to choose from.

    --
    We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    1. Re:Less choice? by Trepidity · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And most areas don't even have as many as four providers. Everywhere I've lived in the U.S. has had two providers: the local cable monopoly, and the local phone monopoly.

    2. Re:Less choice? by smooth+wombat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I meant four total providers. For the entire country. Your experience is exactly what I have, and what most people have.

      In my case the two ISPs offer the same slow speeds at the exact same high price.

      Coincidence?

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    3. Re:Less choice? by InvalidError · · Score: 1

      There is not much point in "forcing them apart" since they are already staying mostly apart from each other: yes, there might be four major wired service providers in the USA but in most neighborhoods, only one or two of them are available... for the most part, they avoid overlapping with each other beyond one telco and one cableco duopoly.

      With the original Bell breakup, regulators expected the mini-Bells to compete with each other for territory but the Bells ended up sticking to their home turfs.

      First mile access is a natural monopoly: overlapping on a competitor's territory is expensive and yields a fraction of the revenue investing in an exclusive market does.

      If you want to end the first mile monopoly, you have to turn it into a public utility that any service provider can rent or some variant of that model.

    4. Re:Less choice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem isn't getting internet service, the problem is that you only have one choice.

    5. Re:Less choice? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      In my case the two ISPs offer the same slow speeds at the exact same high price.

      Coincidence?

      No.

      But perfectly understandable. If the one cut its rates, the other would pretty much be forced to reduce its rate the same amount or go out of business.

      Remember, the stable state in any competitive business is offering essentially the same thing as your competition at the same prices. Any change in either service or price produces a period of instability that ends when everyone is offering essentially the same thing at the same price again.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    6. Re:Less choice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have one. AT&T. Cable co hasn't decided to run the 600 yards they need to get to my subdivision.

    7. Re:Less choice? by magical+liopleurodon · · Score: 2

      well....ISPs used to be common carriers and had to provide net neutrality by default. The RIAA/MPAA didn't like that and were relegated to having to sue individuals for copyright infringement. So they lobbied to have ISPs not be common carriers. Once they got that, thanks to Comcast buying NBC and switching sides (so they can sue their competitors for copyright infringement), ISPs spent their money on high-powered hardware not for pushing traffic, but for doing deep-packet inspection so that they could comply with RIAA/MPAA requests (and whatever the government wanted from them as well) while the rest of the world was putting in bigger pipes.

    8. Re:Less choice? by CreatureComfort · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is called collusion... exactly the opposite of competitive business practices.

      It is impossible that two entities can have so exactly the same input costs, maintenance costs, future investment costs, defined profit margins, and internal (in)efficiencies that they end up with exactly the same offerings at exactly the same price. Either one of them is at rock bottom, and the other is making artificially high profits, or they both are making artificially high profits.

      Neither competitor really wants to put the other out of business and face the scrutiny of monopoly. As long as they collude to keep both in business, then they can each point at the other as "the bad guy".

      Oh, and by the way, since we're colluding anyways, why settle for one just scraping by... we might as well make certain were both VERY comfortable, as long as we can keep real competition locked out.

      --
      "Unheard of means only it's undreamed of yet,
      Impossible means not yet done." ~~ Julia Ecklar
    9. Re:Less choice? by magical+liopleurodon · · Score: 1

      so classifying ISPs as telecoms isn't some disaster that ISPs have never dealt with before. It would basically just make things the way they used to be pre-RIAA litigation.

    10. Re:Less choice? by mjtaylor24601 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Nobody can afford to run a dozen different wires to your house. Infrastructure is fucking EXPENSIVE.

      So you're saying the limited physical space to run wires and the huge upfront capital costs make for a natural monopoly? Good, then you must agree that the argument that regulating the market incumbents as a monopoly will reduce new entrants to the market is complete bullsh#@t because new entrants effectively can't enter the market anyway. Glad we're all on the same page.

      --
      I wish I were as sure of anything as some people are of everything
    11. Re:Less choice? by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 2

      And upgrades? I don't know what they did with all that money they received, but they certainly never upgraded a thing.

      Didn't you read the letter? They've spent all their money writing "apps":

      Today’s regulatory framework helps support nearly 11 million jobs annually in the U.S. and has unleashed over $1.2 trillion dollars of investment in advanced wired and wireless broadband networks, as well as an entirely new apps economy.

      They're throwing in with "apps" developers, Microsoft, Apple, and Google, by claiming those content provider investments are part of their "investment". Every single place they try to mention a statistic about money invested or innovation, they include stuff the content providers have been doing, because if they kept it to infrastructure exclusively it would be clear they've done bumpkiss.

      America’s economic future, ... critically depends on continued investment and innovation in our broadband infrastructure and app economy to drive improvements in health care, education and energy.

      They aren't even claiming they actually have plans to do anything, except build "apps".

      An era of differentiation, innovation, and experimentation would be replaced with a series of Government may I? requests from American entrepreneurs.

      Well that's what every other industry is dealing with these days, why do these bullies think they deserve special treatment?

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    12. Re:Less choice? by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      so classifying ISPs as telecoms isn't some disaster that ISPs have never dealt with before. It would basically just make things the way they used to be pre-RIAA litigation.

      Well, in terms of their revenue stream and their ability to act like assholes ... it would be a complete disaster.

      Part of the problem is the ISPs are pretty much controlled by/part of the *AA cartel, and they will do anything they can to fight going back to the previous way. Because, right now, they control the money, the rules, the content, the lawsuits, and the FCC.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    13. Re:Less choice? by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      Well that's what every other industry is dealing with these days, why do these bullies think they deserve special treatment?

      Because, their lobbyists have bought and paid for that special treatment.

      It's quite simple really.

      And your pointing out the whole thing about apps is key to it these days. See, Netflix came along and invented something. Like them or not, Apple did as well with its app store and iTunes. Now every ISP, along with the content owners who control them, can sell their own special subscription service to give privileged access to their own content, and starve out competitors.

      They can do it in such a way as to enforce as much DRM as they want, have a captive audience for advertising, and ensure they get all the money.

      They are now the old, established players playing "me too" with the ideas that other people generate, and applying it to their own networks to ensure you can only get it from them.

      To them, owning your entire content consumption end to end and maintaining their monopolies and cartels is the key to ensuring executives continue to get blowjobs on yachts.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    14. Re:less choice? by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Actually no. I had the only choice of GTE
      But they were heavily regulated and not allowed to do a lot of the BS that they get away with today. in fact back in the 80's they had to start working on a phone problem within 24 hours of reporting the problem or they got fined.

      Deregulation happened, and now people will go days without phone/DSL/cable because they dont have a regulatory gun to their head to actually respond.

      It's time we put a gun back to the head of ISP's, because they cant be trusted to do the right thing.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    15. Re:Less choice? by Hotawa+Hawk-eye · · Score: 1

      If the ISPs aren't going to upgrade the infrastructure even though there's been discussion about internet access being either a civil right or a human right, the government could (should?) take the infrastructure under eminent domain and upgrade it themselves, then provide access through that public infrastructure.

    16. Re:Less choice? by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      I wish I had two providers. Where I live, I have Time Warner Cable. FIOS doesn't reach my area. I live in an urban/suburban area so this isn't a case of Verizon not building out to the middle of nowhere. My other "options" - using that term very loosely - are Verizon DSL (slower and Verizon's looking to ditch it ASAP), Cell Phone Wireless (very expensive), or Satellite (also very expensive). In other words, no competitive options other than Time Warner Cable. Time Warner Cable could tell their users that we all needed to pay 10% more and cluck like chickens and we'd be forced to do so if we didn't want to lose broadband Internet.

      And they're claiming I'll have *less* choice than one provider?

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    17. Re:Less choice? by Payden+K.+Pringle · · Score: 1

      ,,,

      Isn't "one choice" an oxymoron?

    18. Re:Less choice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not collusion.

      Collusion would be if the sat down and said "hey let's charge X for Y service". What you're seeing is price stabilizing at the equilibrium (the point where cutting price to get more customers would reduce profit and increasing price would lose customers)

    19. Re:less choice? by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

      Actually no. I had the only choice of GTE

      ok, yes, but you still only had 1 choice. Which was my point. ;-)

      But they were heavily regulated and not allowed to do a lot of the BS that they get away with today. in fact back in the 80's they had to start working on a phone problem within 24 hours of reporting the problem or they got fined.

      Thats not true today either. You can file a complaint with the PSC but they only fine based on aggregate results. Not 1 customer complaint. i.e. 95% or their troubles must be worked in X amount of time, etc... and that data is provided by the phone company. But in my experience they don't lie to the PSC. The fines are too low to bother with it.

      Deregulation happened, and now people will go days without phone/DSL/cable because they dont have a regulatory gun to their head to actually respond.

      It's time we put a gun back to the head of ISP's, because they cant be trusted to do the right thing.

      I can't argue with the lack of service. But it's not due to the lack of regulation. It's due to customers buying the cheapest service at all costs. You have competition in the market place now, the telco has to compete with the cable company who has no regulation. As a result the cable companies have terrible customer service, but are cheaper and faster. Most customers never have a problem so that's what they go with. Put that regulatory gun to their head and yes, service will likely improve. But something else will suffer... like speed or innovation... or your price will go up. Which is exactly what the cable companies are saying here. They can't raise the price too far or people will just switch back to DSL. So something else has to give.

    20. Re:Less choice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The government already regulates them. Did you really not even know that much about this situation? You know, the FCC and all that?
       
      If you did know that then you did a pretty poor job of describing the problem not to mention misled readers.
      If you didn't know that then you shouldn't be commenting at all.

    21. Re:Less choice? by Lab+Rat+Jason · · Score: 1

      If only I had mod points, I'd mod this up!

      --
      Which has more power: the hammer, or the anvil?
    22. Re:Less choice? by Bengie · · Score: 1

      The the price isn't stabilizing around 0% margins, then there is not enough competition. Competition causes a race to the bottom.

    23. Re:Less choice? by danomac · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And this is why any one business should not own infrastructure, it should be publically owned and maintained.

    24. Re:Less choice? by entrigant · · Score: 2

      So then you agree they need to be regulated as a public utility and monopoly since, as you stated, competition is not tenable thereby preventing the proper application of free market forces.

    25. Re:Less choice? by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      You have a choice of TWO providers?? Count yourself lucky. I get a choice between Comcast or Comcast. Even though I live in a major metropolitan area, DSL doesn't come to my house.

    26. Re:Less choice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Works in the UK and Europe. Last time I checked I've got 16 different ISPs serving my local area; 3 of those are cable, 5 mobile (3g or 4g), and 8 via DSL. Of the 8 DSL options, 4 also offer phone service.

    27. Re:Less choice? by antdude · · Score: 1

      For me, I have one affordablev fast broadband service: Cable. No DSL and fiber. I do have others like slow dial-up, satellite, mobile, etc. but who wants those? :(

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    28. Re:Less choice? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      You get lots choices for broadband in some places, but in practices it's really 3 choices: cable internet, at&t uverse, and many people selling you the same DSL over the same phone line. The only reason so many sell the exact same DSL is because the telco is required to sell access to it from competing ISPs, because the telco is a common carrier. Most places though it's only 2 choices, cable versus the DSL.

      Now this was ok in the past when DSL was considered decent broadband (amazing stuff if all you did was browse the web or play an mmo), and so there was actual competition in a way, even if they were all selling an identical product provisioned from the exact same room. Today though people want to get tv from the internet and DSL is inadequate for that purpose. So you're left with only 2 providers if you're lucky. Alternates from satellite may be great for giving a choice for television but they're not good enough for broadband internet.

    29. Re:Less choice? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      The problem is with one company being the only choice for internet access and television access and television content provider. We never had this even with AT&T being a monopoly with telephone; they were a monopoly for the lines and service, but they never bundled that monopoly with other industries or limited access to some the people who called you.

      Internet over cable could be run similar to how DSL is done over phone lines. The telco provides the phone lines and maintains them but other companies are allowed to sell DSL service over those lines which directly compete with telco provided DSL. This was the model with @home I think where they provided the internet over the cable company wires back when the cable companies weren't in the internet business.

    30. Re:Less choice? by stoborrobots · · Score: 1

      [If] the price isn't stabilizing around 0% margins, then there is not enough competition. Competition causes a race to the bottom.

      The prices won't stabilize around 0% margin, they should stabilize when margin is around the opportunity-cost-of-capital (approximately, the current investment return/interest rate).

      If margin drops below what can be achieved in another investment, competitors will tend to exit the market in preference for the other investment. (Roughly, I have the choice to spend my money to provide you a service, or put it into a bank/hedge fund; I'll do whichever pays me more.)

  5. I'm taking my ball and going home by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a bunch of babies. The US has horrible internet already. What are they going to do, throttle everyone to 28.8k? (well, to better mimic actual phone infrastructure, 26,400 would be the actual connect rate, at best). These huge telecoms have the money to provide decent internet but they fail at every junction.

    1. Re:I'm taking my ball and going home by fnj · · Score: 1

      I'm taking BOTH my balls and going home - while I've still got them.

  6. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 5, Funny

    Careful there, son. If they don't get what they want, customers will have less choice than the one monopoly provider charging several times what international customers in equivalent markets pay that some of those customers can choose from at present.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  7. Yes, we should all listen to those companies... by The+Real+Dr+John · · Score: 2

    that want to make money charging for higher speed access about how preventing them from doing so will be harmful to "consumers".

    --
    A brain is a terrible thing to waste... Mind? That's debatable.
  8. Less choice? by BilI_the_Engineer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have exactly one choice in my area, and many places in the US are the same. Many more only have two choices, with few having more than that. It's difficult to imagine having less choice than this.

    And upgrades? I don't know what they did with all that money they received, but they certainly never upgraded a thing.

    --
    These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
  9. Fine. by jythie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If these companies can not handle regulation, then others will step in.

    While people often talk about 'free markets' and 'regulations' like they are opposites, they really are not on the same scale. If a company can not adjust to regulation, then it probably can not adjust to shifts in market demand, supply chain changes, or price fluctuations.

    If these big ISPs can not adapt, then they will die.

    1. Re: Fine. by O('_')O_Bush · · Score: 2

      The reason why no ISPs have already stepped in despite huge demand for one is the incredibly high startup cost to enter the market and the end of subsidies that other companies used to get around those costs.

        I expect that if a couple of the major ISPs were to fail, nothing would take there place for a very long time.

      --
      while(1) attack(People.Sandy);
    2. Re:Fine. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't confuse the power of the dollar with the power of the gun.

    3. Re:Fine. by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      While people often talk about 'free markets' and 'regulations' like they are opposites

      Not to mention, "free markets" are completely irrelevant here because ISPs are already regulated, and would be natural monopolies whether they were regulated or not.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    4. Re:Fine. by Bob9113 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If these big ISPs can not adapt, then they will die.

      Promise?

    5. Re: Fine. by Jason+Levine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That and the entrenched ISPs threaten anyone who dares to challenge their business models. Exhibit A would be municipal broadband in areas without any broadband access. Town residents get together and say "the ISPs won't serve us so we'll make our own broadband." The ISPs step in with lawyers calling it "unfair competition." Of course, it isn't competition because they aren't serving those areas, but in the event they decide to maybe probably look into serving those areas at some point in the future, it might be competition. And they can't have even the whiff of competition. That's not allowed.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
  10. less choice? by fakeid · · Score: 3, Interesting

    How could consumers possibly face "less choice" than they do now?! I moved about three months ago and my ONLY choice for wired internet (and cable, for that matter) is Comcast. For two and a half of those months, I had no service and was fighting with Comcast. It sure would have been nice if there WERE another choice. It's also not like I'm living in the middle of nowhere - this is in the DC Metro! This is not a rare thing, at all. Where I moved from I at least had two choices (AT&T and a local Cable / internet company), but that's still not much choice.

    Regulation can only help at this point, because it will give consumers a leg to stand on when dealing with these people. I suggest anyone who thinks we DON'T need regulation should try dealing with Comcast customer support for a month, then get back to me.

  11. What are ISPs currently classified as? by jecowa · · Score: 1

    It seems obvious that an internet service provider would be a telecom, considering that the internet is simply a tool for remote communication. What else would you classify an ISP as?

    --
    my opportunity to freely express myself with the potential persecution and hangings and such
  12. I know a lie when I see one by TheCastro1689 · · Score: 2

    How about all those telephone companies that were forced to give service to every American and look how they all went bankrupt, oh wait, no they didn't. ISPs like to say that it will stop expansion, but in reality the government will force them to instead of waiting for Google to announce they're coming to a new city and force the network improvements.

    1. Re:I know a lie when I see one by stoploss · · Score: 1

      Let's put it into perspective, though. There are tradeoffs. Yes, during the period of high levels of regulation, telephone service was universally available and it was very reliable. In return, we had very little innovation (for quite some time Bell even dictated which phones you could plug into their network in your house), long distance rates were expensive and had no competition driving them down, etc.

      We can see the downside of less regulated telecoms (lower reliability, overselling capacity, etc), but let's not pretend there aren't positives that have come from this lower regulatory level as well.

      One thing is for certain: no matter how regulated or "deregulated" this gets to be, all the US internet's base are belong to NSA. They set up us the bomb years ago. The best we can hope for is to get signal so main Netflix screen can turn on.

  13. It has been a long time coming. by EmagGeek · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Internet STARTED OUT as a "common carrier" service, which is how we were able to buy DSL service from a CLEC instead of the ILEC. Common carrier status was done away with about the time Verizon took a billion dollars from the taxpayer and started rolling out Fios.

    I used to buy DSL from a CLEC in Philadelphia that rode on top of Verizon's copper. When Fios rolled out, I remember discussing with the CLEC that they would not be able to serve me because Fios was not considered a common carrier, and Verizon did not have to sell capacity on its lines at a cut rate to competitive carriers.

    That CLEC exited consumer broadband shortly thereafter.

    Reclassifying modern broadband as a common carrier is absolutely going to create more competition and more choice for consumers. Yes, it will mean a tiny bit less profit for the majors, because they will have to sell capacity to CLECs again at a discount, but whatever.

    Honestly, and I'm hardly ever one to talk about nationalization, but the taxpayer has paid for almost all of the Internet infrastructure that has been laid out since about 2004. It should belong to them and be used for their benefit. If Verizon et al want to be considered media providers and not common carriers, then let them pay the taxpayer for access to the network that the taxpayers paid for. Yes, I know, socialism. So what? A lot of what we do is socialized, because it's better for everyone that way.

    1. Re:It has been a long time coming. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Currently these communications are already regulating their own infrastructure. Their controling of the amount and rate of data is a the same how utilities currently operate but only the kind of resource being used, energy vs. data.

      1). data caps on transmission
      2). slow/fast lane access
      3). bundling of services

      Since the telecoms won in court that the FCC doesn't have authority to control them, perhaps this should be the way since the FCC will then have the power to specify what they can or can't do.

    2. Re:It has been a long time coming. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Honestly, and I'm hardly ever one to talk about nationalization, but the taxpayer has paid for almost all of the Internet infrastructure that has been laid out since about 2004.

      I'd tend to say the figure is even higher than that. For instant AT&T still leaves people to rot who have their POTS telephone service and are still ten years later slightly out of DSL range. Sure the ISPs may have installed some capacity where they were sure they would get a next quarter return, but that is still the tax payer paying for it.

      What is required is a continual National Plan to treat internet connectivity like roads, so that even far flung areas have some level of service that over time should improve. If that means taxes have to be used to subsidize some areas, I'm fine with that, provided they are carefully spent. Someone in the country should not get the same service someone in a city does, unless of course it is just as cheap to deploy in the long term... (Similarly, I never understood AT&T's and others always have one rate everyone. If it costs more to lay lines in the country then charge more. It is a lot better than not laying lines at all.) ISPs should also not be passing their entire network of data through the control of 3 letter agencies, but instead only provided data after a court order consistent with the constitution with a clear end date on the order. (They can get another warrant, if they need it.) Let's be realistic, if you examine the bill of rights for its intent at the time the idea was that a citizen has a reasonable right of privacy and if the internet existed at the time, I've little doubt they would have included it. Finally of course, ISPs need to remain neutral providers of data, save of course based on customer preference such as how a customer who would likely prefer interactive data be given priority over noninteractive data going to a house...

    3. Re:It has been a long time coming. by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

      create more competition and more choice for consumers. Yes, it will mean a tiny bit less profit for the majors,

      Actually, that's one of the great things about the ideal free market; competition only hurts the incumbents in the short run. In the long run, everyone makes more money and gets more stuff, even the carriers.

      Of course, the ideal free market is a mathematical theory. It can't be achieved by running a laissez-faire system on flawed humans. The closest we can get in the real world is a regulated market. With things like regulated rights of way for carrier cables, regulated wireless bands for carrier signals, and regulation of traffic discrimination by operaters of the carriage networks.

      And this is nothing new, from Adam Smith's recognition that unregulated markets would be distorted by unscrupulous businesses to the establishment of the first common carrier regulations in the physical goods transport industry, we have already studied, tested in the real world, and documented the answers many decades ago.

    4. Re:It has been a long time coming. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole thing is dumb. Title II is about broadcast services, like television or radio. It is not a common carrier. I do not know of anyone advocating that classification. Title I is what most people wanted to consider. Title I is where the LECs came from and is where nondiscrimination is described.

    5. Re:It has been a long time coming. by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

      If you raise prices on the "bad guys" (corporations) they just raise their prices.

      I pay enough money already.

    6. Re:It has been a long time coming. by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Hmm, are their armies as big as the US army? Can't we just invade their buildings for being a threat on the American people?

    7. Re:It has been a long time coming. by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

      Ah, war communism. You are aware that Stalin backed out of that because it was crippling the Soviet economy?

      The founders of the US government believed the government was a bigger threat on the American people. The Bill of Rights is about protecting individuals from the government.

    8. Re:It has been a long time coming. by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      First it was a joke, second the corporations are not individuals. Using force to enforce laws is not an abuse of power, but to stand by passively while corporations (or other hostile elements) take over the country is a sign of a useless government. Not necessarily saying this is the case here, but it would make sense to make it illegal to pass the cost of fines to customers or to raise fees just because they are grumpy about being asked to play nice. The networks should belong to the American people who paid for them.

    9. Re:It has been a long time coming. by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

      Corporations have to compete with each other. If they can afford to lower their prices, they will seriously consider that or risk going out of business. If you fix prices by government fiat (actually happened during the Nixon administration), supply dries up pretty fast.

      It's exactly the same thing as an employer saying, "You're going to get paid less money now, and you can't go work somewhere else." Well, then people are not going to work. The problem is a lack of freedom, not missing enough layers of regulation.

      And if you say, "Corporations aren't people ..." Well, I'm a person, and I'm certainly not going to risk my money on something that won't return anything. I'd rather keep it under the mattress instead of investing it in a corporation (where people have opportunities to have a job, etc.). And then people lose their jobs, consumers lose options, assets move offshore. All this happens faster than anything the government can do to stop it.

  14. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by LWATCDR · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe it is time for internet to be treated more like electricity as a "REGULATED UTILITY". That statement should scare the daylights out of ISPs. Sorry but you can only make a 20% profit and yes we will audit the daylights out of you and by the way, you owning media companies is a conflict of interest and you must sell them all off.

    The problem is the same one as the RIAA, MPAA, and Coal. All three have the Democrats in their back pockets because of the mostly liberal "artists" or in the case of coal the unions and they have the Republicans in the other pocket because of corporations and stock prices or in the case of coal you can throw in jobs in Republican areas.

    What is funny is that nobody likes the cable companies but they politically get their way.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  15. What utter bullshit by fnj · · Score: 0

    What utter bullshit.

  16. Cable broadband investment has been falling by stox · · Score: 4, Informative

    For quite some time now, according to data from the NCTA:

    http://www.vox.com/2014/5/12/5...

    --
    "To those who are overly cautious, everything is impossible. "
  17. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    even the potential threat of Title II had an investment-chilling effect by erasing approximately 10% of some ISPs' market cap

    Translation: Our investors know we stand to profit greatly from being able to control the flow of internet traffic in accordance with our company's best interest.

  18. What innovation? by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What innovations have the major ISPs come up with lately?

    Price gouging? Copying services developed by other people?

    Sorry, but these clowns have been charging more for less for a long time, and failing to invest in their own infrastructure. They don't innovate. They sit on their piles of money and make promises they'll never keep about how awesome their internet is, and then fight to ensure their local monopolies are protected.

    When they say this will stifle innovation, it sure can't be anything they're doing.

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    1. Re:What innovation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      qqq

    2. Re:What innovation? by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      What innovations have the major ISPs come up with lately?

      Read the letter. They claim to have created a whole new "app economy".

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
  19. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by lagomorpha2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe it's time for antitrust regulation to be used against ISPs that have used predatory business practices to eliminate competition from smaller ISPs in their regions in order to maintain monopolies over the areas they service?

  20. ISP is an ISP ... by JasterBobaMereel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They provide a single service, an internet connection, continually reclassifying this depending on if it is Copper, Cable, Broadband, DSL, Fios ... etc is a red herring they provide an internet connection and nothing else ...

    They are already a common carrier, they just don't want the service they provide to be classified as this as it would introduce the possibility of competition into the market ...

    --
    Puteulanus fenestra mortis
  21. Only innovation by WhiteZook · · Score: 4, Funny

    The only innovation they are doing is coming up with better ways to count their money.

  22. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by NotDrWho · · Score: 5, Funny

    Well, they have a point. I mean, they are pretty innovative. Just 10 years ago, I had exactly two options for home broadband. Today, with all that amazing innovation and competition, I have exactly one option for home broadband.

    --
    SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
  23. go ahead ISP, i dare you by FudRucker · · Score: 0

    i am about ready to cancel my ISP account and pull the plug on the whole mess, i would just use the time for outdoor activity, besides my computer has lots of use even without an internet connection, ever hear of solitaire? its great!!!

    --
    Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
    1. Re:go ahead ISP, i dare you by mark-t · · Score: 1

      If you were genuinely so bored with the Internet that you couldn't care less whether you actually had it at all, it's unlikely you would have bothered to use such a system to express said belief. Really, what's stopping you from leaving already?

      I'd say goodbye... it's the least I could do for a six-digit slashdot account holder, but I strongly suspect you'll be sticking around for a while.

  24. It's just a ploy. by Grand+Facade · · Score: 2

    They are attempting to monetize individual streams from a service we already pay too much for.

    What really yanks my chain is that they built the internet with our money.
    We gave them subsidies, tax breaks, and rights for physical placement.
    Now they have the nerve to extort the right to further monetize the net.

    Remember when conectivity came with benefits?
    Most all "service providers" had a community area and good support.
    They maintained news servers.
    They provided shell access.
    As more got on board the unwashed ignored these vital beginnings these services dropped off the menu.
    As yet more came along providers used this as an excuse to raise fees.

    Then came cellular technology which the providers connected to this network we helped them build.
    And more subsidies and tax breaks were given = more of our money was used to build the thing the providers would then charge us more to use.
    Given this path and the wreckless way we are governed I predict we will soon have Obama-Net.
    All citizens will be legally obligated to purchase service from a provider.
    Providers will monetize certain streams as they see fit to further exploit their position.
    More of our money will be given to the providers so they can build out the network to effectively reach all.
    The providers will fail that measure as they failed to provide DSL or fiber beyond the urban boundaries.
    The providers will use the money we gave them for a wired network to build out the cellular network.
    Then charge us 10x fees to connect since cellular is unregulated + cheaper infrastructure for them to provide and maintain.

    Oh! Wait! This has all already happened (except Obama-Net)(but it's coming)

    --
    Rick B.
    1. Re:It's just a ploy. by __aailob1448 · · Score: 1

      You call the masses unwashed which is a derogatory way of calling them techno-ignorant.

      You talk about Obama-net (*eyeroll*) which is ..well..ridiculous and at odds with obvious facts: big private companies (Comcast/Verizon/AT&T/TW/etc) control over 99% of the internet consumer market. The solution is good regulation that forces true competition to emerge. Right now, we have duopolies at best, and local/regional monopolies at worst.

        I do think that they are successfully using their money to legally strangly the attempts of cities who want to lay municipal fiber with public funds, to provide 10 times the value Comcast does. Gfiber gives you 15Mbps per dollar. Comcast gives you 1Mbps/$. And that's only for downloads. Your upload is only 200 Kbps/$, 30 times more than Gfiber.

    2. Re:It's just a ploy. by Grand+Facade · · Score: 1

      It was a poor choice of words, my intention was not to denigrate.

      Internet access is my first consideration in searching for a residence.

      There are a great number of people living in the US who do not have reasonably priced viable internet service available (I do not consider satellite service viable, I doubt it has improved since I was once a subscriber, not sure it falls into affordable either). There are also a great number of folks that simply can't afford the ridiculous rates that are charged by providers. It has created a class of people who are in essence now outsiders to the network and and will never see goats.cx.

      My point is I view the internet as a lifeline service just like the POTS phone was/is.
      It is therefore in my opinion the same as telephone service and should be regulated as such.
      The cellular companies have escaped regulation and are free to gouge their customers for their "Luxury service".
      However wired/direct service to the home is vitale to nurture an acceptable quality of life on so many levels it demands to be regulated and taken off the corporate chess board.

      --
      Rick B.
  25. Ok then... by RotateLeftByte · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If that is the case then we will invalidate all those local laws you have somehow gotten enacted to stop competition in local areas.
    you know the ones that say it is illegal for the local government to give Comcast competition?
    The ones that strangle startups at birth keeping your defacto monopoly.
    How about a bit or 'real world' economics to sharpen your game then?
    See how you like that then?

    --
    I'd rather be riding my '63 Triumph T120.
    1. Re:Ok then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uh, no, you're wrong, and a bad person, too...
      i know this, 'cause i live in amerika, and we ONLY have free-market competition for EVERYTHING, which means that we pay the lowest prices for the best service; we don't EVER have monopolies or monopoly-like substances 'cause that is bad, and we don't do that...
      there is no protectionism or gummint-sanctioned monopolies or nothing, that is just lies and awful insults to our most magnificent korporate overlords, EVAH ! ! !
      you are a bad amerikan for saying those bad things...

      oh, and we do NOT gerrymander our voting districts either, that is more lies; i learned that in civics in grade school that gerrymandering was an evil thing, so we don't do that... (we 'customize' voting districts, that is NOTHING like gerrymandering...)

  26. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

    If you want it to be a "REGULATED UTILITY", the trade off will be that it becomes PRISM compliant. You only have two choices. Getting fucked by the corporations, or getting fucked by the government. Most likely we'll get fucked by both however.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  27. Exhibit #1 by QuietLagoon · · Score: 2

    This threat is exhibit #1 that the ISPs have gotten too large, and need to be regulated.

  28. "Threaten"? by pla · · Score: 4, Insightful

    US ISPs have steadfastly refused to provide adequate service outside major metropolitan areas for decades.

    Threatening not to do something they already don't do strikes me as a pretty damned weak threat.

    1. Re:"Threaten"? by Bengie · · Score: 1

      Quite the opposite, people outside major metro areas are now getting better Internet access because fiber is so cheap. In Minnesota, you can get 1gb fiber to your log cabin in the woods. Around here, you can get 1gb fiber to your farm. While it is 1gb fiber, you're not going to afford max speeds for a while, but you can expect high quality 30mb-100mb service, and all the fiber ISPs are offering it as symmetrical bandwidth. Even my mom is going from 1mb/0.25 DSL to 15mb/15mb fiber, and her bill is going DOWN, and she lives in a small town of a few hundred. My brother has lived on a farm for several years, and he's got 40/40 fiber, and he gets his rated speeds all the time.

      I think us rural folk have it better than metro because we don't have horrible incumbents trying to be as horrible as they can.

  29. The market cap is refactored, not erased. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These complaints are similar to the oil companies complaints about emissions standards. If they could behave themselves the question would never have come up in the first place. No innovation will be stifled by making ISP's common carriers. It will just refocus carriers into capacity production, and allow the content and service sectors that depend on those carriers to flourish. The greatest threat to innovation is multinational corps that treat the entire global intellectual property base as something they can deny selectively to their customers for profit and political influence. The right to speak pointless, if you only ever hear, what they want you to hear. This subject probably reflects the greatest dilution of the sovereign authority of congress, since the civil war. Which is why we can reliably predict, that congress will sell every drop of civil liberty they can possibly squeeze out of the public, to Comcast and their ilk.

  30. Careful, ISPs. govt always has eminent domain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Threaten to stagnate society and govt can take your companies from you.

  31. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Chill out bro, they already are PRISM compliant.

  32. Please support the FCC to do the right thing by CityZen · · Score: 1

    We all know this is BS. But we also know the FCC doesn't have much backbone. U.S. folks, please show them your support:

    http://www.fcc.gov/comments
    http://www.fcc.gov/complaints
    http://www.fcc.gov/discuss

    You may also write your senator or member of congress:

    http://www.senate.gov/general/...
    http://www.house.gov/represent...

    Comments or complaints sent to any of the above may do a lot more good than any posted here.

    1. Re:Please support the FCC to do the right thing by gstoddart · · Score: 2

      We all know this is BS. But we also know the FCC doesn't have much backbone.

      They're not supposed to, not when you take a former cable and wireless lobbyist and put him in charge.

      He's not there to have a backbone and "do the right thing" for us, he's there to ensure the cable companies get everything they want, all in the name of corporate profits.

      And your senators and members of congress, they've probably also been bought off by the same companies to ensure they get what they want.

      America stopped being a democracy (or a republic) long ago, and is entirely under the control of corporations. Sadly, some people view this as a good thing.

      I simply don't believe the FCC has the desire (or the ability) to do anything which isn't entirely in the interests of the cable companies.

      And, as I said elsewhere, for the cable companies to say this would stifle innovation is a crock -- because there isn't a damned thing the big ISPs have innovated in years.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    2. Re:Please support the FCC to do the right thing by eedwardsjr · · Score: 1

      Wish I had mod points today. you sir, hit the bullseye.

    3. Re:Please support the FCC to do the right thing by CityZen · · Score: 1

      While I won't argue that you are wrong, I'm sure the cable companies would be pleased if people just thought "eh, what's the point in trying to change anything?" and didn't do anything.

      That's how we got to this situation in the first place.

      An alternative way out of this BS is to develop technology to bypass ISPs. Start setting up mesh wifi, or something. Figure it out.

    4. Re:Please support the FCC to do the right thing by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      They're not supposed to, not when you take a former cable and wireless [arstechnica.com] lobbyist and put him in charge.

      And remember, he was appointed there by Obama, who promised on the campaign trail not to appoint lobbyists to policy-making positions.

    5. Re:Please support the FCC to do the right thing by bughunter · · Score: 1

      Yes, but despite appearances and accusations otherwise, Obama doesn't get to decide who gets appointed as chief regulator for the FCC or any other agency that oversees major business sectors like telecom, energy, pharma, etc.

      Regulatory capture is complete, from the administrative agencies to the legislative committees and now apparently even to the courts. GP is correct. This is no longer a democracy... it's a corporate plutocracy.

      Anyone who still believes the president has the power to decide policy over anything that affects corporate profits is living in a fantasy world.

      --
      I can see the fnords!
  33. Strategic Omission by jbmartin6 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They are absolutely right, to an extent. Now hold on, hold on. What they of course carefully avoid mentioning is their sweetheart local monopoly deals. I don't think we need more government to solve the problem caused by government in the first place. If they want to shelter under the rubric of the advantages of a free market, let them have a free market and we'll see who innovates and competes. While they are profiting off government provided monopoly they can go pound sand.

    --
    This posting is provided 'AS IS' without warranty of any kind, implied or otherwise.
  34. Let's Do This: by VortexCortex · · Score: 5, Informative

    Remember MCI? Yes, tell us all about how much less competition we'll have when you're forced to compete on service instead of in disservice. Blow it out your interconnect. We've already been down this road. ISP definition of "competition" is how much more they can over charge for shit than their competitors without actually delivering service. Thus the throttling unless the endpoints pay even more for the shit they already paid for.

    ISPs are quadruple dipping: The website pays for access, the end user pays for access, OK, but then they charge extra for non-NATted IPs (hello, IPv6 exists) and unblocked ports ("business" class), and now they want to sell the websites "faster" access to the customers when we both already paid for that speed of access to each other, AND they want to put caps on the number of bits downloaded -- Hint: That's not how it works. They have to have the hardware to handle peak load, it doesn't matter if I suck in tons of gigs during off-peak time, caps are not about congestion, they're just yet another way to monetize. Not to mention "bursting" plans where they allow the first n-bytes of a download to come in fast, then throttle the shit out of it. "Up To X MB/s, (minimum 0 BAUD, yes Zero)", WTF. Damn, that's more that quadruple, but I lost count of how many dippings that is.

    Visit OpenCongress and locate your congress critters via zipcode. Politely call each of them and say, "I want the FCC to classify broadband Internet services providers as common carriers", and have them repeat it (a real person will answer, and they'll have written down your words). I also mention that it should be considered illegal anti-competitive business practices for municipalities to granted ISPs monopolies, and that breaking up said monopolies will allow new competition to flourish. You can leave a comment on Issue #14-28 via the FCC Comment Filing System. Contact the FCC by Email: openinternet@fcc.gov, or call the FCC comissioners (but remember they're not beholden to voters). The most effective thing to do is write a letter to the editor mentioning your congressman's name and the net neutrality issue and send it to your local news outlet, that really gets their goat -- they care about the newspaper for some odd reason, maybe because old folks read it? Here's a petition, but these don't do shit, really it's just the illusion of shit-doing.

    P.S. Here's a vid explaining the net neutrality issue. Here's another more sarcastic and long winded vid on the subject. and here's a video from an actual honest ISP. (NSFW, for brutally honest language).

    Protip: Use a download accelerator to open multiple connections to the same file and trick the ISP into allowing you a faster speed. When the D/L starts getting throttled (hover to view the speed graph), pause it then unpause it and the speed goes back up (new connections = new "bursting" counter).

    1. Re:Let's Do This: by Payden+K.+Pringle · · Score: 1

      ...

      Isn't a Download Accelerator, if used by many people to the same location, effectively a DoS attack? I get this from "Multiple connections to the same file".

      Obviously pretty much everyone would need to start using them, but I'm just saying, the potential is there.

  35. We need competition by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    The existing ISPs are too large and monolithic. I suspect this is mostly local regulation making pole leasing fees unreasonable.

    It needs to be practical for small ISPs to operate anywhere in the US. Any jackass should be able to start his own ISP. Lease the poles, buy some shake and bake ISP equipment, buy the appropriate back end bandwidth, and then run the business.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    1. Re:We need competition by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

      The existing ISPs are too large and monolithic. I suspect this is mostly local regulation making pole leasing fees unreasonable.

      It needs to be practical for small ISPs to operate anywhere in the US. Any jackass should be able to start his own ISP. Lease the poles, buy some shake and bake ISP equipment, buy the appropriate back end bandwidth, and then run the business.

      The majority of ISPs in this country are under 30k people. You just have only heard about the big ones.

    2. Re:We need competition by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      I consider an ISP to provide service to your door. To actually run the wires themselves that enter your home. I do not consider the companies that lease cable from the above mentioned monoliths to be true ISPs.

      You break the stranglehold of these companies by bypassing them. If your ISP utterly depends upon the giant ISP providing you with to the door cable access and you must contract with them to buy that access then you've done nothing to upset the status quo. If anything you're just increasing the profits of the monoliths by doing all the high overhead marketing work to get THEIR cable subscribed to by your customers.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  36. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 2

    Regulating profits does nothing to ensure an open internet. Its a separate issue, and should be kept separate. If you limit profits, you may also be limiting the chance of competition forming.

    The FCC should focus on ensuring fair standards for access and content delivery, and set rules accordingly. Let local governments deal with monopolistic entities if the wish, as every situation is different.

  37. Dopplegangers by paiute · · Score: 1

    Consumers would face less choice, and a less adaptive and responsive Internet.

    As someone said when informed that Jerry Garcia was in a coma: "How could they tell?"

    --
    If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
  38. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by sandytaru · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is no competition now! That's the whole problem. My choices are slow but steady DSL, fast but unreliable cable, or slow AND unreliable dish network. The cable companies and the phone companies have zilch incentive to upgrade their lines to better support their Internet-only customers, since their primary phone and television customers are happy and don't realize what awful Internet service we're getting compared to all the other developed countries on the planet. If I want better service where I live, I have to pay several thousand dollars to the cable folks to run business class fiber to my house, for which I'll pay several hundred dollars a month... and the service will STILL cut out every hour, based on what I saw of the business service when I did third party tech support in town. The DSL company won't even consider giving us the business class package since we're not in a commercially developed area.

    --
    Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
  39. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PRISM compliant as in custom ASICs mandatory to be stamped on all new logic boards (motherboards, routers, etc)?! That's next. They will be silent sentinels listening in on the bus. Speed and performance will be sacrificed for homeland security.

    What? You actually think the heroes in office know anything about what they regulate?! Man, you haven't a fucking clue what those monkeys in office do.

  40. Separate Hardware from Services by sanosuke001 · · Score: 2

    Just separate each companies' hardware from its services and make two companies, the hardware side being a Title II Common Carrier. Then, anyone, including the former companies' services division can now buy wholesale access and sell their services.

    The infrastructure is expensive and it isn't feasible for more than one or two companies to install lines to every home. Have one utility company install the lines and sell to the services companies. It should have been done years ago.

    --
    -SaNo
    1. Re:Separate Hardware from Services by Eravnrekaree · · Score: 1

      You are confusing the difference between Tier 1, 2 and 3 ISPs with the difference between Common Carrier and Information services. A Tier 3 ISP is almost entirely common carrier, it does in cases contract with Tier 2 and Tier 1 providers who themselves are common carriers. An ISP sort of almost is all hardware as it is. ISPs are already mostly a carrier service as it is right now. The websites such as Yahoo are doing a lot of the content in an advertising driven model. Your bill to the ISP goes mostly to hardware, partly to the ISPs own network, and partly to Tier 2 and Tier 1 upstream providers (in many cases). Tier 2 and Tier 1 ISPs are as much of a common carrier as a Tier 3, and perhaps even more critical. Requiring incumbant Tier 3s to lease their lines to other Tier 3s, since it would allow competition in Tier 3 internet providers. The differentiation would be in customer service and possibly different tier 1 and 2 infrastructure upstream, though the Tier 3 infrastructure would be shared among several customers. I dont think it negates the need for net neutrality legislation.

    2. Re:Separate Hardware from Services by bleh-of-the-huns · · Score: 2

      I have always like this idea.

      Or to take it a little further, the local gov wires from a main switching hub/CO to all the residences in the area, then ISP's wire up to the hubs/CO's, and lease access to the residences. That similar to DSL style, but with fiber instead of copper, and the telco's do not own the last mile.

      That last mile is what allows companies to hold us hostage. They can argue all they want that they paid to wire of the streets, poles and houses, but the reality is, they all received massive tax breaks and subsidies from the local and state governments to do that in the first place, and it has already paid itself off.

      --
      I came, I conquered, I coredumped
    3. Re:Separate Hardware from Services by evilviper · · Score: 1

      Or to take it a little further, the local gov wires from a main switching hub/CO to all the residences in the area, then ISP's wire up to the hubs/CO's, and lease access to the residences. That similar to DSL style, but with fiber instead of copper, and the telco's do not own the last mile.

      That's all fine and well, if you assume fiber is perfect.

      A few years ago, would you have had the "local gov" wiring their city with twisted pair telephone lines, or coax? And now that they've invested all that money and speeds are maxed-out with copper, would they be anxious to invest in replacing the entire infrastructure they haven't made a profit on, yet?

      Or would you, perhaps, have had them invest in wireless service delivery... Perhaps pre-wifi technologies like "wireless cable TV" companies were using? Or would you have deployed maybe 3G cellular, which is now relatively slow and due for expensive replacements?

      What would the upgrade path be? Would you prefer fiber to the block, like AT&T's U-Verse, or would you suggest they spend lots more money for FTTH, to offer higher speeds nobody is going to want to buy just yet, but will in the future?

      And this is relevant today. The fiber installed today isn't going to be state-of-the-art for very long. The transceivers, splitters, and whatnot may be upgradeable once or twice (and how quickly will your "local gov" want to pay for that?), but then it needs to be replaced, wholesale, with wider-bandwidth fiber.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  41. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by CreatureComfort · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Oh, I think 99% of everyone would agree that it is way past time, but where are you going to find a Federal DA willing to indict, who wouldn't also be immediately fired? Well, in reality, in today's day and age, he'd be framed for child porn or proved to be an islamo-mole and buried in gitmo.

    --
    "Unheard of means only it's undreamed of yet,
    Impossible means not yet done." ~~ Julia Ecklar
  42. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

    Sigh......
    No your wrong.
    What competition do we have? How many cable companies do you have to pick from? How many ISPs?
    The simple answer is the more money the cable company makes the more they would have to invest in infrastructure or cut prices. They would also have to have a regulated level of service.
    Of course the idea is not to make them a regulated utility but instead to use that as a threat to counter their threat.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  43. Monopolies are only part of the problem by pr0t0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I’m going to open a big can of worms here, and I’ll admit up front that I haven’t fully thought it through. This more of a US-centric stream-of-consciousness kind of mind-dump.

    I’ve lately come to hate the US telco industry with the angry passion of a thousand fiery suns. They enjoy a monopoly or near-monopoly in most areas of the United States. They also have a legal responsibility to maximize value to their shareholders. In the absence of competition, maximizing service and quality to their customers runs counter to maximizing that shareholder value. Our natural instinct is to shout the mantra of “increase competition!”, but even in the areas where there is competition, we see very little competitive behavior.

    Why is that? Collusion? Well...maybe it’s because the Comcast CEO doesn’t have to pick up the phone and discretely call the AT&T CEO to find out what he’ll do if Comcast decides to lower rates and provide better service. He already knows it will start a price and service war that while benefiting the consumer, will hurt corporate profits. Nobody at this echelon wants to race to the bottom. All the big players have to do is find a happy medium of market share and slowly increase profits. The barriers to entry to be competitive/disruptive are enormous. It takes a Google to do it. Even if you could do it, you’d be forced to join the club and be a part of the same problem for the same reason the incumbant companies do.

    But telecom isn’t the only industry that operates in this manner, even when competitors are present. The average prices in automobiles, new homes, health care, etc. have all outpaced increases in wage at a rate of roughly 2-to-1 over the last 45 years. The increases should be in line with wage increases to guarantee sustainability. These are competitive markets, so why the disparity? The reasons are many and varied. There are some easily justified increases like safety, R&D, and environmental concerns; but there are also offsets like increases in efficiency, automation, logistics and transport, overseas labor, etc. More often than not, these companies report quarterly and annual profits that measure in the billions and frankly defy belief. Which brings me to that can of worms.

    There was a time when companies were reluctant to sell stock. They were literally selling a piece of their company to the public, and only did it because they needed the capital to bring new products and technologies to market. People bought stocks because they believed in that company, product, or technology; and handed over their money to help bring it to market and maybe make a little money in the process. Now, stocks are strictly investment vehicles for the buyer, and the seller often uses the capital to force stagnation instead of innovation. Look at Facebook. They are a titan in the tech industry, lighting cigars with $100 bills. Why the IPO? What new major advances in social media did the IPO make possible that they couldn’t make happen themselves? Likely none. But what it did do is allow Facebook to make some acquisitions. They are staying on top by removing the competition not rising to meet it.

    Maximize shareholder value. That phrase is used to justify: higher prices, lower service, lower quality parts, environmental damage, damage to the long-term future of our nation, and general unethical corporate behavior (skimming, fleecing, shell corporations, tax loophole exploits). I’m not opposed to making money as a shareholder. But that money isn’t made out of thin air, and it doesn’t come from the seller. It comes from the American public. We pay that. When you get your dividend check or sell your stocks for a fat profit, that money came from me, from your neighbors, from your family and friends, from anyone that ever bought a product or service from that company. You paid for it too.

    Similar to the underlying storyline in the movie The Matrix, I’m of the ever-increasing opinion tha

    --
    I'm sorry, but your opinion seems to be wrong.
    1. Re:Monopolies are only part of the problem by kuhnto · · Score: 3, Funny

      You know, I'm starting to like this guy.

      --
      "A 'person' is smart. 'People' are dumb, panicky animals and you know that."
    2. Re:Monopolies are only part of the problem by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Of course a lot of mid range ISPs aren't all that smart either.

      One of the first things I would do as a mid-range ISP it analyse where most of my customers go on the internet. Then approach those data locations, cap in hand and negotiate mirroring and a data storage farm, so the by far the bulk of the traffic is from the data farm to the end user. The Data location only needs to update data once, it has less direct traffic, it can cut down on bandwidth, minimise servers by distributing throughout mid range ISPs and still control the data on them. For the ISP there is substantial less cross network traffic and their customers get far better service. Pluses all round. Smart caching and mirroring can hugely cut traffic, provide better quality services and save money all round.

      It is time for the major content service data companies and mid range ISPs to get their act together and start working on minimising long distance traffic and work to localise it. Peta bytes of storage to power far more effective mirroring are a lot cheaper that all that traffic.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    3. Re:Monopolies are only part of the problem by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      Similar to the underlying storyline in the movie The Matrix, I’m of the ever-increasing opinion that the US public is viewed as (literally) a cash crop by people who trade in tens and hundreds of millions of dollars. Top 1% income type of people. If we’re over-farmed, we’ll rebel. But if we’re fed and nurtured, told it’s for our own good, even made to believe that if we buy stocks we can come along for the ride; the money will slowly move from our pockets to that top 1%. We think because we made 8-18% on our investment portfolio we’re doing ok, being good citizens, and saving for our retirement. But we don’t realize we overpaid by 20-60% for the goods and services to make that happen*.

      Ah, you're awake, good. Welcome to the machine. Good old George Carlin put it well: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...

      As he says in that clip, the table is tilted, the game is rigged and nobody seems to notice. Nobody seems to care. The upper class sits at the top of a system that funnels money to them from the rest of us. Whether that is by accident or design is open to interpretation. But I think you are right about how we are viewed by the .1%. Here's another interesting viewpoint: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
    4. Re:Monopolies are only part of the problem by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Informative

      "One of the first things I would do as a mid-range ISP it analyse where most of my customers go on the internet. Then approach those data locations, cap in hand and negotiate mirroring and a data storage farm, so the by far the bulk of the traffic is from the data farm to the end user. "

      We used to do this back in the @home broadband days. we had servers in major headends that were mirror serves for places like download.com and other services that had high traffic. Most of the time it was simply a reciprocal agreement because we both benefited from it. This was in the old times when Businesses were ran by honest people.

      Today we have dishonest crooks like you have running Comcast who want to use extortion on everything. If they were honest in any way they would have formed an agreement with netflix to host mirror servers or add in a dedicated pipe to netflix regional servers to each region.

      Instead they prefer to be dishonest dirtbags and try to act like organized criminals. the solution is heavy handed regulation like forcing common carrier status. The had decades of time to play nice, they dont want to, so fuck em all.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    5. Re:Monopolies are only part of the problem by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 1

      Maximize shareholder value

      Who created this rule have a guaranteed place in hell. And I will be happy to ensure that his stay here be the most "comfortable" possible.

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    6. Re:Monopolies are only part of the problem by AnontheDestroyer · · Score: 3, Informative

      Wages have been dropping, that's one reason everything is outpacing it. I highly recommend the movie "Inequality for All," available on Netflix. It sums up the problem the middle-class has been facing since the '80's, quite well. The middle-class tried to compensate by, 1) women working, 2) longer hours, 3) debt, and the housing crisis blew that up.

    7. Re:Monopolies are only part of the problem by bjk002 · · Score: 1

      Welcome to the club!

      --
      Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
    8. Re:Monopolies are only part of the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the solution is heavy handed regulation like forcing common carrier status

      The weird thing for me is that I disagree with "heavy handed" regulation, but common carrier status hardly seems heavy handed at all. It's a reasonable minimum regulation, only as much as is required to balance the problem we created along with these monopolies.

    9. Re:Monopolies are only part of the problem by PaddyM · · Score: 1

      Is Title II going to work? I see it prevents unreasonable discrimination, so I'm not sure how that's different than what we have today if the government thinks its reasonable to charge netflix more.

    10. Re:Monopolies are only part of the problem by kick6 · · Score: 1
      You're absolutely right. And the root of the problem is..................401k-like investment vehicles. The stock market has become the de-facto, government-seal-of-approval vehicle for retirement savings which has had the negative effects of

      1. overvalueing the entire market as everyone clamors to buy stocks, but because there's a limited supply, demand pushes their price (though not their value) higher

      2. corporations who focus on stock price vs cash reserves, cash flow, or any other useful metrics of corporate health. Stock price is up? Good! Who cares if we had to shutteran entire division, and revenue dropped 20%.

    11. Re:Monopolies are only part of the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That particular strategy doesn't work well for ISPs, not for small ones and not for large ones either: You're putting yourself in a position where your quality of service depends on the willingness of someone else to do extra work so your customers have a shorter path to the content. At first sight, it looks like all should be well because placing content close to the customers should be in the content providers' interests as well. But think about it: If you're a small provider, it might not be worth it to the content provider to do that extra work, and that puts you at a disadvantage compared to bigger ISPs. If you're a big provider, you're missing out on an opportunity to double dip, which means you have to charge your direct customers higher prices to feed the same profit to the stockholders. Naturally this makes you vulnerable to competition from a big ISP which does double dip.

      That strategy doesn't work well for content providers either. It's basically the same problem: The small ones might not get direct access to many ISPs. You stated that you'd only work on getting the content onto your network that most of your customers demand. Tough luck for the content which isn't mainstream yet, and with this arrangement will have a harder time getting there. Big content providers on the other hand can raise their profits or lower their prices if they get paid to move their content closer to the ISPs, and not demanding to be paid puts them at a disadvantage.

      Combine both views and it's easy to see that this will particularly screw over the small guys. The small content providers need to pay the big ISPs to get their content to the customers and the small ISPs need to pay the big content providers to get access to the content their customers want. This leads to precisely the stalemate between big quasi-monopolists we have today.

      The internet erased distance from the communication bills. That's its primary appeal and innovation, business-wise and culturally. That's were the future of the net needs to be. Re-localizing the net is exactly the opposite of what needs to happen. If your transit is full, don't fake it by moving the data closer. Upgrade your transit.

    12. Re:Monopolies are only part of the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the competition we need is another FCC.
      They are the incompetent assholes that saddled us with the mobile
      system we have now, not even having the brains to know that the
      original phone deployment required the level of coverage by cell towers
      due to their inappropriate choices 20 years ago.

      the phones and the cell towers eat power like crazy trying to
      make up for the lousy range at 2Ghz.

      any Novice Ham knew that.

      jr

    13. Re:Monopolies are only part of the problem by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      Why is that? Collusion? Well...maybe it’s because the Comcast CEO doesn’t have to pick up the phone and discretely call the AT&T CEO to find out what he’ll do if Comcast decides to lower rates and provide better service. He already knows it will start a price and service war that while benefiting the consumer, will hurt corporate profits.

      I think it is a myth that these companies compete for customers. I cannot ever remember seeing an ad for Comcast bashing AT&T or vice versa. There is usually 1 cable provider and 1 phone provider in a town. They both seem content to maintain their existing customer base. One time in my life I had a Quest/Century Link person come to my door to show me their internet offerings. That is the extent of the competition I've seen.

      At least that is how it is in the Northwest US. Maybe it is different in other areas.

  44. Ummm by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 2

    You mean like the innovative way Verizon got New Jersey to fork over a boatload of cash for broadband access that Verizon never rolled out....

    1. Re:Ummm by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

      The increased regulation will be to cable carriers, which Verizon is not. In fact, it will be applying regulations that Verizon is already under to the cable companies.

      And the "boatload" of cash the feds handed out was to increase rural broadband access. That's insanely expensive to install and very unprofitable. That's why the ISPs wont do it without federal funding. Cable companies CANT do it, Coax sucks over long distances. They need amplifiers every 800ft. That federal program cost something like $300k per customer added. There's a reason the ISPs refuse to do it themselves, and it's not because they hate you.

  45. Distributed Peer to Peer Mesh is the Answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck the ISPs. Up here, Rogers made 1 billion dollars profit in the last quarter ...

    We need devices that will do peer to peer and have our own towers that will do comms via peer to peer / mesh. No central ISP whatsoever - fuck em.

  46. Why Title II? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why do we have to classify it under a law that is nearly 20 years old? Is no one in the FCC competent enough to amend, or scrap and remake, the Telecommunications Act of 1996? It's 2014. It's time for a Digital Telecommunications Act that tackles these issues and potential issues for the next 15-20 years, like VoIP, TV over IP, etc..

    1. Re:Why Title II? by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Why do we have to classify it under a law that is nearly 20 years old? Is no one in the FCC competent enough to amend, or scrap and remake, the Telecommunications Act of 1996? It's 2014. It's time for a Digital Telecommunications Act that tackles these issues and potential issues for the next 15-20 years, like VoIP, TV over IP, etc..

      The FCC cannot make law, they can only work with the laws that Congress passes. Good luck getting the Oligarchs in Congress to do anything, the big telecoms spread their money around to both parties...

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
  47. section 251(b)(5).15 looks ok by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Senior VP Robert Quinn wrote: "For example, if broadband Internet access service is a telecommunications service, then broadband Internet access providers could be entitled to receive transport and termination fees under section 251(b)(5).15. The Commission could not avoid this occurrence by establishing a bill-and-keep regime because, unlike voice traffic, Internet traffic is asymmetric."

    He appears to be talking about 47 US code section 251 Interconnection
          (b)5 Reciprocal compensation
    The duty to establish reciprocal compensation arrangements for the transport and termination of telecommunications.
    http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/47/251

    That rule seems fairly general. There are lots of ways to define who pays for what. An Internet payment plan could be similar to the way things work for telephony as he is suggesting, but I don't see where this rule says they have to be.

    Common carrier status gives the FCC the power to regulate. Given this power, the FCC could certainly make a bigger mess. To expect this given the caution and restraint the FCC has shown to date seems far fetched. Balanced against the current state of affairs, this risk doesn't seem a good reason not to do common carrier. It seems a good reason to be carefully incremental with the regulatory path flowing from common carrier.

    Thursday's vote should be interesting.

  48. The ISPs may be right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At first I was all about turning broadband providers into 'Common Carriers' to help combat their monopolistic practices. I'm not sure now. What will happen once regulated? Will Google throw in the towel, cause they don't want all the extra red tape? From my observations setting up Fiber in areas around Kansas City, They did not want to deal with BS the muni's where throwing at them, and if they couldn't strike a sweet deal with the city, they'd just move on.

    From what I hear, Companies like Google, on the threat of providing FTTH, scare the entrenched providers into actually get off their butts and do something. Heck, I live in Manhattan, KS - barely a city, and Cox our provider, decided to double our speeds - so I can top out at 150/20 for $99 - Sure, nothing great compared to the other side of the world, but to say that innovation isn't happening isn't quite true.

    My biggest complaint - lack of provider options - I don't see really being fixed with Common Carrier status. What VC is going to want to invest in something as un-sexy as a Govt' regulated utility?

    Don't get me wrong - It could happen - SOMETHING needs to happen, It's just not a clear cut to me as it was.

  49. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 0

    There is no competition now!

    And regulating profits would help ensure it stays that way. There is competition emerging in some areas. Regulate profits, and that may very well stop.

    The monopolistic nature of ISPs in many areas is an issue, and certainly a big factor. If you want competition, then don't allow the ISPs too much control over selective content delivery, as they will strike exclusive deals and kill any chance of real competition. But don't give potential competitors reason to stay by limiting profits.

  50. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by chrish · · Score: 1

    Except, of course, these ISPs are already PRISM compliant. Even the ISPs we have here in Canada generally make a point of sending all your traffic through the US to play ball as good ol' FIVEEYES members.

    --
    - chrish
  51. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

    I was referring to regulation of "limiting profits". Maybe you can explain how limiting profits will lead to more competition, but as I see it, it will simply ensure no competition arises.

    Some regulation regarding pricing might make sense. That is, a big ISP much charge comparable rates to all customers for comparable services, and not simply cut rates in areas where there is competition.

    Regulation for handling content, fast lanes and slow lanes, is a different matter. That should be kept separate, its the most important piece to ensuring ISPs don't gain domination of content.

  52. Anti net neutrality stifles innovation by Eravnrekaree · · Score: 0

    There is no free lunch. The consumer will pay for internet infrastructure one way or another. The cost of requiring websites to pay end user ISPs would reduce the selection of free services and cause increases in prices for subscription video services. This will not save consumers any money. Instead, what it will do is throw such a regulatory burden and cost onto running innovative new websites that it will reduce consumer choice of web services, and will be bad for the consumer therefore in producing less competition in say, video streaming services by making things much more difficult for startups. So, it discourages entreprenuership and small business innovation and that is bad for consumers. These anti net neutrality things will stifle and kill innovation on the interrnet

    If ISPs need more cash to upgrade their network they should do what they have always done, offer a high speed tier for video users and gamers to pay for it.

  53. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by bondsbw · · Score: 1

    What is funny is that nobody likes the politicians but the cable companies get their way.

    I read it that way the first time. Eh, still seems right.

    --
    All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
  54. Allow me to explain how much the US pays... by Torp · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here are some pricing examples for Romania, a backwards country somewhere in Eastern Europe.

    I pay about $25/month for 40 mbits on a so-called "bussiness" connection - at this price of course "bussiness" means no SLA, but it does mean unmetered traffic and the freedom to run any service i want on that wire.
    I also pay about $30/month for 200 mbits on fiber, plus IPTV plus a voice line (not sure of the conditions on voice, I don't really use it). This is a home connection, but it's also unmetered. I think I can't do SMTP through it, but no other restrictions.

    This is what happens when you have a little real competition. Everyone has access to at least two out of cable and DSL. Which are no longer cable and DSL, but fiber.

    You're going to give me the age old argument that the US is much larger and more spread out, but we have residential suburbs as well, and they get... guess... ethernet and/or fiber :)

    --
    I apologize for the lack of a signature.
    1. Re:Allow me to explain how much the US pays... by Elvestad · · Score: 1

      Also currently living in Romania as a student, I pay about $10/ month for a 50/30 Mbps connection, where the only restriction is on outgoing SMTP.

      Additionally, I pay about $12/ month for recharging my pre-paid SIM. These $12 gets me about 500 megabytes of internet, unlimited (I literally talk about 30-100 hours per month) calls to any other national number, as well as about 2 1/2 hours for calls to any European and North American number, including mobiles.

      Beat that!

    2. Re:Allow me to explain how much the US pays... by evilviper · · Score: 1

      You're going to give me the age old argument that the US is much larger and more spread out

      No, I'll use the argument that man-power and regulatory compliance costs a lot more in 1st world countries, and there are lots of other stable and profitable places to invest money.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    3. Re:Allow me to explain how much the US pays... by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1

      No, I'll use the argument that man-power and regulatory compliance costs a lot more in 1st world countries, and there are lots of other stable and profitable places to invest money.

      What? Are you seriously suggesting that we have less regulation and cheaper labour in my native Sweden than in the US of A?

      That's a new one... And that's as far as I can tell the only merit that argument has.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    4. Re:Allow me to explain how much the US pays... by evilviper · · Score: 1

      Who said anything about Sweden? This is about Romania.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    5. Re:Allow me to explain how much the US pays... by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1

      But of course the same is true about Sweden, and almost all European countries.

      For example: I have 100Mbps/100Mbps + cable tv (basic) + phone (calls extra) for $50 (and that's just because your exchange rate sucks right now). No caps, of course, there are no caps on fixed line internet, and servers etc. are OK (no outgoing SMTP, that's the only limitation).

      So you want to try that argument about standards and cheap labour again?

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    6. Re:Allow me to explain how much the US pays... by evilviper · · Score: 1

      So you want to try that argument about standards and cheap labour again?

      No. Only a complete and total idiot would take a statement about something in one country, and assume it must apply equally to other countries.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    7. Re:Allow me to explain how much the US pays... by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1

      So what is your argument about the Swedish situation then? As you agree the supposed argument about the Romanian situation doesn't work to explain the differences between the US and most European countries when it comes to differences in internet adoption/cost/speed/caps etc.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    8. Re:Allow me to explain how much the US pays... by evilviper · · Score: 1

      So what is your argument about the Swedish situation then?

      I haven't made one.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    9. Re:Allow me to explain how much the US pays... by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1

      So make one. Or is your argument that a) there might (big "might") be differences between regulatory structure and cost between Romania and the US that would make internet infrastructure in Romania cheaper to build, b) when observing that the rest of regulated high cost Europe also has much better and cheaper access to same, that "I'm right about Romania and I don't know about the rest"?

      That's not an argument at all. Not even about the Romanian situation. Especially about the Romanian situation.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    10. Re:Allow me to explain how much the US pays... by evilviper · · Score: 1

      So make one.

      I don't take requests.

      Or is your argument that a) there might (big "might") be differences between regulatory structure and cost between Romania and the US that would make internet infrastructure in Romania cheaper to build,

      There's no "might" about it. It IS much cheaper.

      "I'm right about Romania and I don't know about the rest"?

      I was talking about Romania, and I have no interest in humoring you, just because you want to change the subject, since YOU don't know a thing about Romania, and are neither able nor willing to debate the facts of the subject.

      While I may know the reasons for other countries, there is no one single factor, as you want to set up and knock down as a straw man. Neither does your mind-numbingly stupid and argumentative style make me want to enter a rational and reasoned debate on the subject with you, of all people.

      If you actually wanted to know the reasons, rather than flame and rant from ignorance of the topic, you're perfectly capable of doing some research on the subject, and gathering facts and figures, or finding resources from others who have done so before you.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    11. Re:Allow me to explain how much the US pays... by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1

      If you actually wanted to know the reasons, rather than flame and rant from ignorance of the topic, you're perfectly capable of doing some research on the subject, and gathering facts and figures, or finding resources from others who have done so before you.

      I know the reasons. Living in Europe and having worked several years in the telecoms industry. (And son, if you think that was a flame, you weren't around when the internet was young...)

      I was just interested in what you thought the reasons were, since your explanation for why it might be cheaper in Romania (which BTH aren't exactly watertight) doesn't even begin to explain why the rest of Europe (barring a few dark corners) have so much better connectivity, at drastically lower cost than the US. That is to say, the part of Europe where cost and regulations are much higher and stricter than in the US.

      Sure, I might have come of as a bit snarky right off the bat, but I am really interested in what your arguments are, or rather, your reasons for thinking the way you do about this issue.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
  55. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by mark-t · · Score: 1

    Sorry but you can only make a 20% profit and yes we will audit the daylights out of you and by the way, you owning media companies is a conflict of interest and you must sell them all off.

    Would a TV cable company count as "media"?

    What if the ISP *IS* also a cable company?

  56. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by rtb61 · · Score: 1

    They are not regulating profit, they would be regulating access and ensuring the privacy of end users by making all their traffic communications traffic, which factually it is and protected by existing telecommunications laws, which of course factually, historically, all the existing telecommunications companies were able to expand and profit. So, yeah, I have to call bullshit on your comment because it does not reflect historical accuracy of analogue copper communications, which are capable of only carrying a small percentage of the same traffic at a far higher capital investment cost.

    People are only asking for what they had under copper, a direct full bandwidth connection, for the life of that connection, between the end users (we are all end users, regardless of size). We just want that in fibre optic which factually is cheaper to install than copper, especially with regard to distance and major trunk costs, also allowing for much greater bandwidth and sharing of each fibre, the ability of ISPs to cache and mirror major traffic items and reduce data costs with better performance for end users and data transmission savings for the ISP.

    Divide and conquer by leaving it up to local governments, screw you.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  57. They're right. by Charliemopps · · Score: 0, Troll

    They're right, it will.

    First, you have to understand what the FCC is proposing.
    There are 2 kinds of ISPs we're talking about here. Telco and Cable. They are TOTALLY different. It may seem the same on your end, but its not.

    Telcos are heavily regulated by the feds.
    Cable is almost completely unregulated.

    Much of the telco regulation is left over from the days when there was no other way to get phone service, and no competition from cable companies. A lot of the rules you'd find ridiculous if you understood everything involved. In some places, abandoned homes are required by law to have a working phone line in them for example. They are not required to have working cable television however.

    What the FCC suggested yesterday was to apply some of these rules to cable companies. Now, not all of them are dumb. So I don't want you to think this is a terrible idea. I've no idea which regulation they want to apply to cable companies. The one thing I do know is it will hurt their business and in turn hurt your service in the short term.

    If you want evidence that it will hurt innovation, just look up what your local phone company charges for service and compare that to your cable company. Then look at each companies max speed. In most areas they charge about the same but your cable company is offering 15 to 50mb/s while your phone company likely caps out at 5mb/sec unless you're in one of the few areas that have fiber.

    But again, I want to be clear, there are upsides to the regulation as well. In the long run it'll likely be better for the industry.

    1. Re:They're right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about comparing like for like. The US "phone" companies have exactly the same technology the rest of the work has. And like the rest of the planet, there are areas where you have low population density, and those with high. There is no reason to to upgrade the populated areas, most already have fiber running through the streets, and copper is hardly a poor conductor. The problem is ancient switching equipment, the fugly road-side-box. They're easy enough to swap out, and have already been depreciated on the books, they telcos have already taken several billion dollars of tax payers money to do precisely this.

      If useless companies like BT can give limey's 80mbps over their archaic infrastructure, the US telcos can do the same.

      Verizon is also a rather large telco, and they've moved over to fiber phone service. When there's a power outage, as there often is in the FL summer, their phones don't work for long. You see, fibre needs power at both ends, unlike good ol' copper. Therefore, Verizon have already side-stepped any regulation for telephone service availability.

    2. Re:They're right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That may be true, but when you pay for a 5Mb/s line from the phone company, you get a 5Mb/s line from the phone company. When you pay for a 50Mb/s line from a cable company, you get UP TO 50Mb/s and on rainy days they cap you at 1Mb/s and drop half of your packets. Also, most of the time you have lower latency on phone company lines vs cable company connections. The latency issues are less evident than it has been in the past, but not everybody's infrastructure is up to snuff yet. Absolute bandwidth isn't always everyone's desire. Most gamers (if they had half a brain) should lean towards the 5Mb/s line with half the latency over the 50Mb/s with double the latency.

      I've also had much better luck with consistency of the connection with phone company provided lines vs cable provided sometimes there sometimes not lines. Regulate the hell out of em, their service is crap half the time anyways.

    3. Re:They're right. by bughunter · · Score: 1

      Why is this moderated 'Troll?' While I don't like his conclusion, I won't call him wrong. And his summary of the regulatory situation is generally informative.

      If you don't agree with someone's point, don't downmod them (and if you absolutely must, certainly don't use Troll or Flambait unless they actually are trolling or flaming). Post a reply, or mod up a counterargument.

      --
      I can see the fnords!
  58. Cool by seven+of+five · · Score: 1

    ISPs hold their collective breath until they turn purple and die, new ISPs take their place.

  59. Less options? by Hamsterdan · · Score: 1

    "Under Title II, new service offerings, options, and features would be delayed or altogether foregone. Consumers would face less choice, and a less adaptive and responsive Internet."

    Yup, soon we'll have only two options, Telco & Cableco. We're gonna have low speeds and quotas for high prices and some services will be throttled due to compet^H^H^H^H congestion. Oh wait...

    --
    I've got better things to do tonight than die.
  60. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by kilfarsnar · · Score: 3, Informative

    PRISM compliant as in custom ASICs mandatory to be stamped on all new logic boards (motherboards, routers, etc)?! That's next. They will be silent sentinels listening in on the bus. Speed and performance will be sacrificed for homeland security.

    What? You actually think the heroes in office know anything about what they regulate?! Man, you haven't a fucking clue what those monkeys in office do.

    How did we get from ISP's being regulated like utilities to government mandating what gets printed in circuits? Does the FCC mandate how electrical transformers are built?

    --
    "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  61. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

    The FCC should focus on ensuring fair standards for access and content delivery, and set rules accordingly. Let local governments deal with monopolistic entities if the wish, as every situation is different.

    I think the point is that the FCC does not have that authority, unless the ISP's are declared common carriers like the phone companies.

    --
    "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  62. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You forgot "Slow and ultra-expensive third and fourth generation networks"

    What's hilariously sad is that my LTE connection on my iPad that I pay 20$/mo for is faster than my 50Mbit connection from my Cable company that I pay 120$/mo for on account of the Cable company throttling the upstream to 3mbit while the iPad has no upstream throttle at all. So I've been able to hit things like 70/30 on LTE where my wireline hits like 50/3

    Just I'll burn the bandwidth cap on the iPad's LTE in about 5 minutes. Where I've not been able to hit the 100x larger cap on the wireline connection whatsoever.

  63. Do what we want or... by rnturn · · Score: 1

    ... we're going to pull up stakes and move to Galtville.

    Innovation?! What innovation has AT&T come up with lately? Sure... they've come up with a web site that would make Franz Kafka run screaming into the night but beyond that, what innovation are they talking about?

    --
    CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
    1. Re:Do what we want or... by bughunter · · Score: 1

      Well, based on the additions they've made to their services in the past, their 'innovations' can only be 1) giving your data to the NSA 2) reporting your copyright infringement to the MPAA and RIAA, and/or 3) throttling your service based on your transfer protocol or content.

      Oh, wait. Maybe they're using the finance industry's definition of 'innovation' which basically means finding or creating loopholes in the law that allow them to collude to steal your money while not technically committing any crimes.

      --
      I can see the fnords!
  64. Lost Cause by ExecutorElassus · · Score: 2

    I don't mean the ISPs, I mean the rest of us. Wheeler is a cable lobbyist; I suspect the court striking down the Open Internet Order was exactly the excuse to scuttle the net neutrality that all his buddies hate so much. Besides: the court has been very clear on this matter. The only way the FCC could force net neutrality would be by declaring ISPs common carriers. The Republican Party -- and Wheeler himself -- is adamantly opposed to such an action, and so it will not happen.

    This smacks very much of the Obama administration responding to all the illegal wiretapping the NSA and FBI et al were doing not by arresting the perpetrators, but by writing the laws to give them authority to go right on doing it.

  65. "Innovation" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They must be using a different definition for "Innovation" than I am familiar with

    innovation
    noun \i-n-v-shn\

    : a new idea, device, or method
    : the act or process of introducing new ideas, devices, or methods

    Somehow I am hard pressed to think of a single example of this being done by the major ISPs, plenty of innovation has occurred as far as in home devices, wireless network connections, etc, but hardwired ISP connections have crawled forward at a painfully slow pace. We've went from what over the last 10 years? 512 to maybe 1-5 meg connections with skyrocketing prices?

  66. Wired and Wireless build out issues by bleh-of-the-huns · · Score: 1

    All of the major telco's have been scaling back their investment, especially in wireline services. Trying to dump copper, no longer building out new fiber (Verizon), and trying to convince people to switch to more profitable wireless.

    They claim that Wireless is a perfectly acceptable alternative to cable/wire based broadband. Verizon used that exact claim to get out of paying New Jersey billions of dollars when they failed to meet the promise of broadband to the entire state.

    At the same time, they then lobby the crap out of the regulators to explicitly exclude wireless from regulation, specifically the Net Neutrality rules.

    They cannot have it both ways.

    Here's the thing, if "broadband" was classified as Title II, would that not also include Wireless, which the telco's have lobbied hard to be excluded from pretty much any regulation that would protect consumers.

    As for wired services, they can threaten all they want, as someone noted earlier, the scene from Blazing Saddles, threatening to shoot yourself in the head if the Feds don't leave them alone, is an empty threat. We already know they have scaled back capital expenditures. And sure, at the beginning, they might go through with their threats, but what will happen, is people will start to migrate from one crappy provider, to the next slightly less crappy provider, resulting in significant losses for the companies losing people. That will then spur the next upgrade wars, where they will have no choice but to upgrade to get customers back. It might be slow going to get to any speedy service like they have in pretty much every other country that has cheap quality broadband, but it will happen.

    --
    I came, I conquered, I coredumped
  67. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who started with the bullshit threats, huh? Huh? HUH?

  68. Empty Threat by Mansing · · Score: 1

    Internet access outside of the major metropolitan areas sucks today. Will the ISPs threats make it worse? Maybe.

    But since US internet access is far, far worse than the rest of the world, it matters not in the long run.

  69. They need to take this as a Sign.... by Lumpy · · Score: 1

    If all the ISP's are against it, then it's the right thing to do.

    Dear ISP's, It's your own damn fault, you let Comcast act like pricks so now you get what you allowed to happen.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  70. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

    There is no really way to have more competition unless you separate the fiber/copper from the data. You treat the transport as a utility and then allow different ISPs to use the utility to provide the data. It is both wasteful and impractical to expect Verizon, AT&T, Comcast, and so on to all run fiber. The "poles" and right of way along with the lines should be regulated as a utility. Any company that wants to and can afford to rent the lines could then offer services over the lines. Right now the ISPs have a lock on the poles.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  71. US ISPs = mafia by jeffasselin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's a nice Internet you got there. Would be a shame if anything happened to it.

    --
    If he explores all forms and substances Straight homeward to their symbol-essences; He shall not die.
  72. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Kamiza+Ikioi · · Score: 0

    Please tell me you aren't serious. We've been hearing about a smart grid working with smart appliances for what seems like forever. If we'd done this in the days of dial up, we'd still be on dial up. When's the last time your water company increased the pipe size to your house as part of "innovative upgrade". Never, right? Exactly.

    Would you still want a regulated monopoly/duopoly (government's fault)? I don't know about you, but taking back the last 20 years of profit to undo the broadband revolution seems like an insanely BAD idea.

    Let's keep the sour grapes reactions under wraps so we don't get stuck in the dark ages of current speeds for the next 20 years. I agree the problem is with politicians in back pockets, but it's the local and state policies that stop competition we should be fighting. Pretending they'll innovate under threat of becoming a pure utility will not work. They'll simply become a utility.

    --
    I8-D
  73. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

    They are not regulating profit.

    You failed to read the post I was responding too, which suggested that profits should be regulated.

  74. How would that be any different than it is now!? by kheldan · · Score: 1

    'Slow or halt network upgrades'? 'Consumers would face less choice'? How the actual fuck is that any different than things are right now, you retarded baboons!? We already have little to no choices when it comes to which ISP we can use, and while other countries of the world are regularly rolling out near-LAN speeds to their customers for the same amount of money or less, you're over-booking your network capacity like some shit-tier hotel or airline, extorting money out of content providers, giving shit-tier customer service, and all the while charging us a premium price for the 'privilege'! MEMO TO ISPs: How about you all go fuck yourselves!?

    --
    Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
  75. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by rnturn · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Don't forget the provisions -- that the telcos heavily lobbied for -- in the last major telecommunications act that made it legal for them to lock out all those smaller ISPs.

    IMNSHO, the anti-trust actions should have started the day the first Baby Bell was being purchased to begin the reconstitution of Ma Bell. It's time to break up AT&T again.

    And kudos to whoever it was who suggested that they (and the cable companies) need to divest themselves of any content creation companies they now own. Owning the pipe and the content seems like creation of a vertical monopoly to me. I don't need or want the ISP's "content". I'm struggling to think of any content that AT&T could provide to me that I would find valuable. In fact, I really don't want to deal with an internet service provider but, rather, an internet connection provider. That's what I have now through one of the companies that's managed to survive on the crumbs left over after AT&T started pricing access to their copper to the point that it killed off the little guys. It works fine although its tough to describe my connection as "broadband".

    --
    CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
  76. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

    ^what you are proposing is not too much different from when they "de-regulated" the long distance phone companies, but then required local carriers to allow access to their infrastructure. Its an interesting approach with a host of impacts, both good and bad, although it has nothing to do with the suggestion that profits be regulated, which was what my responses were about.

    State and local governments generally are at the heart of regulation of utilities at the service level. Unfortunately, they've signed their souls away and the price to get them back is hefty.

  77. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Drethon · · Score: 1

    I suspect it is the stock holders that like the cable companies.

  78. You are not going to get Upgrades anyway. by hackus · · Score: 1

    As I have pointed out in many times before, and people continue to know nothing about the fact that NSA now decides most of the network grades for core routing etc, you do not get upgrades period.

    Core routers in AT&T's internal network upgrades are mostly latteral (copper replaced with same speed fiber), for example.

    Until the NSA is removed from internal infrastructure you are not going to get MEANINGFUL upgrades.

    DEFINITION OF MEANGINGFUL:

    1) Conversion of all upstream points to fiber. (There is a reason you know why asymetric networks suck it.) Most of the taps for NSA gear work on where the information is GOING TO, not where it is from, therefore the slower speeds for easier data collection on pretty old gear (circa 2009).

    2) Faster switches for the upstream points.

    3) Complete software stack upgrades to IPv6. If we do that, we can get SIGNIFICANT PERFORMANCE boosts on the internet.

    None of this is going to happen though because collecting all of that data requires expensive investment in secret hardware and software, and such pieces of technology don't like change.

    I wouldn't be surprised to find if this all isn't documented by companies such as AT&T who is an example I made recently and got modded to like -1 crazy person soon because internet performance in the USA compared to example the far east, is GLARINGLY bad.

    USA=21st century CABLE MODEM speed, which is just as bad as 20th Century MODEM speed.

    They have absolutely destroyed the potential of something that could have been a great liberator for educating people, commerce and making life generally better for all peoples.

    It is so sad.

    --
    Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
  79. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by spire3661 · · Score: 1

    There should be very little profit in telecom until we get AT LEAST Gigabit service and 1 TB transfer. Until the ISPs reach this bare minimum, they should get no breaks of any kind. Like how we force the electrical companies to provide standard 240/120 service.

    --
    Good-bye
  80. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by spire3661 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The water pipe to my house doesnt need to be replaced because it was sized properly from day one. The only people with properly sized internet connections in the US are the ones with fiber to the house.

    --
    Good-bye
  81. Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The more they drag their feet, the faster they'll be replaced.

  82. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by ganjadude · · Score: 3, Informative

    it sure seems as if the only time there is "competition" is when google threatens to put fiber in a city, anything else the cant be bothered

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  83. Ummm... by thestudio_bob · · Score: 2

    I wasn't aware that data caps are considered "innovation".

    --
    The real Sig captains the Northwestern. This one captains /.
  84. Slow and halt more than they already are? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How would that even be possible without just turning off the lights.

  85. Slow network upgrades? by Chas · · Score: 1

    Slow network upgrades?
    That'd imply that there was actual forward momentum here!
    Right now their networks are standing STILL!
    So? What? They're going to start pulling current equipment out of their networks and replacing it with older stuff? Reversion?

    This is an empty threat.
    If they allow themselves to stagnate, new-market competitors like Google Fiber will eat them for dinner and they KNOW it.

    Here's hoping the FCC realizes this.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  86. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yeah it's a threat alrighty: business as usual...

  87. Correction. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It takes a Google to do it.

    Wow. Three cities. Such coverage. Much non-threat to the status quo.

    Seriously, Google hasn't done shit. I've been a customer of tiny, regional ISPs that nobody has heard of, whom have more skin in the game.

    It takes a Google to do it? Please. A Google hasn't yet come anywhere near doing it.

    Frankly, that should scare the hell out of all of us.

  88. Oh NOes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are they threatening my unlimited data limit now?

  89. nothing new about this by Wansu · · Score: 1

    Threaten to throttle innovation and slow network upgrades?

    They've been doing this all along. I suppose they mean the innovation will be throttled more than it already is.

    --
    Wansu, th' chinese sailor
  90. You guys dont realize. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a small cable operator, I can tell you this will kill any competition that is left.
    We have cut out a niche as being friendlier and cheaper than the big boys of the industry. The trade-off is that we arent at work 24x7. If they re-classify, chances are small guys like us would have to double our employee budget in order to cover extra shifts.

    No way can we afford to double our payroll and stay competitive. We would fold.

    I hate to say it, But these guys are right to protest.

  91. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by whistlingtony · · Score: 1

    We'd take you less seriously if you didn't make statements saying Democrats are beholden to Big Coal. Yes. West Virginia is suuuuuch a blue state. :P And unionization amongst coal miners is soooo strong these days. :D

    Really. make your point and keep out the ad hominem attacks. You could have skipped that entire second paragragh and made your point just as well. Our politicians are bought. We know. We get it.

  92. So now we have big companies that threaten.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So now these big US Companies are so in control they can threaten the American people with inaction. They could do this and still raise prices on us.

    Sounds like these companies are too big and need some competition?

  93. In other word by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Back to status quo, because they've been sitting on the pile of money they make without investing anything that would improve the network for YEARS, all they did was remove one or two artificial barrier they had placed to pretend they upgraded they network.

  94. What a threat! by Sloppy · · Score: 1

    If you do that, then I swear, we will stop trying to have customers, and then our competitors will eat us alive. See how happy you are then, paying a $16/month bill for your fast capless Internet. I dare you, FCC. I double-dog dare you!!

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  95. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

    I'll repeat what I said earlier:

    Appropriate regulation would be to restrict ISPs to only providing connectivity services to the end-user. No ownership of content or other services of any kind. Much like electricity providers cannot also run the grid unless they're a monopoly. No one can realistically compete with them since if the generation costs for the competition are undercutting the grid provider's price, they can merely up the access fees. Regulate them there, you say? There's far too many shenanigans going on with GAAP to have that come out any differently under regulation, and far more opportunity for corruption and fleecing.

    --
    The cesspool just got a check and balance.
  96. Innovation by jjbenz · · Score: 1

    Don't they already throttle innovation?

  97. AT&T OFFERING BILLIONS FOR DIRECTV !!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Billions of U.S. Dollars. Soon it will be Trillions as we all know. I wonder what homeless people think of the execs getting paid several hundred thousand dollars per year while they are expected to live on $700 a month.

    In other news:

    How She Lives On Minimum Wage: One McDonald's Worker's Budget
    276 comments, 155 called-out Comment Now
    Follow Comments

    Iverson with her children

    Earlier this week, McDonald’s made headlines for offering a sample budget to its employees living on minimum wage.

    Instead, the company’s goodwill gesture seemed to highlight the near impossibility of surviving on that level of pay. For example, the budget assumed the worker had two jobs.

    RELATED: Why McDonald’s Employee Budget Has Everyone Up In Arms

    To find out what it’s like living on minimum wage, we asked one McDonald’s worker. Below is an edited transcript of the conversation with Carman Iverson, 28, in Kansas City, MO.

    When did you start working at McDonald's MCD -0.81%?

    I started working there in April 2012.

    How much do you make per hour?

    $7.35. When I first started working there, I was making $7.25.

    When did you get the extra ten cents an hour?

    When the President [of the U.S.] raised our minimum wage. [Ed. note: She was mistaken; On January 1, 2013, the minimum wage was raised to $7.35 because in 2006, Missouri voted for an annual cost of living adjustment in the minimum wage. The previous few years, the federal minimum wage of $7.25 was higher, so Missouri followed the federal minimum.]

    RELATED: Will The McDonald’s Employee Budget Help Get The Minimum Wage Raised?

    How many hours do you work per week?

    I work close to 27 hours one week, and then I might work 20 hours the next week.

    How do they decide how many hours you work per week?

    They decide by how many days you get on the schedule.

    So, even if you wanted to work 40 hours a week, you couldn’t do it?

    I couldn’t do it.

    What’s the fewest hours you ever worked in a week?

    18 hours.

    How much do you make after taxes each month?

    Probably $200-something, some paychecks are $300-something. Between $400-$600 a month.

    How much is your rent?

    My rent is $650.

    How many bedrooms do you have?

    Three.

    Do you have children?

    I have four — 11, 7, 4 and 5.

    If you make, on average, $500 a month and your rent is $650 a month, how can you afford your house?

    I have a landlord that works with us. I’m kind of on my last little leg, because I’ve been late on rent. I’m actually behind three months in rent.

    If you only ever make $400-$600 and your rent is $650, can you ever pay your rent?

    Sometimes I can pay it, sometimes I can’t. I get paid twice a month, and both checks go to rent and the rest of it goes to utilities to the point where I don’t have any money left to buy anything for my kids — to buy them clothes, shoes or anything they need.

    If all of your money is going to your rent and your utilities, how do you feed yourself and your four children?

    I get food stamps. I get about $543 a month.

    Is that enough to feed everybody?

    Not really, because they eat so much. They’re growing kids, so they eat a lot. The food can be gone by the time I get to my next food stamp day. And then we have to wait two more weeks before my food stamps come next month, before I can get something to eat, and then I have to ask my sister for food and all that.

    What about transportation?

    I take public transportation. I pay 75 cents a ride — $1.50 every day to get back and forth to work, for 4-5 days. That 75 cents to get there and 75 cents back.

    So, it’s about $30 a month?

    Yes, ma’am.

    What about other expenses, like your phone?

    I’ve been without a phone for two months.

    How much are your utilities?

    Right now, I’m behind

  98. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I remember reading about a clause in the NBC/Comcast deal that has net neutrality requirement which calls for the joint venture to abide by the agency’s Open Internet Rules for a period of seven years.

    This is how Comcast behaves when they have to conform to this stipulation.... I would hate to see what they do when this is up.... Anyone create a countdown timer?

  99. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by mrbester · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Funny how regulation of ISPs doesn't affect their profit margin too much for the rest of the planet...

    --
    "Wait. Something's happening. It's opening up! My God, it's full of apricots!"
  100. Comcast is undervalued by Etherwalk · · Score: 1

    Actually, Comcast is severely undervalued right now, so their investors stand to profit either way.

    Their EPS shows about a 5% return on market value, with near 20% annual earnings growth (geometric mean over five years, although mostly in the last three), but their market value is actually less than their equity. Now a lot of the equity is intangibles, but even if you take out fifty billion or so, they could still earn back their market value within three years.

    (Pretax earnings are around 3B/quarter, total market cap is around 22B).

  101. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Nemesisghost · · Score: 1

    In addition to what spire3661 said, I've not increased the amount of water I'm using because there aren't new ways to use it as there were when the pipes were installed. Even if I added a hot tub or a pool, that would only significantly increase my water usage 1x, then it would go back to levels near what I was at before.

    The same cannot be said about our internet usage. New applications have continuously come out that have increased our appetite for data. When I 1st got on the internet, 56k dial up was more than adequate for anything available. Later when I started college, 1.5Mbps was far faster than anything available at the time, and so provided speeds that were generally unnecessary for all but pirating movies. Now, anything less than about 15Mbps won't cut it. And to get that, even in a large city, you are going to pay almost $100/month.

  102. Re: If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not necessarily. In small markets, a wholly government run solution may be best, I.e., municipal fiber, like some places have tried to put in.

    In larger markets, where competition is more viable, that's probably the better answer.

  103. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny, but why electricity companies don't have the right to "throttle" some "selected" consumers? Say, if you dont pay a little bit more than the regular Joe, then sorry, but your electrons will be slow-down to the speed of donkey, LOL.

    Patent.

    Profit.

  104. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by phorm · · Score: 1

    The water pipe to my house doesn't need to be replaced because it was sized properly from day one

    Water needs haven't changed that much over the last decade or so. A better comparison might be electricity In that case many homes are insufficient, which will be compounded as EV's etc become more popular.

    Internet bandwidth consumption, OTOH, has grown from the days of 56k modems to require multi-MBPS connections. The problem is that the providers are even slower than utilities to upgrade.

  105. Or you could... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or you could just build your own BSD router/firewall with PF, print your own circuit board, buy hardware made outside the US....there's options here.

  106. Re: If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busin by Likes+Microsoft · · Score: 1

    Sounds like the leaders of the ISPs have been reading a lot of Ayn Rand lately...

    --
    -- Who am I? How did I get here? My God, what have I done?!
  107. Yes that would be true, but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's a nice strawman you've got there. There's no reason someone wouldn't step up to the plate. None. There's too much money to be had, and these companies were PAID with tax dollars to run the lines that they haven't run in the first place. They failed in their contractual obligations multiple times, in multiple states and have actively shut out competitors and local governments from setting up municipal ISPs through court actions even in places that they weren't even competing. Hate to tell you, setting up an ISP isn't hard, the lines are already run and paid for, in most cases they are about 20 years old. So take that stupid ass line about it costs too much and shove it where the sun don't shine. It's false and it's a lie.

  108. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Bartles · · Score: 1

    In my area the local government has set up a franchise agreement that guarantees a monopoly. Is that the ISP's fault, commie?

  109. You almost had me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You almost had me agreeing with you until your Obama-Net garbage. It's been going on for far longer than Obama and almost every politician is filthy with it.

  110. Of course, the best threat to the ISPs is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    to tell them Google could be looking to come to their area...

    And suddenly the improvements will magically appear...

    1. Re:Of course, the best threat to the ISPs is... by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

      to tell them Google could be looking to come to their area...

      And suddenly the improvements will magically appear...

      You would think. But Time Warner was shitty up to the day that I switched over.

  111. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Bengie · · Score: 1

    They should just allow others to access their infrastructure, the last mile infrastructure should be required to allow access to multiple ISPs at the same time. I should have a single fiber, maybe a second for redundancy, entering my house where port 1 is ISP A, port 2 is ISP B, etc etc. There is no reason I should have to choose between ISPs, I should be able to have multiple without additional wiring.

  112. Threats? I thought they were doing that already? by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    It's not a threat if you've already are doing it.

  113. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Likes+Microsoft · · Score: 1

    Sounds like a serious threat. Better cave.

    It sounds to me like the CEOs have been eating their Wheaties and reading up on their Ayn Rand... Seriously, though, I love how the letter makes it sound like all the brouhaha is coming from a "concerted publicity campaign by some advocacy groups". I just looked at the FCC's public docket for response to Wheeler's previous proposal, and there are at least 10,000 responses. Even my state of Tennessee, not necessarily the most friendly to to Federal regulation, had 500 comments. I looked at a random sampling from TN, and couldn't find one posting with any particular love for the current regime of large ISPs. Words like "oligarchy" and "monopoly" were quite common.

    --
    -- Who am I? How did I get here? My God, what have I done?!
  114. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by static0verdrive · · Score: 1

    This is along the lines of what I was thinking. Yes, the internet can be used for telecommunications. Using morse code, so can my flashlight... should it be regulated too?

    --
    ========
    77 77 77 2e 6d 65 6c 76 69 6e 73 2e 63 6f 6d
  115. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Bengie · · Score: 1

    The same fiber from 40 years ago that carried 1mb/s can now carry 100gb/s. Newer fiber is easier to work with, but fiber has a life span of about 50-100 years. Since it only takes about 1 year to pay off the cost of laying fiber infrastructure, I'm sure they can replace the fiber more often than 50 years. Modern fiber is good for about 32tb/s, next gen fiber is currently getting about 1pb/s. It's not like we need to replace this stuff often. These speeds are based on current tech. Future tech will probably enable current fiber to move more than 32tb/s.

  116. ISP is a Utility by Neuroelectronic · · Score: 1

    Oh, you can't be profitable anymore without ripping off customers? The networking industry has already been completely optimized? So what you're saying is ISPs are logically a utility?

    1. Re:ISP is a Utility by bughunter · · Score: 1

      Haven't you been paying attention for the past 15 years? 'Utilities' are fair game for profitmongers now. First it was electric power exchanges, then municipal water (especially in developing countries in S. America and Africa) and now phone/internet. And don't even get me started on proposals to start charging tolls for interstate highway usage.

      It won't be long before someone 'innovates' a way to charge you for the air you breathe.

      --
      I can see the fnords!
  117. Title II would result in more choice. by mgemmons · · Score: 1

    We already have a good idea of what happens when ISPs are treated like common carriers -- more competition; better and faster internet access. The UK is a perfect example.

    This planet money podcast is great overview on how both the US and the UK arrived at their respective situations. It's a fascinating listen:

    http://podcastdownload.npr.org/anon.npr-podcasts/podcast/510289/299232999/npr_299232999.mp3?_kip_ipx=1217487091-1400085519/

  118. "That's a real nice Internet you got there... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...be a damn shame if something bad happened to it. A damn shame.

    Hey, you know what? If you want, me and my friends here, we can help you with it.

    All we ask is a little... consideration, from time to time. Maybe the occasional favor, nothing that'll cost you anything.

    Think about it. I mean, it would be just a damn shame if you let something happen that we could have kept from happening. We'd be real torn up about it."

    God. Damned. Blackmail. The very fact that they had the Gold-plated-BALLS to send that letter after so may of them pissed away (Indeed, one could say embezzled or frankly stole) all the money/tax breaks/advantages so many of them begged for in the 90's and 00's so they could "afford" to build up network infrastructure, which they then promptly did NOTHING about...

    That takes Godfather level greed and criminality. Simply sending that letter should result in a negative reaction from the FCC (a "regulatory pimp-slap," if you will), though since Obama put their inside-man in charge (I'm not gonna get into politics here, and I knew Obama was gonna disappoint me, he's a fucking politician and a young one at that, and I doubt it woulda been different, possibly worse under McCain or the Rominator, but great googily moogily) at BEST it will result in a spineless withdrawal of any proposal to do ANYTHING, and more likely just waiting until the public is distracted before trying to sneak the fast-track crap through again.

  119. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by symbolset · · Score: 1

    They are just making it easier for Google Fiber to take over.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  120. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

    ...nobody likes the cable companies but they politically get their way.

    Nobody likes congress either, but they reelect 90% of them anyway. That right there is the very source of the problem. People are fickle.

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  121. Blackmail and extortion by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

    Sounds like just another day at the office.

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  122. Regulating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why can't they regulate the Internet like say the intetnet? Not like some other Fricken good olé boy service where some politicians buddy gets rich.

  123. If the ISP's are against it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The ISP's are against it because they stand to make less money. When they stop complaining, we'll know the rules or legislation will have been manipulated to the point where it benefits them and not the consumer. It's exactly the same thing that happened to ACA - the insurance companies and medical industry complained until the legislation was changed to the point where they came out better.

  124. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    don't realize what awful Internet service we're getting compared to all the other developed countries on the planet.

    Sorry for you situation. If it's any of comfort, sparse populations face the same problem in everywhere in Europe as well. One solution has been a pooling of resources by the community to share the burden of high speed connection to the provider and for the local distribution via fiber, or other suitable means. Watch out for the embezzlers during the process.

  125. Govt regulating an industry that needs to die by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Am I saying that ISP's need to go away? No. But what we are at the early stages of is the transition from land-line and/or fiber -based infrastructure to a mobile-based infrastructure. We have industries with literally hundreds of years of combined existence in land-line persistence they feel the need to defend because they have already developed an infrastructure. Why re-design, and re-deploy a completely new infrastructure when the cost of doing so is extraordinary and the return on that investment will (due to political not to mention consumer pressures) be negligible.
    Picture it this way, when Henry Ford made the automobile industry more affordable (automobiles were a luxury of the well-to-do for the first few decades), entire industries started to lose demand: buggy whip makers; harness makers; horse breeders; wagon manufacturers; lumber mills had to get new clientele; etc...
    Keep the heavy hand of the FCC off the 'Net! Yes, there are areas in this country that have shoddy service and/or "overly" expensive service. But let's not compare the geography of the United Staes to the geography of Europe and/or Asia. The US is a single country made up of multiple states with single companies reaching into those multiple states. Many European countries are considerably smaller than most East Coast states and they are just as monopolized as we experience, however their infrastructure needs to be only 1/10 of what our ISP infrastructure needs to be in order to reach their citizenry. As must as we American's LOVE our "instant gratification" of "always on" internet, access to high-speed internet is not a "right" as some would like to paint it.
    We need "light" regulation
    A) All ISPs will treat all traffic without preference regardless of it's origin or destination or it's content unless reasonable evidence is discovered (via court order or pre-standing law) that indicates such data is in violation of the law (child-pornography as just one example - however this also means our ISPs can "sniff our packets" to determine content)
    B) All ISPs may choose to provide tiered service based on speed of service or total amount downloaded per billing cycle (This is not very different that what is offered now)
    But it needs to be combined with a "Memoriam of Understanding" to many other companies in the tech sector: BE DISRUPTIVE and make video/audio codecs with greater compression. Stop creating web-sites that are HTML5 and/or Flash heavy as "eye candy". Most of our most radical innovations have come about because of radical disruption of an existing paradigm. We need more people to disrupt the status quo and get us thinking about new ways to solve problems. This goes from product developers (iPhone) to infrastructure (Cisco developing better 'net traffic algorithms) to ISPs (do your best); Web developers (stop creating cody-heavy, graphics-laden, non-W3C compliant sites) as well as our institutions of learning (teach our kids there are moral absolutes like Right and Wrong - you never know which kid will be the next CEO of an ISP and/or product developer, etc...)
    We should never allow the technological status quo to be legally protected from innovation
    I, for one, use FIOS because it's all that's available in my area. However they still give me dozens (if not hundreds) of channels I don't ever watch. (Why should I pay for them?) Yet I've no problems paying for their service because their "fat-pipe" to our house/neighborhood provides my internet hungry family the bandwidth to gorge on Netflix and YouTube.

  126. I don't get it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since when does the FCC care about the market cap of a company. If the FCC is properly regulating then the fact that potential action could lower market cap suggests that the market is not anticipating that the FCC will regulate properly. I would not say this too loudly people might get the idea that the FCC needs to start acting like a regulator.

  127. Information vs. telecommunications by tepples · · Score: 1

    Currently an ISP is classified as an "information service", which is distinct from a telecommunications service.

  128. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

    "Properly" sounds like it is a matter of etiquette.

    I think we have far too much of that already.

  129. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2

    Actually, merely with the replacement of my key lightbulbs with warm LED's (the G7's at 3000k are indistinguishable from incandescent by the way) (the 3000k is the key - not the brand), my electricity usage and bills dropped enormously.

    Meantime, when I replace my AC unit, it will drop more.
    And my TV draws a fraction of the previous TV.

    My electricity usage has consistently dropped since i moved into the house 15 years ago. In some months- my bills are lower than they were when I moved in despite price increases. During the summer, they are about the same- a little higher (10%) last august. I think I found the cause for that- a repair man broke one of the ducts so I was air conditioning the attic instead of one of the rooms.

    I agree internet bandwidth consumption is growing and will continue to grow. However--

    1) Whenever google enters an area, the ISP's have shown a pattern of being able to rapidly upgrade service while holding or even (!!!!) lowering their prices.

    2) Many other countries have had better service at lower prices for close to a decade now.

    ---

    To be fair, my $110 internet service from comcast has gone from 3mbps to 25mbps (and sometimes even higher- perhaps they are caching large files locally) as it increased from $70. But I suspect if google came around, I could get much more bandwidth for $70.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  130. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by rnturn · · Score: 2

    Bingo. "Mr. CEO, we'll push to have you removed if you waste your profits building out your infrastructure to be more modern. What you have now if making us huge profits. Mess with that at your own risk."

    Someone needs to revisit this BS argument that -- as I currently understand it, came out of a controversial opinion in a state court proceeding that manage to make its way into business textbooks -- the only goal of a business it to make a profit for the shareholders. It's an important goal (or the company won't be around very long) but it shouldn't be the only goal. Making a quality product? Doing something for the community where you're based? Not polluting? It's all very nice if those things happen but don't you even think about spending one red cent of our profits on those activities. Heck, at one time, corporations had their charters revoked (the corporate death penalty) if their activities failed to provide for the public good. Remember the public? In theory, they're the ones who allow these legal fictions to even exist.

    --
    CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
  131. Lumpy, hate to say it, but... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're right on this one - only problem is, you CAN'T GET HONEST gov't. regulation since those IN gov't. are bought & paid for puppets of those with the big money (like telcos, or any other big corporate body with a hidden, or perhaps NOT so 'hidden', agenda).

    * We're heading, imo @ least, to fascism - IF we're not already there, that is...

    APK

    P.S.=> THIS is what happens, when MONEY BECOMES YOUR GOD... apk

  132. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would just meme what has been said, the FCC will put loopholes or screw these regulations up. The industry, or I should monopolies, attempts to claim they would lose money are laughable, that exactly what should happen it would stop them from monopolizing, buying out everything that allows them to continue to eliminate competition, that will hopefully allow up coming providers to offer better more reliable services at lower prices.

    I talked about this before, in my state they passed a competition law. However they put loopholes in it and idiotically enough allowed local government to dictate whether anyone else would get a chance to compete. Concast offers a range f free service to the city and their employees. COncast either owns the all of the other cable/internet providers within the state, and I guess because they didn't change the names of the companies somehow politicians didn't have a problem with it.

    Basically I'm saying should the FCC do what experts and organizations like the EFF say they should be doing, there is still a long road to go before the start-ups get a chance to compete. I realize in other states this could happen a lot faster, but in mine this would do little to nothing.

  133. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by catchblue22 · · Score: 1

    Of course all threats by corporations regarding regulation have proven to be true. Collapsible steering columns, air bags, anti-lock brakes and other government mandated technology standards have nearly destroyed the auto industry, as the American car companies promised they would.

    --
    This and no other is the root from which a tyrant springs; when first he appears as a protector - Plato (423 to 327 BC)
  134. Not really a threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are ALREADY stifling innovation, by plotting to create a two-tier internet with a financial barrier to entry for new major bandwidth users. The kind of artificial and unnecessary "innovation" required to work around the problems caused by the system that they are instigating will not be of use to society.

    They are ALREADY performing network upgrades at a sluggish pace. If they went any slower the whole thing would fall apart at the seams.

    It isn't a particularly strong threat if they are already doing it anyway.

  135. I have always said greed would by ralphaostrander · · Score: 1

    Ruin the internet that same way it has real life. The net is doomed to politics of th wealthy. And no matter what you have no say. Any say you do have is statically insignificant.

  136. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by peragrin · · Score: 1

    Only if you live in the USA. If you live in Europe cities you can get three times that spend for half that price. The simple fact is comcast and time warner are not upgrading their networks. They should be rolling out fiber to the home right now in every city. Instead we get more copper when they do physical upgrades at all. Fiber makes more sense instead Of using copper lines that are 30 years old. 90% of of coax runs to homes and buildings are RG59 and that should scare you.

    --
    i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
  137. Slowing network upgrades? by sir-gold · · Score: 1

    How exactly do you "slow" something that is already at a dead stop? it's taken 10 years to go from 2mbit to 25mbit for a base subscription, meanwhile the rest of the world went from dial-up (or nothing at all) to 100mbit+ speeds.

    I have no problem with the major ISPs coming to a "stop", as long as Google Fiber keeps going.

  138. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by yoghurt · · Score: 1

    > Would a TV cable company count as "media"?

    Does NBC count as "media". Comcast owns them.

    > What if the ISP *IS* also a cable company?

    And what if your cable company ISP also owns a major network with original programming and multiple cable channels?

    --
    Yoghurt
  139. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Drethon · · Score: 1

    Hell as a holder of mutual funds myself (retirement investment, not instant fortune) I'd be happy if the companies would at least focus on long term profits rather than short term. But those with the real money in stocks are not looking for profits forty years down the road...

  140. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When's the last time your water company increased the pipe size to your house as part of "innovative upgrade".

    My water company doesn't sell grass. When I buy grass from someone else and water it, my water company doesn't reduce the flow of water I use to water it to give advantage to buying grass from them. Yes, it sounds fucking stupid to say that, but that is *exactly* want these ISP's want to do. They want to give priority to their own products. It's called product tying and it is already illegal.

    These CEOs are saying there's a huge profit to be made by ripping people off like this and they won't spend as much money if they can't rip people off. At least we have a list of the names of these bad people.

  141. Re: If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wait but I pay $63/month for 25mbps in Chicago right now. Of course there is acutely competition here. I had 4 purifiers to choose from. AT&T, Comcast, RCN, and clearwire. So I can see that not being true everywhere.

  142. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Tharkkun · · Score: 1

    Actually, merely with the replacement of my key lightbulbs with warm LED's (the G7's at 3000k are indistinguishable from incandescent by the way) (the 3000k is the key - not the brand), my electricity usage and bills dropped enormously.

    Meantime, when I replace my AC unit, it will drop more. And my TV draws a fraction of the previous TV.

    My electricity usage has consistently dropped since i moved into the house 15 years ago. In some months- my bills are lower than they were when I moved in despite price increases. During the summer, they are about the same- a little higher (10%) last august. I think I found the cause for that- a repair man broke one of the ducts so I was air conditioning the attic instead of one of the rooms.

    I agree internet bandwidth consumption is growing and will continue to grow. However--

    1) Whenever google enters an area, the ISP's have shown a pattern of being able to rapidly upgrade service while holding or even (!!!!) lowering their prices.

    2) Many other countries have had better service at lower prices for close to a decade now.

    ---

    To be fair, my $110 internet service from comcast has gone from 3mbps to 25mbps (and sometimes even higher- perhaps they are caching large files locally) as it increased from $70. But I suspect if google came around, I could get much more bandwidth for $70.

    Why? I doubt you get 25 mb/s consistently anyways.

  143. All the more reason to stop mergers by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    Seriously, when companies can threaten like this, it is time for us to disallow things like Comcast/Timewarner, ATT/Direct, but then also break up the monopoly. That means order that all network connections that are in place via limited-place monopolies (such as what cable and dsl providers have) should be regulated. If there is REAL competition, such as 2 or more fibers in place, then all regulations disappear.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  144. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

    Please the coal miners unions are not that weak. Why do you think even president Obama is talking about "clean coal".
    You buy both sides of the isle and you get what you want.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  145. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

    You bet and it is insane that the FCC and FTC let that happen.
    If your cable company owns a network it would have to sell it off. If your cable company is your ISP then it has too sell.
    Things get really iffy when talking about a "pure" ISP. Google as in Google Fiber owns YouTube and that could be an issue if not regulated correctly.
    It might require Google to offer to supply a high speed link to any ISP that wants it... Which they honestly would be glad to do.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  146. Wish upgrades occurred to keep us up with other de by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What I wouldn't give for connection speeds available in South Korea, and Japan

  147. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by triffid_98 · · Score: 2

    "When buying and selling are controlled by legislation, the first things to be bought and sold are legislators."

    -P.J. O'Rourke

  148. that's exactly the problem by Chirs · · Score: 1

    If the ISP also owns content, they have a vested interest in making it as hard as possible to access outside content, and as easy as possible to access their own.

    It would be far better if the ISP was wholly separate from the content owner, and was legally required to offer the same network access terms to everyone.

  149. what's wrong with a utility? by Chirs · · Score: 1

    My power/water/gas/sewer utilities are reasonably priced and provide excellent service.

    I'd be perfectly happy if internet were priced like a utility: a basic monthly rate for the simple fact of being a subscriber, and a low per-GB fee that actually reflects the incremental cost of more bandwidth.

  150. Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They always cry like this when someone calls foul on them. Then they get over it and back to finding new and creative ways to suck the money out of us.

  151. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by mark-t · · Score: 1

    If your cable company owns a network it would have to sell it off. If your cable company is your ISP then it has too sell.

    It's a pretty safe bet that's not going to happen. If forced to by law, they'd probably just stop being an ISP... what obligation do they have to sell their ISP business to somebody else?

    Of course, when the two largest ISP's in the area are both cable providers, and every other broadband ISP provider is ultimately dependant on one of them as their upstream provider, this creates a bit of a problem....

    Good thing I still have my 56k modem.

  152. better solution...last mile as public utility by Chirs · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A better solution would be to run the last mile as a public utility. You pay the city to maintain a single fiber to the premises, and then all the various ISPs could hook in at defined network access points.

    So your local connectivity would be within the utility, but anything beyond that would be routed through your chosen ISP...sort of like picking different long-distance providers for a phone subscription.

    1. Re:better solution...last mile as public utility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly what I have in my apartment. There's a city-wide fiber network. The entire building (and all apartments) is connected to it.

      The people running and managing the fiber infrastructure do not sell any services directly to me.

      Independent service providers do that. I have plenty of those to choose from, with various offers of combinations of TV, phone and general Internet connectivity.

      I picked one with phone and Internet including a public and static ip address, since that's exactly what I want.

      The price, for both, is lower than I used to pay for my slower ADSL connection that I've had for many years.

      Now I have 100/10 mbit/s.

      Of course, I live in Gothenburg, Sweden, where we have actual competition...

  153. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 1

    I think most of the time when an ISP eliminates the competition, they don't do it through underpricing (if they did, we would see cheaper internet services.) Rather, the way they do it is through corrupt politicians and unions. That is, they get the law changed so that they are the only one who can acquire the easement rights.

    And of course, many voters often support it for very stupid reasons. A common argument I see (especially in areas like SF where everybody is hypersensitive to maintaining a "traditional" appearance) is that they don't want everybody who asks to be able to run fiber lines throughout the city, saying that one link is enough. As a network engineer myself, I disagree, and even think that idea is actually stupid. Multiple redundant links is a good thing, not just for competition, but to allow for robust networks. From a technical perspective, the advantages range from higher availability to higher bandwidth. Furthermore, if you run large conduit pipes then there are no aesthetic issues other than VRAD deployment, which isn't a big deal IMO because for electricity you already have to have transformers almost every bit as distributed.

  154. Properly sized internet connections by sabt-pestnu · · Score: 1

    The internet connection to the place I used to live in did have a properly sized internet connection from day one:

    none.

    Yep. no internet connection. Built in 1930.

    The internet connection to my apartment complex was properly sized when the complex was constructed.

    1970. Copper wire phone lines. They were suitable up to about 1995 too, covering 19.2k modems.

    Think about how much your data consumption has increased in even the last 10 years. Comparing water usage to broadband usage is not apropos. Compare your broadband usage to the 1930's electrification projects instead.

  155. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 1

    Since it only takes about 1 year to pay off the cost of laying fiber infrastructure...

    I was curious how you arrived at the conclusion that fiber would only take a year to pay off. I'd have guessed, given the amount of work I saw as fiber was being buried beneath my own street a number of years ago, that the costs probably ran a couple thousand dollars per house.

    A quick search turned up this paper to give me an estimate of per-mile costs. Depending on the type of installation, laying fiber can range from $50K per mile (aerial lines) to $400,000 per mile max (installed underground via boring). My neighborhood was likely on the middle to high end, as they did indeed appear to be using boring techniques, and the neighborhood isn't super-dense.

    Let's see... I'd guess that an average home in my neighborhood maybe takes up about 75 ft or so of street space on average, so fiber is reaching about 140 homes per linear mile (70 houses per linear mile x 2 sides of the street). Assuming a total installation cost of about $250K per mile, that would means each home cost a bit under $1800 to connect. With these costs, I think you're looking at more of a 10-15 years to recoup that investment.

    Anyone with more real-world knowledge about this know if that's anywhere close to a reasonable estimate?

    --
    Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
  156. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    One of the problems is that the last mile is cost prohibitive and often not open. The cable companies and telecoms use their right of ways and infrastructure from their regulated side and with only a few exceptions, there is no incentive to allow others the same access.

    Until the last mile is owned or a portion of it is owned by the people it serves, I doubt anything will change. Even if it becomes regulated or whatever.

  157. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    Or like Spitzer where they will pitch in and buy a high priced hooker.

  158. Re: If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    multiple links also make surveillance more difficult, you turrurrist.

  159. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    I seem too- at any time from 3pm to 3am, prime time, etc.

    Here.. I just tested at http://www.speedtest.net/

    29.3 Mbps down and 5.7 Mbps up. at 7:45pm on a Weeknight.

    I seriously stopped testing after a half dozen times because it was always good (even for Netflix when I did those tests).

    It's about $30 more than I think is fair but I can't complain about the performance. Uptime is also stellar-- probably 2 hours a month of unexpected downtime? Never for more than an hour so far.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  160. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You need to think this through and do some research. You seem to think that companies don't like being regulated as a utility.

    The truth is, companies LOVE being regulated as a utility. They get a guaranteed profit (20% in your example) no matter how poorly they perform, and the government keeps competitors out of their market for them! Investors in the company get a stable profit at low risk. Since risk is lower, they'll accept lower profit margins.

    Think!

  161. CAFE-like regulation? by PuertoRican · · Score: 1

    Why couldn't the federal government regulate internet speeds similar to how they regulate automobile fuel economy? It couldn't be as straightforward, but perhaps they could stop the ISPs from listing max speeds (the whole "up to 20 Mbps" crap) and specifying percentages for speeds over time (e.g., customer must receive 95% of the bandwidth they are paying for 100% of the time). They could also force minimum bandwidth plans that must be provided and because of the lack of competition in certain geographical areas, even stipulate a maximum cost per Mbps of speed based on national averages of broadband fees.

    CAFE has certainly forced auto manufacturers to invest in new technology in order to meet new standards (to varying degrees of success).

    --
    Mostly watching.
  162. Bulls! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bollocks! How come Europe can grow and expand its internet, charging HALF!!! YES HALF! for TWICE AS F*****G MUCH bandwidth! With no throttling of services.

  163. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no competition now! That's the whole problem. My choices are slow but steady DSL, fast but unreliable cable, or slow AND unreliable dish network. The cable companies and the phone companies have zilch incentive to upgrade their lines to better support their Internet-only customers, since their primary phone and television customers are happy and don't realize what awful Internet service we're getting compared to all the other developed countries on the planet. If I want better service where I live, I have to pay several thousand dollars to the cable folks to run business class fiber to my house, for which I'll pay several hundred dollars a month... and the service will STILL cut out every hour, based on what I saw of the business service when I did third party tech support in town. The DSL company won't even consider giving us the business class package since we're not in a commercially developed area.

    so build a business and start your own you slug. There's nothing stopping you and you do have choices...you already laid them out.

  164. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Duggeek · · Score: 1

    Seems to me like there must be something to it. If the ISP's are threatening to sit on their asses (believe me, they'll do it, those crazy bastards) then there's got to be something proper and fair about that bill.

    The ensuing pity party will undoubtedly be called the thumb-up-the-ass-mageddon.

    Either that, or face the rise of a Chart-warner-cox-cast abomination, sure to be renamed the Cable Operators Commision Kabal. The acronym should make it obvious.

    --
    This post © Copyrite Duggeek, all rights reversed.
  165. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by Nov8tr · · Score: 1

    I like your idea a LOT. I agree it is time. They have screwed the public long enough. My friends in other countries call my 24 meg connection "welfare internet" and that I pay 4 times too much for it. As funny as that is, it is also just as true. Now would be a good time to do something. They are FCC is deciding today. I personally have already signed a number of petition to try and save all our asses. I don't know if it will be enough. With everyone's help it might be.

    --
    I'm old, not dead. Well that's my 2 cents worth, your mileage may vary. I say what I think, not what you want to hear.
  166. Re:If you regulate properly, we'll stop our busine by rezme · · Score: 1

    "A witty saying proves nothing." -Voltaire

  167. HAs it ever ocurred to anyone that.. by doccus · · Score: 1

    .. This time they might be right? I know it's all too much like the "boy who cried wolf", in that almost every previous argument they have made has appeared entirely self serving and hardly straight up, but the complaints they make are valid this time. Some regulation IS essential, such as preventing them from gouging the consumer with restrictive and over the top data plans, considering the popularity of online video such as Netflix..