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Fast Internet for
individuals and businesses?
By: Scott Bradner
On August 29th the Washington Post
ran an article on "Japan's Warp-Speed Ride to Internet Future.
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/28/AR2007082801990.html) The article painted a quite impressive
picture of the current and future state of residential Internet service in
Japan while not saying much good about what has been happening in the U.S. I expect that the pictures the article
paints of high-speed Internet service for both Japan and the U.S. are a bit
over rosy when it comes to what is actually going on for homes and
significantly over rosy when it comes to business Internet options.
The core observation of the
article is that competition enabled by government regulation has produced an
environment where many people can get Internet services at far higher speeds
than are available in the U.S. at a far lower cost. Non-fiber based broadband services tend to be 5 to 10 times
faster than what the U.S. homeowner can expect and fiber-based services are 3
or more times faster. The article
attributes the availability of these services to the fact that government
regulators forged the local telephone company to unbundle the copper phone
lines and offer anyone the opportunity to rent the copper wires into a home for
about $2 a month. Congress in the
US wanted to force the same type of unbundling but the FCC and the courts
removed most of the regulations.
The distance between homes and
telephone central offices in Japan is generally less than in the US and the
speed of DSL services depends, to some degree, on the distance. The $2 per month fee for the connectivity
enabled competitors to offer cheap ($22/mo) Internet service at a significantly
higher data rate than in the US.
Verizon is offering the FIOS
fiber-based service in some parts of its territory
(http://www22.verizon.com/content/consumerfios/) but the highest speed service
it offers is less than 1/3 the 100 Mbps service that NTT now offers in Japan.
The Post article did not talk
about the specific features of the Internet services being offered in Japan but
my guess is that they are the same as the telephone company (and cable company)
residential services in the US -- they only offer half the Internet. You can download and upload at
your whim but you cannot participate in offering Internet content. For example, the Verizon terms of
service for subscribers of their broadband Internet service (which include both
DSL & FIOS) (http://www.verizon.net/policies/popups/tos_popup.asp) cannot
be used to "host any type of server whether personal or commercial in
nature." So a subscriber
cannot run a web server, email server or any other service that would make the
subscriber a full member of the Internet community.
The lack of an ability to host
servers is not all that big a deal for most current Internet users but can be
critical for business users. For a
lot more money, subscribers to Verizon's "Business DSL" service are
permitted to host at least some types of servers. (http://www22.verizon.com/content/businessdsl/faqs/faqs.htm)
Verizon's terms of service for Business FIOS (http://biz.verizon.net/policies/tos_policy.asp?version=fiber)
does not clearly say that servers can be hosted but I would hope that they
could be. Verizon has some very
silly rules about mixing "business" and "non-business"
services (http://www.complaintsboard.com/complaints/verizon-fios-internet-digital-tv-c2476.html)
so it might be hard to get what you want for a home-based business.
But the biggest problem is that FIOS is unavailable in
almost all of the country and the actual speed of DSL in most places is very
slow, especially if you host servers.
Maybe someday we in the US will get reasonable cost high-speed Internet
options but it may be a while.
disclaimers:
Despite the common impression, Harvard can be a reasonable cost option (http://www.hno.harvard.edu/gazette/daily/2006/03/30-finaid.html)
but the University has not provided an opinion on the reasonableness of
Internet services so I did instead in my own name.