Where I live you have 2 choices, xfinity or century link, at a max of 50 mbps for 50$ a month.
.
In NC a town called Wilson started a community ISP over a public fiber optic network named Greenlight that cost less and had better speeds than Time Warner Cable or Century Link. Shortly after the telecoms got a new bill passed that makes it much harder to start municipal ISPs because it's too hard for them to compete.
http://www.newsobserver.com/2014/08/27/4101819_wilson-asks-fcc-to-override-nc.html?rh=1
It's okay to provide power, water, gas, and other utilities for your towns, but not telecommunication.
...which is, in itself, a scary prospect.Only Google can save us.
I guess that could be the case... but in the case of high-speed countries like Korea, it was achieved by government incentive. So it wasn't really a glorious open and free market that made them leaders... it was aggressive government involvement.
Are ISP lobbies too stronk?
(my country is way way worse lol, 30Mbps will cost $180 a month)
I get 40Mb (4.5MB/s) and it costs me £20 a month on top of my typical satellite/phone subscriptionUnlimited usage. I could double that for an extra £10 a month.
Sorry =/
Worst thing is there are other countries with even better deals.
Then treat it like essential infrastructure, you asshat!Stop and let that sink in: Three-quarters of American homes have no competitive choice for the essential infrastructure for 21st-century economics and democracy, Tom Wheeler, chairman of the F.C.C., said in a speech last month.
It's not the presence of a monopoly that stops competitors starting up in this sector, but the cost that comes with entering it in the first place. Google does extremely well in the markets they enter as an ISP, and forces competitors to offer better services at a better cost, the problem is their expansion is very slow due to the cost of entering that market. You are right that real regulation is the only solution though.
how is prohibiting competition a level playing field?
US complaining about broadband internet.....come to Canada for a month it isn't pretty.
Yeah, gargantuan infrastructure cost is the biggest obstacle for new entry. But protectionist lobbying from large companies like Comcast and TimeWarner also plays a heavy role, particularly in high-profit areas (populous cities).I know there could be more competition in the States but it's pretty hard to bring high speed internet to every corner in such a huge country.
No shit.
I pay $70 for 30/6 internet only. I can step up to 50/10 for $120 though (still, internet only). Thankfully no caps but still it is ridiculously expensive. Knoxville, tn here.
Let's not forget this: http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/1529287
Verizon receiving $23 billion to roll out fios they fail to come through and just keep the money.
So is the reality that the entire open Internet has been exploited by the NSA, hackers, no doubt numerous unknown entities, and yes, even Google....which is, in itself, a scary prospect.
If you want Texas you can fucking have it. Take a bunch of other southern states with you so the US can finally progress.This could have something to do with the the size of the US.
![]()
![]()
I live in Germany and it blows my mind that Texas would be easily the biggest country in Europe.
I know there could be more competition in the States but it's pretty hard to bring high speed internet to every corner in such a huge country.
FWIW, I have written a letter (an actual printed-out letter) to the FCC about my immigrant's experience of America's terrible Internet and the dangers of undercutting net neutrality.
This could have something to do with the the size of the US.
I live in Germany and it blows my mind that Texas would be easily the biggest country in Europe.
I know there could be more competition in the States but it's pretty hard to bring high speed internet to every corner in such a huge country.
Are ISP lobbies too stronk?
(my country is way way worse lol, 30Mbps will cost $180 a month)
The whole problem stems from having private companies hold local monopolies. Internet should be a utility.
Bah, any true American has a physical copy of this movie.Americas slow and expensive Internet is more than just an annoyance for people trying to watch Happy Gilmore on Netflix.
In NC a town called Wilson started a community ISP over a public fiber optic network named Greenlight that cost less and had better speeds than Time Warner Cable or Century Link. Shortly after the telecoms got a new bill passed that makes it much harder to start municipal ISPs because it's too hard for them to compete.
http://www.newsobserver.com/2014/08/27/4101819_wilson-asks-fcc-to-override-nc.html?rh=1
It's okay to provide power, water, gas, and other utilities for your towns, but not telecommunication.
America is like a fat kid screaming at their parents because their Big Mac meal wasn't super-sized whilst Australia stands outside of the McDonalds, nose pressed against the glass and drooling because they haven't eaten in a week.
Australia has larger problems to deal with, often with teeth.
I think telecom companies need to be broken up again. Lack of competition creates high prices and non innovative services.
Every time Google Fiber moves into an area, all of sudden, everyone starts offering gigabit speeds at lower prices :/
It's such BS.
I love that the banner ad I'm getting on this page is for AT&T Internet.
I have time Warner and I'm getting 300/20 for 70.I only have time warner in my area. Which up untill recently was charging me 75$ for 15/2 speeds lol.
Google please save us.