From another list

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Bill B
Sent: Thursday, March 11, 2010 2:25 PM
To: [email protected]; Droid Discussion Group
Subject: [DroidDoes] The FCC Wants You to Test Your Broadband Speeds

 

 

 


Sent to you by Bill B via Google Reader:


 

 


The FCC Wants <http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2010/03/fcc-broadband-test/>  You 
to Test Your Broadband Speeds


via Epicenter <http://www.wired.com/epicenter>  by Ryan Singel on 3/11/10

 

 <http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/epicenter/2010/03/broadband-testing.gif> 
broadband-testingThe FCC is asking the nation’s broadband and smartphone users 
to use their broadband testing tools to help the feds and consumers know what 
speeds are actually available, not just promised by the nations’ telecoms.

Starting Thursday, netizens can go to the FCC’s Broadband.gov site 
<http://www.broadband.gov/> , enter their address and test their broadband 
speed using one of two testing tools. iPhone and Android users can go to their 
respective app stores and download the FCC’s first ever mobile app, which will 
report to the feds exactly how slow your connection actually is. The FCC is 
requiring the street address “it may use this data to analyze broadband quality 
and availability on a geographic basis.”

Broadband connection testing isn’t new, and is freely available online, but 
this might mark the first time that individual tests help to lead to informed 
policy making.

Crowdsourcing this data is a brilliant move, given that telecoms have long 
fought against telling federal regulators what areas they cover and at what 
speed, arguing that information will be used by competitors to poach their 
customers. The data can also be used as a way to prevent telecoms from 
over-promising and under-delivering on upload and download speeds. If you 
listen closely you might actually hear the telecom companies hitting the 
backspace key to revise the speed numbers on their promotional fliers.

But the FCC isn’t forgetting about those left out of the broadband revolution 
and is asking those who live in a broadband “Dead Zone” by filling out a report 
online, calling the FCC at -888-CALL-FCC, faxing the email or even sending a 
letter through the Postal Service.

The announcement comes just six days before the FCC presents the first ever 
national broadband plan to Congress. Goals include 100 million Americans with 
100 Mbps service by 2010, bringing affordable broadband to rural and urban 
areas, and helping digital laggards get online.

The FCC is collecting IP addresses, along with physical addresses, but is not 
asking for names or e-mail addresses. They promise not to release the street 
addresses, with some exceptions noted in the privacy 
<http://www.broadband.gov/broadband-quality-test-privacy-statement.html>  
policy. A free Java plug-in is necessary to run the test.

Gentleman, start your browsers.

See Also:

*       The 
<http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2010/03/the-wired-interview-fcc-chair-julius-genachowski-on-broadband-google-and-his-iphone/>
  Wired Interview: FCC Chair Julius Genachowski on Broadband
*       Um, 
<http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2009/08/um-whats-broadband-asks-the-fcc/>  
What’s Broadband? Asks the FCC
*       Broadband 
<http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2009/08/broadband-is-this-generations-highway-system-fcc-director-says/>
  Is This Generation’s Highway System, FCC Chief Says
*       Cost, <http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2010/02/fcc-broadband-report/>  
Crotchetiness Keep Broadband Out of 1/3 of U.S. Homes
*       @USA: 
<http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2009/08/usa-were-writing-the-national-broadband-plan/>
  We’re Writing the National Broadband Plan!

 

 

 


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