On 21/02/2017 12:05 AM, Stephen Loosley wrote:
...
"nbn™ to cut the charges ISPs pay for traffic"
...
What if they didn't charge at all?

In response to:
<http://mpegmedia.abc.net.au/radio/local_brisbane/audio/201702/aak-2017-02-17-steve-baxter.mp3>
Baxter is certainly the archetypal market fundamentalist, but there are some interesting points in 
the interview. He has great difficulty accepting that telecommunications infrastructure is a 
natural monopoly. He speaks of "re-monopolising" and asserts that the results of 
competition are "much better than what we used to have".

Baxter seems outraged that the commercial sector isn't allowed to cherry-pick the most 
lucrative markets. He calls it "efficiently competing". I call it siphoning-off 
revenue, leaving the taxpayer to ensure equitable service to less-profitable markets. I 
do agree with him though, that selling-off the monopoly to a private operator would be 
monumentally idiotic.

One interesting factoid: a "unit" (1 megabit per second for a month) from LA to 
Sydney costs about 20¢-$1, depending on source. The same within Australia from nbn™: 
$17.50.

Baxter characterises the monopoly NBN as a public good, like the road system. 
With that, I agree. Despite history, he denies that competition in 
telecommunications infrastructure has failed. With that, I don't agree.

At the end, Baxter came up with a proposition that I'm going to take where he probably 
doesn't intend. He said "imagine if every household in Australia could connect to 
every other household in Australia at this blistering speed. People will find a use for 
that. It will be used for things that you and I can't fathom. It's mind-expanding."

I've pointed out before that implementing fibre to every premises on the mainland 
(plus Tasmania and quite a few other islands) would probably cost less than $1 per 
week for each premises over the service life of the infrastructure. We could 
therefore afford to write off the entire cost. I've always assumed that we'd 
charge for usage, so the investment would pay for itself, but suppose we didn't 
charge. What if we just kept paying our <$1 per week and allowed everyone to 
use the infrastructure cost-free? What would that do for Australia?
<https://www.facebook.com/groups/BIRRR/permalink/634327020109322/?comment_id=634405953434762>

Then:
Another connection that occurred to me overnight (amazing what the dozing mind 
comes up with).

Baxter notes that no commercial lender would provide nbn™ funding to cover a cost 
blowout. 
<http://www.afr.com/technology/web/nbn/pbo-raises-concerns-over-governments-risky-nbn-loan-and-88bn-budget-impact-20161214-gtar71>
 Prospects for the mutilated network are simply too poor. That gels with a comment in 
an article which was, I think, linked on BIRRR. The upshot of that was that 
rebuilding the NBN could be an issue for the 2025 election.

If so, then an investment that should last a century or so would need to be rebuilt after 
less than a decade. The "superior managers" in our Coalition government seem to 
be on track to waste the better part of $50 billion.
<https://www.facebook.com/groups/BIRRR/permalink/634327020109322/?comment_id=634599513415406>
--
David Boxall                    |  Dogs look up to us
                                |  And cats look down on us
http://david.boxall.id.au       |  But pigs treat us as equals
                                                   --Winston Churchill
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