I'll duck after this post, but I by and large tend to agree with the basis
of the article.

Scottie, exactly what regulation would you recommend?

What has regulation solved in the past 11 years?  By and large, I've not
seen a single bit of FCC regulation that has had a net positive impact for
getting access to the consumer, especially post 2000 (it was probably a good
force behind making dialup Internet access widely available and affordable).


We had over 11 years of forced network unbundling for the ILECS (ie where
the ILECs are required to sell the bare copper at cost).  The idea, of
course, was to help service providers get on their feet while they were
building out their own network.  By and large, for a policy standpoint, it
did very little to actually increase network buildout.  Almost all of the
CLECs took the easy money of reselling the Bell networks and ran, making
agreegates of billions of dollars and not really building out any network to
speak of.  (Yes, there are some exceptions, but, this sums up the general
problem).

Forced wholesale access of the physical layer / network layer does
absolutely nothing to increase availability and, in fact, actually hurts
availabilty.  The ISP / CLEC that is basically reselling ILEC copper is not
connecting anyone who wouldn't / couldn't have been connected via the ILEC.
However, because the ILEC is less profitable due to forced reselling, then
they can't buildout as much infrastructure (theoretically).

The only real change in FCC policy in the past 11 years (fundamentally) is
that more people actually have to provide the services that they are
selling.  It's harder now to buy Bell DSL service, stick your own label on
it, and say that you're competing with Ma Bell.  All in all, I think that's
a good thing.

I understand that it isn't necessarily economically efficient to have
multiple sets of copper / coax going to the same house / office building,
and that telecommunication companies often constitute a natural monopoly of
sorts.  Forced selling of the network layer still doesn't get any new people
access to the

Now, if they wanted to successfully regulate the market, force a separation
of the network layer and the physical layer into two separate companies, a
model that is being vaguely adopted for some muni-funded developments.

The fact of the matter is that the US is doing pretty damn well at broadband
deployment, and, corruption aside, most of the current administration's
policies have been fairly benificial towards making broadband more widely
available (with some very major exceptions).  The US is fairly far down on
the list statistically; however, comparing US to Japan or European markets
is not an accurate comparison.  Sure, there is fiber available for
$25/month in many countries...can you profitably deploy fiber in Idaho at
$25ARPU?  Montana?  Kansas?  North Dakota?  Is bad FCC policy to blame?  Or
the fact that this is a big country with a lot of empty space...something
that doesn't affect most of the countries that are "beating" us in broadband
development.

Is the government policy hurting the independent ISPs?  Really?  Given the
huge regulatory requirements that exist on the ILECs, and the relative
freedom that the independents operate under, I can't really see the
independent industry as being hurt by government policy.

BTW, I do agree that the FCC is in the pocket of the telco's...and so on and
so forth.  However, most of the changes have, nevertheless, been positive
changes.  The industry does need less regulation, IMHO.  As long as there is
interconnection is manditory, there really doesn't need to be much more
regulation.  Don't like AT&T?  Build your own network...(as most of you are
doing).  Expand.  Grow.  Acquire customers...you know, compete and all that
sort of good capitalistic stuff...

-Clint Ricker
Kentnis Technologies




On 7/24/07, Peter R. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Mike Hammett wrote:
> 3 mbit is not fast.  The US IS behind other countries, there's no
> point in whining about it.  Yes, there are very substantial reasons
> why our numbers don't look as good as theirs, but there's no need to
> skew the system to make us look better...  just solve the problem.
>
>
>
> Fixed wireless is broadband.  WIFI hotspots, cell phones, etc. are not
> broadband (maybe the cell broadband cards).  The reason our numbers
> are climbing is because this has been a problem for some time and
> we're working on fixing it.  It takes a lot to change things like that
> for the third most populous country in the world.
>
>
>
> Perhaps it should be measured per household and not per capita, I dunno.
>
>
>
> The reason why there's less competition elsewhere is because what is
> present is doing a good enough job!  Their telcos have delivered 15
> meg DSL for years, while ours don't yet offer it.  That's why cable is
> taking on so well here.  It surely isn't because anything connected to
> Comcast has a good price point (DSL and satellite TV are both better
> values).
>
>
>
> -----
> Mike Hammett
> Intelligent Computing Solutions
> http://www.ics-il.com
If they change the definition to 1MB, EVDO won't count and neither will
IDSL and DSL Lite. The numbers of BB users in the stats will drop - the
telcos will look like they have very few BB subs since about 10-20% buy
Lite (depending who you believe). So the FCC will never voluntarily
change the definition.

BTW, in countries with deep BB penetration, the regulators are TOUGH -
as in the FCC Chairman does not have Ivan and Ed's hands up his butt so
he can talk like Charlie McCarthy.

But ALL of that is beside the point. End of the day, YOU guys have to
find, acquire and retain profitable customers. No matter what the
regulatory or competitive environment looks like.

- Peter @ RAD-INFO, Inc.


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