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Our National Broadband Strategy is Hope Without Action
The Freedom to Connect Conference saw calls for a "national broadband
strategy" and although it's true that the current non-strategy is failing,
it's not clear what would succeed. FCC Commissioner Adelstein shared his
hopes for the future.
"We can help all of our nation's citizens," said FCC Commissioner Jonathan
Adelstein to the Freedom
to Connect conference. "We need to establish a real national broadband
strategy, one that preserves internet freedoms for everyone, no matter
how rich or how poor."
e-rate
Adelstein said that the necessity of the e-rate should be obvious now,
but it is not obvious to ISP-Planet. The ideals of the e-rate program
are good: provide broadband to those who would not otherwise have the
option of purchasing it.
The reality, however, is that the program is riddled with flaws, a subject
we have covered
for years. Although the program does pay
legitimate ISPs doing good work , it is also riddled
with fraud.
What the FCC has not done
"We're falling behind our global competitors," Adelstein said. "In other
countries, you can get more Mbps for less money."
He said that it's time that the FCC review its definition of broadband.
The FCC's definition
of broadband remains "data transmission speeds exceeding 200 kilobits
per second (Kbps), or 200,000 bits per second, in at least one direction."
This is ludicrous.
At ISP-Planet we believe that 1.5 Mbps, the current standard for copper
networks, will not be sufficient to meet future demand. We wrote at the
end of last year that 1.5
Mbps is "Dialup 2.0".
In June of 2006, the
U.S. ranked 12th in the world in subscribers per capita. Furthermore,
the U.S. is lagging behind the most advanced nations, such as Korea, Sweden,
and Japan, in the rollout of fiber.
What the FCC can do
The FCC needs to produce better data (see Flawed
FCC Data Guarantees Flawed Policy) because without that data, the
FCC's policies will be misguided. A recent GAO report (.pdf)
noted that the FCC admits its data is not intended to be the basis of
national policy but argues (footnote 3, page 3), "while FCC states that
its zip-code information is not meant to be a measure of broadband deployment,
some parties have used it in this manner because there are no other official
data on deployment of broadband across the country."
Better data would, we suspect, show that there are more gaps in deployment
than the FCC is willing to acknowledge, and that those gaps are in poor
and rural areas.
Adelstein said that there's much that Congress can do, including continuing
to fund the RUS program (that program is administered by the U.S. Department
of Agriculture, not the FCC, and has helped many small rural ISPs and
WISPs) and allowing better depreciation rules.
Adelstein was encouraging about municipal deployments. "Some argue that
the challenge of rural deployment can be solved by allowing communities
to tap their own resources," he said, leaving his own position on the
matter unclear.
On new wireless technologies, he was also well informed but very vague,
saying that "we need to find ways to allow cognitive radios to reach their
full fruition."
Questions and few answers
The question and answer session began with J.S. Snider of The New America
Foundation who asked whether the FCC would ever punish a telco. "The FCC
has been 99.99 percent carrot versus stick. You gave $50 billion worth
of spectrum. . . to incumbents. Sprint promised to [connect] 30 million
households, said they would begin a rapid buildout, but they haven't built
out anything. They got more spectrum in 2004. Now it's 2007 and they're
making more promises. I think they will build, but it's been 8 years.
. . of delay after delay. Where's the stick?"
Adelstein admitted, "DC likes to hand out carrots, not sticks. We need
to have more accountability."
Another questioner asked about the definition of net neutrality in the
decision on the merger between SBC and Bell South. At the time, Dave Burstein
of DSL Prime wrote, AT&T's
Net Neutrality Offer is Just Hot Air, noting that AT&T had offered
to not control only those parts of the network it is not able to control.
Adelstein admitted that the FCC might ignore the agreement and let AT&T
do anything. "The Chairman [Kevin Martin] said he will enforce the net
neutrality provision. In his statement afterwards, when he said he wouldn't
implement some sections. . . I think he was referring to special access.
I'm hoping he will enforce net neutrality."
For the moment, our national broadband policy appears to consist of
hoping that the FCC will enforce the law and the agreements that it signed
as it allowed the creeping re-monopolization of telephony.
ISP-Planet would like to recommend one simple idea: enforce the law.
Crack down on false advertising, fraudulent billing, slamming, and other
monopoly practices. Most basic of all is this: don't tell the telcos that
they don't need to obey their merger agreements. They're supposed to find
that out later, after they've violated the agreements with impunity.
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