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Best
of the ISP-Lists
CLECs See No Future in Residential Service
CLECs will focus on business services, now that the FCC
has decided that broadband deployment will speed up if the cable and phone
companies are handed a duopoly.
On the ISP-CLEC
list in August, after a long discussion about the current regulatory climate
(see ), EL asked:
So, is it the opinion of the participants in this facilities
discussion that the facilities based CLEC will still be in a decent
position to get and keep business in a REBOC/ILEC, FCC defined competitive
market place but have to pay more for interconnection products and getting
to the customer premises?
[MR argued] "I certainly think so. Sure,
we're having to pay more. Sure, it's harder than it used to be. But we're
doing well. Now, I agree that this FiOS thing is troubling and anti-competitive.
I think there should be a regulatory prohibition against removing copper
plant simply because the ILEC is offering fibre service to a customer.
We'll see if that flies though. I think the best thing we can do on this
issue is to get some press. Make the public aware that a choice of FiOS
today means no choices later, ever. How many of them will agree to 'try'
FiOS then?"
[VV grumbled] "There'll be ads all over
radio and TV telling them how wonderful it is and how they can 'surf'
even faster and to take this really low introductory pricing and they'll
follow that pied piper wherever he leads them."
[EL replied] "So the CLEC (over time)
must look at a shrinking market share? Or the CLEC must install its own
fiber services. Would that be a correct statement? Then given (assuming
the FCC rules do not get any better) a shrinking business/enterprise market,
where is the CLEC in five years?"
[MR suggested] "I would say that it
puts us right back where we started, with the business model that the
regulators complained loudly about. It means we can only serve the highly
profitable commercial subscribers, who likely are in a multi-tenant building
that is still on-net. I don't see Verizon being able to take multi-tenant
structures off-net for any reason. We could still survive doing that,
but it leaves those poor residential subscribers left with no options,
which was (I thought) the big contention with the regulators. We'll see
what shakes out, but I suspect that if that begins to occur, rule changes
would be in the offing. Especially after the white house changes hands
again."
MP pointed to an article in the Washington
Post, suggesting that some people might be beginning to realize what is
going on:
Broadband
Is Too Important to Be Left to Cable-Phone Duopoly
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