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The US broadband program -
too much like old times?
By: Scott Bradner
If I sounded a bit positive in the last column about the
state of part of the US government bureaucracy
I will make up for that this week.
Since the last column the Department of Commerce capitulated to the big
carriers, the FCC is actively ignoring consumers, the carriers are calling the
government's bluff and the FCC is asking if they should think about joining
this century when it comes to Internet speeds.
In the last column
(http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2009/080309bradner.html) I wondered if
the FCC had suddenly become activist. Maybe it has in one area but it does not seem like there has
been any kind of a transformation.
The FCC just issued a "Section 706" request for opinion as to
"whether broadband is being deployed to all Americans in a reasonable and
timely fashion" as required by section 706 of the Telecommunications Act
of 1996.
(http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-09-65A1.pdf) The request notes that in each of the
previous five Section 706 reports to Congress the FCC concluded that broadband
was being deployed "in a reasonable and timely fashion." Very few people other than a few
carriers and the FCC itself agreed with that assessment. The new request notes that "these
conclusions, however, rested on data increasingly criticized as lacking
sufficient detail to support robust analyses." I can't disagree with that conclusion. (See All's well with U.S. broadband
deployment (says FCC)
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2008/062408-bradner.html)
The
request notes that congress got fed up with the FCC's relying on crappy data
and told it to do better. (See
FCC: Consistent to a fault, but there is a (small) hope -
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2008/032508-bradner.html) The FCC did ask better questions this
time but has yet to finish analyzing the data so we do not know if they will
continue to play the role of Pollyanna.
The
request notes that under the Recovery Act the Department of Commerce is
supposed to come up with "a comprehensive nationwide inventory map of
existing broadband service capability and availability." Instead of fulfilling that requirement
the Department instead capitulated to the
big carriers and decided to ask for less information that it needs to follow
intent of the law. For example, it
will not ask what speeds customers actually get - something that most people
think would be useful information. (http://www.ntia.doc.gov/frnotices/2009/FR_mappingclarification_090807.pdf)
The request asks a few questions, two of which do not
actually need to be asked: "Is broadband available to all
Americans?" and "Is the current level of broadband deployment
reasonable and timely?"
Unless you are actually Pollyanna you already know the answer to these
questions.
In
another question the FCC asks permission to redefine broadband speed to a value
that most of the developed world has been assuming for most of this century.
They also want to know what the FCC can do to make things better. If they find a real answer to that, and
then act on it, it would be a first for the FCC which has largely been
irrelevant to the pace of broadband deployment.
The big carriers have decided to not
take the broadband stimulus funds.
You know, the funds that were designed to bring broadband Internet to
parts of the country that don't yet have it. The carriers seem to be trying to call the government's
bluff in an attempt to rid themselves of the pesky rules that say they have to
be fair to their customers.
(http://thehill.com/leading-the-news/big-firms-will-not-participate-in-broadband-program-2009-08-16.html)
Finally,
the FCC seems to have neglected to invite anyone who cares about actual
Internet users to their hearings.
(http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20090814/0324115877.shtml)
All in all, not a good
sign for the "us" vs the "them" of the status quo.
disclaimer: Cambridge
& Boston residents may think of Harvard as "them" but there are a
lot of us (Cambridge & Boston residents) who are part of that
"them."