ISPs and their lobby groups opposed every FCC attempt to regulate broadband as a common carrier service but also argue there shouldn't be a "patchwork" of state laws regulating broadband.
Pretty sure it's "State's RIghts for me, but not for thee."Let's see how the party of State's Rights feels about this. I'll wait.
"Handouts" have been a conservative media trigger word, so this is just extra funny. Not the part about the lawyers though.Shocked Pikachu face that companies keep forgetting that states can regulate when the feds choose not to and keep bitching about both options. Seems to me it would be easier to be held under Title II than to have 50 states and several territories regulating ISP's.
Has doge decided to kill the subsidies that are being handed out to the ISP's yet? Clearly they (ISP) aren't spending the money to provide extra wireline services.
Edit to add, once again, the only ones who win are the lawyers.
If a red state enacts such a law and enforces it, I'll eat my hat.If you don't want to be federally regulated, you get locally regulated. Localities are not likely to leave their constituents out in the cold on BASIC SERVICES. The real firewall is when a state that is not typically perceived as liberal enacts these kinds of requirements. Like, say, Virginia.
This is a good point. From what I remember, cellular carriers interpreted it as meaning they could not provide selective zero-rated data in California to anyone.The point about not providing zero rating in California is an interesting one.
Would the law only apply to services sold in California or just operating there?
If I bought my data plan in Texas and travelled to California, would it be illegal for the ISP to give free data for Netflix while I'm there?
I live in NYC and get $50/mo gigabit from a small company called Honest. No haggle, all online, the person who came to initiate the service arrived on time and was done in 5 minutes. It was refreshing after spending 2 hours trying to cancel my verizon fios at my previous house. It is amazing what happens when ISPs have competition.I get heat assistance in NY, bingo, I'm qualified for 50/10 at $30 with all the little charges included. No problem signing up, a pleasant little old lady voice, no upselling, no push back. The speed is Good Enough and I'm loving it. Feel like I live in S. Korea or Europe where inexpensive net accessibility is an imperative.. So socialist, doncha know.
A lot of different answers to your question, from certain ISPs having an undue influence on local governments to the fact that you have to proactively budget to create that service. A lot of towns/villages/smaller cities look at the options for muni broadband and decide that available grant money would be better spent fixing roads that have been destroyed by winter or putting a new roof on city hall.I wish more Dem controlled states would actually look at Municipal Broadband and push that more. Why can't New York have municipal fiber providers in competition with the private providers? You hardly have to regulate if you've got a muni provider that sets the baseline standard on price, speed, quality of service, net neutrality, quotas, etc. If the other providers become too much worse than the muni provider, then people will just switch to the muni provider.
Some places even do a scheme where other companies can basically be similar to MVNOs for cellular companies, where they buy service at wholesale from the muni fiber network, and resell the service at a markup, while doing the marketing, customer service, tech support, etc.
And exorbitant executive salaries and stockholder payouts. All inefficiencies that could be put back into the core business.Ah, poor little isps.
If you don't like it I'll make you an offer I think we can all agree on.
Spend half the money you do on hookers, drugs, pr, and ondonationsbribes and spend it on the service you provide.
Because of lobbying, well mostly anyways. Chattanooga, TN did the municipal broadband thing through its city owned power company, one of the largest around, and got immediately lobbied to death the second they tried to go outside their electrical coverage. Admittedly, Chattanooga is actually a mildly purple spot in a sea of crimson red and IIRC the only reason it got approved at all was through grant money for smart metering, legally the ISP was just using the extra fiber capacity. Basically, whenever there's a chance that a major municipality might try it, there's a full court press of lawyers and lobbyists to make sure it dies in a sea of paperwork.I wish more Dem controlled states would actually look at Municipal Broadband and push that more. Why can't New York have municipal fiber providers in competition with the private providers? You hardly have to regulate if you've got a muni provider that sets the baseline standard on price, speed, quality of service, net neutrality, quotas, etc. If the other providers become too much worse than the muni provider, then people will just switch to the muni provider.
Some places even do a scheme where other companies can basically be similar to MVNOs for cellular companies, where they buy service at wholesale from the muni fiber network, and resell the service at a markup, while doing the marketing, customer service, tech support, etc.
On the other hand, muni fiber will also generate revenue, and so in the end should pay for itself. Although, you do need upfront financing to get it built in the first place before you get revenue. Muni bonds could be a way to finance that, which would be tax-neutral.A lot of different answers to your question, from certain ISPs having an undue influence on local governments to the fact that you have to proactively budget to create that service. A lot of towns/villages/smaller cities look at the options for muni broadband and decide that available grant money would be better spent fixing roads that have been destroyed by winter or putting a new roof on city hall.
I agree with you more governments should look at it, but I understand why they don't, its much easier to just contract with Lucif-I mean, Spectrum from a time and money perspective for the people making those decisions.
Yes.Isn't this just ISPs trying to have it both ways by saying "we don't want to be regulated Federally, and we also don't want to be regulated by the States"?
The point about not providing zero rating in California is an interesting one.
Would the law only apply to services sold in California or just operating there?
If I bought my data plan in Texas and travelled to California, would it be illegal for the ISP to give free data for Netflix while I'm there?
I fully support regulating low cost access to essential services including broadband, but this strikes me as crazy. I live outside Pittsburgh and get 300/300 from FiOS for $40 a month, I think with all fees and taxes its around $47. The only reason is that I have a choice, we have both Comcrap and Verizon service in our area, so they both have to compete with each other which keeps prices reasonable for base level services (yes, 300/300 is base service on FiOS). The real answer here is not to just force low costs plans, its to force ISPs to actually compete with each other through regulation and enforcement of their monopoly powers over localities. Make the fiber/coax a shared resource that any provider can ride, fix one-touch laws to allow for faster and cheaper roll outs of infrastructure, and get rid of laws that allow landlords and HOAs from favoring (or in many cases only allowing) a single ISP.I get heat assistance in NY, bingo, I'm qualified for 50/10 at $30 with all the little charges included. No problem signing up, a pleasant little old lady voice, no upselling, no push back. The speed is Good Enough and I'm loving it. Feel like I live in S. Korea or Europe where inexpensive net accessibility is an imperative.. So socialist, doncha know.
I imagine that they calculated they will get greater profits by defanging the FCC and battling states in court as they are now, rather than let the FCC actually enforce. Suing is a cost of business to them.Isn't this just ISPs trying to have it both ways by saying "we don't want to be regulated Federally, and we also don't want to be regulated by the States"?
ISPs and their lobby groups opposed every FCC attempt to regulate broadband as a common carrier service but also argue there shouldn't be a "patchwork" of state laws regulating broadband.
Isn't this just ISPs trying to have it both ways by saying "we don't want to be regulated Federally, and we also don't want to be regulated by the States"?
you give them too much credit. Project 2025 people think ANY law or regulation is bad because its a "Regulation". These people cannot decide if they are fascists or anarchists. Looking at all the bumbling, they have no clue what they are doing. Well, except for working for russia and china. EVERYTHING they do is designed to destroy our country. Yay fascism and nazisI imagine that they calculated they will get greater profits by defanging the FCC and battling states in court as they are now, rather than let the FCC actually enforce. Suing is a cost of business to them.