Directly from the author...




-----Original Message-----
From: Telecom Regulation & the Internet
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Bruce Kushnick
Sent: Tuesday, January 31, 2006 2:45 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [CYBERTEL] BOOK: $200 Billion Broadband Scandal: Verizon, SBC,
Qwest, BellSouth


Teletruth News Alert: January 31st, 2006

Contact info at the end.

For details about the book, chapters, highlights, etc.
http://www.newnetworks.com/broadbandscandals.htm

$200 Billion Broadband Scandal

New investigative ebook offers micro-history of Verizon, SBC, Qwest, and
BellSouth's (the Bell companies) fiber optic broadband promises and the
consequence harms to America's economic growth because they never delivered
and kept most of the money, about $200 billion.

New York: This is one of the largest scandals in American history. America
is 16th in the world in broadband and the US DSL current offerings are 100
times slower than other countries such has Japan and Korea. How did we go
from Number 1 in the web to 16th in broadband and falling?

*   Are customers owed $2000 for a fiber optic service they paid for but
never 
received? Did towns and cities, libraries and schools, government agencies, 
and every residential and business customer subsidize new networks that
never showed up?
*    Did America lose $5 trillion in economic growth, $500 billion annually,
because of these missing networks?

Broadband Scandals is a well-documented expose, 406 pages and 528 footnotes.
Using the phone companies' own words (and well as other sources), the book
outlines a massive nationwide scandal that affects every aspect of state of
the Internet. Not only the web but broadband, municipalities laying fiber or
building wifi networks, not to mention related issues such as such as VOIP,
cable services, the cost of local phone service, net neutrality, the new
digital divide, and even America's economic growth.

The fiber optic infrastructure you paid for was never delivered.

Starting in the early 1990's, with a push from the Clinton-Gore
Administration's "Information Superhighway", every Bell company - SBC,
Verizon, BellSouth and Qwest - made commitments to rewire America, state by
state. Fiber optic wires would replace the 100-year old copper wiring. The
push caused techno-frenzy of major proportions. By 2006, 86 million
households should have had a service capable of 45 Mbps in both directions,
(to and from the customer) could handle over 500 channels of high quality
video and be deployed in rural, urban and suburban areas equally. And these
networks were open to ALL competition.

In order to pay for these upgrades, in state after state, the public service
commissions and state legislatures acquiesced to the Bells' promises by
removing the constraints on the Bells' profits as well as gave other
financial perks. They were able to print money - billions of dollars per
state - all collected in the form of higher phone rates and tax perks.
(Note: each state is different.)

*    ADSL is not what was promised and paid for. It goes over the old copper
wiring, can't achieve the speed, has problems in rural areas and is mostly
one-way.
*    0% of the Bell companies' customers have 45 Mbps residential services.

Harms and Outcomes

This investigative book isn't just a history, but a warning - the Bell
companies can not be trusted with our digital future. Worse, what they have
done has resulted in serious repercussions to local, state and national
economy.

*    The public subsidies for infrastructure were pocketed. The phone
companies
collected over $200 billion in higher phone rates and tax perks, about $2000
per household.

*    The World is Laughing at US. Korea and Japan have 100 Mbps services as
standard, and America could have been Number One had the phone companies
actually delivered. Instead, we are 16th in broadband and falling in
technology dominance.

*    Harm to the economy. Five trillion dollars was lost because new
technologies
and services that America would have developed, happened in Korea.
Municipalities around America are waking up to the fact that the phone
companies failed to deliver and are now doing Wifi and fiber-based
work-arounds.

Broadband Scandals delivers serious revelations. In fact, the book has been
designed as the data source for Teletruth's complaint to the FTC against SBC
and Verizon.

*    The promised networks couldn't be built in 1993 and state laws were
changed
based on "deceptive speech". The technology today still has problems
delivering 500 channels.

*    The phone companies pulled a bait and switch. In order to offer DSL
over
copper, it was not necessary to have state regulation changed. Their plan
was to get rid of regulations and enter long distance.

*    The Bell mergers resulted in the death of the state plans for fiber
optic
broadband. Over 26 states had fiber optic projects closed when the mergers
of SBC and Verizon were completed. That affected almost 80% of all phone
customers in the US.

Broadband Scandal contains some additional special chapters.

*    20th Anniversary Summary of the Bells' Financials. The core of the book
is a
20-year analysis of revenues, profits, construction, etc.. Starting in1984,
their own data shows revenues up 128%, and concludes profits shot through
the roof on the promise of broadband. Meanwhile, compared to revenues,
employees are down 65%, construction down 60%. Why did prices increase?

*    Case Studies: New Jersey, California, Massachusetts, and Pennsylvania.
-
State-by-state the book outlines the same pattern of deception. By 2010,
100% of New Jersey is supposed to have 45 Mbps service; by 2000, California
should have had 5.5 million homes completed, and each state paid billions
for services they never received.

*    Verizon's "FIASCO" and SBC's' "Dim-Speed" - Verizon and SBC are rolling
out
new fiber optic services but want the laws changed again. These services are
crippled, closed networks that do not fulfill the state obligations, like
New Jersey and can't compete globally. FIOS's top speed is only 35% of the
Asian standard, and yet it cost $199 vs Korea, $40 for 100 Mbps.

*    Fake and co-opted consumer groups, biased non-profit think tanks are
now the
major force in broadband regulation and policy. The book goes into groups
like Consumers for Cable Choice, TRAC, APT, Issue Dynamics and New
Millennium Council and how these groups are attempting to block
municipalities from offering new services to harming new services, like

*    VOIP. These groups are sending out deceptive messages that make the
formulation of the policy that is in the public interest impossible.

Broadband Scandal's conclusion: Publicly paid for infrastructure is being
held hostage and needs to be freed. Customers funded the fiber optic
networks and the Public Switched Telephone Networks (PSTN) should be opened
to ALL competition with strict rules of Net Neutrality. The Bells have
harmed America's economic growth and our global competitiveness.

Investigations into all of the monies collected in the name of fiber optic
broadband in America should start immediately. These investigations should
include how the Bells improperly funded their DSL and long distance
rollouts. The Bells should be forced into refunds or giving the money to
municipalities. This would be a better solution than allowing the companies
who have harmed our digital future to control America's digital destiny.

Author. According to Broadband Reports: "Bruce Kushnick has been dubbed
everything from the 'Leading Visionary in the Telecom Industry' to a 'Phone
Bill Fanatic'; but what's certain is that nobody in the industry is ignoring
him." Kushnick has been a telecom analyst for 24 years, and is one of the
founders of Teletruth, an independent customer advocacy group focusing on
broadband and telecom issues, as well as executive director of New Networks
Institute, a market research firm.

Teletruth was a member of the FCC Consumer Advisory Committee in 2003-2004
and has active cases with the IRS, FCC and FTC pertaining to broadband and
the cost of the networks. Research through Teletruth's phone bill auditing
services has led to class action suits and major refunds for phone bill
overcharging,

Reporters and reviewers, write for your complimentary copy.
For a Table of Contents, roadmap, a chapter, the introduction, and more...
http://www.newnetworks.com/broadbandscandals.htm

Read what the pundits and experts are saying, "talented, persistent,
honest"...  "brilliantly documented this fraud" ... "stunning in its
implications." 
"Anyone who wants the U.S. to thrive in this connected future should read
Kushnick's book."

Ebook only: $20
406 pages, 528 Footnotes, 72 Exhibits.

Contact: Kelly Deegan, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Bruce Kushnick, [EMAIL PROTECTED] , 718-238-7191



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