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Continuing deceptions
By
Scott Bradner
The
FCC just released the 5th annual
report on the status of "High-Speed Services for Internet Access" in
the US and its possessions. (http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-259870A1.pdf)
Like its predecessors, this report is fundamentally misleading on a
number of fronts.
The
FCC produced this report and its predecessors
because Section 706 of the Telecommunications Act of
1996 (http://www.fcc.gov/telecom.html) directed the FCC to regularly
"initiate a notice of inquiry concerning the availability of advanced
telecommunications capability to all Americans" and from the results of
the inquiry determine "whether advanced telecommunications capability is
being deployed to all Americans in a reasonable and timely fashion." If the answer is ever no, the FCC is
required to "take immediate action to accelerate deployment of such
capability." The Act defined
"advanced telecommunications capability" as "high-speed,
switched, broadband telecommunications capability that enables users to
originate and receive high-quality voice, data, graphics, and video
telecommunications using any technology.
I
have no idea what Congress in all of its technical prowess thought they were
talking about when they mentioned high-speed broadband in the Telcom Act but
all the network people that I know would not consider any service of less than
a megabit per second as a "high-speed, switched, broadband
telecommunications capability. "
In
the first of its reports (See http://www.fcc.gov/broadband/706.html)
the FCC used the term "broadband" but it arbitrarily defined
broadband as a service supporting at least 200 Kbps in both directions.
Maybe because it became clear that few observers agreed with its
use of the term broadband to mean such a slow service and maybe because the
numbers were not going to be all that impressive the FCC has now dropped the
use of the term broadband and substituted "high-speed," which it
defines as at least 200 Kbps but it only has to be in one direction. Thereby halving its already low
requirement. This is misleading at
best.
It seems like the FCC has been able to confuse (deceive?) some in
the press who touted the growth in broadband usage based on the FCC
report. They also seem to have
confused the FCC Chairman who published an editorial in the July 7th Wall Street
Journal touting the growth of broadband deployment in the US. Maybe no one told
him that their own survey just reported on "high-speed" not
"broadband" access.
As I mentioned two years ago, which was the last time I looked at
one of these reports, ("Reading into the FCC's 'Net access stats" http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2003/0623bradner.html)
there are a lot of other problems with the FCC's approach. For example, its very misleading
assumption that a single subscriber to high-speed services in a zip code can
tell you anything about the actual availability of high-speed (never mind
actual broadband) service to people living in that zip code.
All
of the stats in the FCC report are 'up and to the right' and thus look
good. It's too bad that they
actually do not tell us all that much about Internet service that can actually
be used for "high-quality voice, data, graphics, and video
telecommunications." Maybe
someday we will find out but maybe not from the FCC.
disclaimer: Most of Harvard's stats are also up
& to the right but I've seen no university opinion on the FCC's use of such
stats so the above is my own rant.