Yeah, that’s because in Tennessee you have Marsha Blackburn, the biggest piece of shit on legacy telecom’s payroll. You’ll find her behind every single damn bill that works to keep them as monopolies. That’s what paid her way into the Senate.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.
Its nuts to me that republicans/Conservatives espouse free-market capitalism as the fix for regulations, and then turn a blind eye to industries that lobby enough like ISPs to enforce monopolies when it is super clear that forcing actual competition does fix almost all the things consumers hate about that industry
The existing regulations don't allow that.I'd be interested to know what happens if someone with in-the-ground infrastructure decides to take their ball and go home. Can the state take it or force a sale at a reasonable price and use it for municipal or even state level broadband?
I think it's no different from you quitting your job because you no longer like the terms your employer is offering.I'd be interested to know what happens if someone with in-the-ground infrastructure decides to take their ball and go home. Can the state take it or force a sale at a reasonable price and use it for municipal or even state level broadband?
No. That's not how it works.South Korea long ago proved that broadband does not need to be expensive to end users. But, you need to let the ISP's pick up the costs from content providers, as in SK, where content providers pay 15x what they do in the US. Sure, this kills a lot of spammy clickbait business models, and the big content providers hate it because those pennies per user do add up at scale. But, it would be a better Internet. In fact, it was moving that way naturally until the big content providers convinced consumers that only they should be allowed to pay for the last mile. So, now we all kick in ~$60/mo to subsidize the content and advertising industry.
Even if the prices aren't quite as good, the Muni provider isn't constantly lying to you, trying to rip you off, or blowing off service issues.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.
it's not just lobbying. There are plenty of ways ISPs can influence legislators such as sponsoring election campaigns, making donations to organizations run by a politician's spouse, funding inauguration ceremonies, etc.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.
It's Brendan Carr, and he is miles worse than Idjit Pai.I don't know how bad the current FCC chair is, but I bet if it was Ajit Pai he could somehow convert ISPs to a utility in order to make them federally regulated, and then set arbitrarily high rates to protect their revenue plus no discounts for low income customers or anything like that.
Edit to add: If you guys are going to downvote this, I'd love for you to at least respond and tell me why you disagree so we can have a healthy discussion.
I don't know how bad the current FCC chair is
I am in agreement. The FCC has always been more interested in enriching Wall St corporations than in ensuring the needs of the citizens are met. That should not be surprising considering that every single commissioner on the FCC was nominated by an ISP sponsored President, and confirmed by an ISP sponsored congress.The Federal regulations for broadband pricing were always going to be thrown out in favor of state-level action, regardless of who is president or the FCC chair.
The US Constitution clearly delineates what is under state purview and what is under federal purview. None of the legislative powers granted to the federal Congress in the USC (interstate commerce, coining money, declaring war, and establishing post offices) - nor the subsequent the "necessary and proper" clause - grants Congress or the Executive any power to regulate broadband pricing - at least for the majority of ISPs. The reason is because broadband providers have established state-level business offices / companies to whom you remit your monthly bill. A completely in-state transaction is immune from such federal regulation.
Net Neutrality, on the other hand, likely can be regulated federally, should the Congress ever specifically pass legislation authorizing the FCC to do so. This is because 1) the networks in use involve physical links across numerous states, and 2) a core function of using the internet is to make digital and physical purchases - which generally involve interstate commerce.
The NN regulations that were recently struck down were due to a 2024 SCOTUS ruling striking down the "Chevron deference doctrine" - meaning courts can no longer just side with the government arguing that a federal regulation is legit, if the underlying law authorizing the regulation is too ambiguous. Laws now must be unambiguous or any regulatory authority they grant to the Executive could be nullified by the courts if the regulations seem unreasonable to the jurists.
Edit to add: If you guys are going to downvote this, I'd love for you to at least respond and tell me why you disagree so we can have a healthy discussion.
how many people in New York City qualify for the Statewide low-income broadband pricing? The low percentage of residents that qualify will get affordable service, and the ISPs can simply continue to gouge everyone else and keep shareholder profits high.NYC is a nightmare of infrastructures from fibre optic for WallSt, cable everywhere and old copper telecomms from terrestial dialup to T-1 services – all of it outdated. Just ask N.J. who swooped-in to provide better faster optical comms for WallSt.
Not only are those architectures brittle, they’re under concrete; manhole accessible- jackhammer where not. This in a city that can’t bear road construction in any of its five boroughs. Talk about cheap - NYC doesn’t have a chance of supporting $20/mo internet.
It matters not whether Manhattan, Queens, Bronx, etc… the problems differ but the costs will not be recouped at $20/mo.
Layer overtop initial service the Nat’l Security services telecom must accommodate - few know – much less understand — NYC is an online jungle.
FED needs to subsidize NY POPs if they want not to expect their independent telecoms to not go broke - as has the FED
Chattanooga was actually a neat place, I lived there for awhile.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.
Virginia is purple tinged. Let's see Arkansas do it.If a red state enacts such a law and enforces it, I'll eat my hat.
The other poster said nothing objectionable; they just gave the opinion that, given court precedents and the design of the American system, this was always likely to happen.I downvoted for whinging about downvotes. You've been here long enough to know the board's culture.
Competition is key. They can do way better.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.
Queue that quote from V For Vendetta...You had me at "ISPs fear."![]()
Has AT&T ever made a claim that was true? Certainly not one that was newsworthy enough to get quoted in an article. One of the most dishonest companies in existence."AT&T's claims were and continue to be false"
While I guess 100 mbps is good for future-proofing, I would keep the minimum speed at 48 mbps and update it as needs change in the future. I am sure the ISPs could provide that at low cost for low income users if the law requires it.
They're all about regulations - for people.more power to the states for states choice, except when the states actually get to choose....
To bad the fasc will go to their grave before they admit regulations are a good thing. Though I'm happy to watch them go there, the sooner the better!
Pai tried that. He got shutdown by the courts.Expect the FCC to try to skate the line where they “regulate” only enough to make sure states can’t do it.
Does it make sense? Of course not.
Brendan Carr has thus far shown about as much sense and care for people as a pebble.
Almost. They are all about regulations for non-rich people.They're all about regulations - for people.
I mean, in the last few years, our plan has gone from 300Mbps to 1000Mbps with no changes on my part, they just keep upgrading and dropping plans forcing us up, which in turn raises our rates. So, yeah, I'd agree that prices are going up, not down.A different price analysis by the Technology Policy Institute, an independent think tank, is based on government data and said that "from 2016 to 2022, average household spending on Internet services increased from about $54 per month to approximately $74. The increase could reflect changing preferences as people move to higher, more expensive tiers or price increases that we cannot observe in advertised plans."
That's not accurate. There are many new (and reintroduced old) laws project 2025 calls for. to use one concrete example: P20205 wants to revive a 19th century law, the Comstock Act, to ban any abortion medications and materials preventing materials from being sent through the U.S. Postal Service.you give them too much credit. Project 2025 people think ANY law or regulation is bad because its a "Regulation".