ISPs Claim Title II Regulations Don't Apply To the Internet Because "Computers" 124
New submitter Gryle writes: ArsTechnica is reporting on an interesting legal tactic by ISPs in the net neutrality fight. In a 95-page brief the United States Telecom Association claims Internet access qualifies as information service, not a telecommunication service, because it involves computer processing. The brief further claims "The FCC's reclassification of mobile broadband internet access as a common-carrier service is doubly unlawful." (page 56)
Interesting argument (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Interesting argument (Score:4, Insightful)
Even if that wasn't the case, they're arguing AGAINST being a "common carrier".
Won't this make them responsible for any of the crap (death threats, libel, etc) that they distribute as part of them being an "information service"?
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Re:Interesting argument (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Interesting argument (Score:5, Informative)
Won't this make them responsible for any of the crap (death threats, libel, etc) that they distribute as part of them being an "information service"?
Yes, but with responsibility comes control. They will be able to censor and control what crosses their network, shut out competitors, and charge premiums. They will be able exploit their local monopolies to muscle into the content business.
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The ISPs are trying to have their cake and eat it too - be classified as an information service so they are not subject to net neutrality, but not be liable for for the information they're transmit
Re:Interesting argument (Score:5, Insightful)
The communication is between humans and humans. A human at one end craft content and store in on a computer in a accessible format. The end user then crafts a request for that information and sends it via the internet and the stored communication from the content creator is then delivered to the end user.
The ISP claim is a stupid as is possibly imaginable, easy proof, their claim basically is that an answer machine hooked into a phone service means that it is no longer a telecommunications service, or that a phone text message in not communications or that email is not communications or that forum posting in not communications or that chat is not communications or that instant messaging is not communications or a live video stream is not communications or that video chat is not communications. Their claim is so laughably stupid that the court should penalise them for making it.
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The FCC has discretionary authority precisely because the issues are too complex and changing to be tracked by legislation. Basically Congress is saying, let the experts decide. Bottom line, ISPs based their business on elements of the public domain including public airwaves and right of way originally given to power companies. If they had obtained or created the infrastructure on their own, it would be a different matter. But they didn't.
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Congress decided by giving the FCC the authority. In a nation of over 300 million people no legislative assembly could ever hope to directly deal with every possible permutation of policy decision or interpretation. I doubt there has been a legislaturw since the rise of the nation state that could.
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No they did not. The internet was never Title II except for the attempt now and a brief lived stent coming from a ruling in the Portland cable case in which was overturned about a year later on appeals.
The FCC and congress behind them have repeatedly took the position that the internet and computer communications were information services and the variants signifying the same leading up to that terminology being created in the mid 1990s. There is a long and complete record of the FCC treating computer commun
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And yes, I do see the FCC as "trying to change" the dynamics here so we can agree on that aspect of the discussion.
At the same time, to suggest that the Internet isn't rapidly taking over telecommunicat
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I cannot find any reference to Kevin Martin outside of some basketball player for some team I frankly have never heard of before. I couldn't say if you are right or wrong about the creation of the term itself.
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Kevin Martin [fcc.gov]
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I need a cite for this.
BTW, you do realize the cable service is not the same as internet service right? So if you do understand this, I'm not sure we are in disagreement. If not, there is our problem.
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FCC Classifies DSL as Information Service [techlawjournal.com] [fcc.gov]
In what respect do you believe is cable service different from DSL in this context? And while I do disagree with you in this assertion, I have a somewhat awkward assurance of your error that Kevin Martin also disagrees with you as can be seen in the link I supplied above.
Yes, that entire common carriage thing was such a nuisance what with those regulated utilities having to open up their networks to allow for competition. And we can all see exactly how well this decision has worked our given that most of us here in the US pay more for crappy service than most of the rest of the developed world. And while we're resting on our laurels, let's not forget Comcast, who has achieved the distinction of being recognized as having the worst customer service out of any corporation in our country.
Given that the internet, as we think of it today, hasn't been around for 47 years, what are you talking about? In fact, it was the common carriage rules which made it possible for all of those independent ISPs to exists.
On another note, how is it that you can make all these assertions without knowing who Kevin Martin was, what his leadership over the FCC did and what effect it had over this entire process?
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That doesn't say what you seem to think it says. All that shows is the formalizing of the ways they already had been treating cable internet. This was largely due to lawsuits and their response to them. There was absolutely no switch in policy which is why there was absolutely no need to release the newly adopted paper- there was no change in policy or procedure- just a formalizing of it.
Stop looking only far enough back in time that you think you found so
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But hey, should I be allowed to just come into anything you own and make it for the better without your permission or any specific act or law created by your elected officials?
As soon as the carriers surrender their granted right of way and allocations out of the public's spectrum, they can do whatever they want.
Until then, they have been placed under the FCC BY LAW.
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The same as they were after computer I and computers II and the interim reports to congress in 1996, 97, and 98.
The FCC has never taken the position that the internet was ever anything other than an information service. This is prominent and clear starting as early as 1968. The only thing that happened to differ was the Portland cable case temporarily said cable internet was title II but it was overturned on appeals in 2002. The FCC did not let anyone do anything other than what they maintained for the 34 y
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Information service is defined by law separate from what you are describing as an information service. It is as apposed to the legal definition of a telecommunications service. When speaking of such in pertaining to the FCC actions, we need to consider the legal definition and not the common one.
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Yes and what isps do now fits the legal definition of telecommunications service better than information services.
The term “telecommunications” means the transmission, between or among points specified by the user, of information of the user’s choosing, without change in the form or content of the information as sent and received.
The term “telecommunications service” means the offering of telecommunications for a fee directly to the public, or to such classes of users as to be effectively available directly to the public, regardless of the facilities used.
Whereas information service is supposed to be a superset of telecommunications service
The term “information service” means the offering of a capability for generating, acquiring, storing, transforming, processing, retrieving, utilizing, or making available information via telecommunications, and includes electronic publishing, but does not include any use of any such capability for the management, control, or operation of a telecommunications system or the management of a telecommunications service.
The problem is ISPs as they are now no longer offer anything to acquire, store, generate, transform, process, utilize or make available information via telecommunications. One could argue they offer retrieving but the same arguments would apply to phone systems given that you can dial with them.
Face it. They ar
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Who is telling you these lies?
Seriously, who is lieing to you about this 2002 crap? You are not the first person to bring it up, you are not the first person who
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What you argue here is true but what we have in the news now is not about measuring old stuff by old definitions but new stuff by old definitions. And because of this mismatch between old vs. new definitions the definitions should be changed. The definitions are so old that they do not apply even in the modem/BBS era.
Re: Interesting argument (Score:2)
You think Americans have a monopoly on spelling English words?
Re: Interesting argument (Score:4, Informative)
Penalise is the British English spelling you fuckwit.
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Re: Interesting argument (Score:2)
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My ISP has all sorts of content. They have pages to bill me, pages to sell me stuff, pages to log in and play with my router (I just put my own routers in - screw that), and all sorts of stuff. You can not really say that ISPs do not generate content. They facilitate content but, I imagine, they all generate some content even if it is just a billing interface. You could even say that they craft packets... But, I am already being pedantic enough.
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but who's interest is it in besides the ISPs to not be reclassified?
Anyone who values the ability to start up and run a business according to their own tastes, serving customers according to whatever arrangements they want to make with those customers. That's who. Most will fail, as most businesses do. But just because they're in the business of running private networks that happen to make peering arrangements with other private networks doesn't make them a common carrier. They don't WANT to be common carriers, because that prevents them from making decisions, based on the
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Official reclassification would probably change the legal status of all currently active legislations dependent on the 1934 act and possibly other obsolete definitions for information interchange. Changing those phrasings would open a "can of worms", requiring investigation of all those cases dependent on such obsolete definitions. Thus nobody directly related to clean the mess wants to change anything, creating a stand-off situation. Just a guess why nothing has been done and why people are just arguing ab
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Look it up http://www.thefreedictionary.c... [thefreedictionary.com], English spelling as in how it is spelt in England the home of the English language. Not stupid American spelling because special spelling was required for them because it seems they are a bit thick https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org].
So yes it does apply to the magazine when it is sent electronically. No it does not apply to the magazine when it is printed and sent via a truck and then van and then motorbike. I mean exactly how thick can you be, I thought I cou
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stupid American spelling
Except you're in an exchange with stupid Americans talking about an stupid American issue and stupid American businesses and their being subject to a stupid American law. And you're doing so on a stupid American web site with a primarily stupid American audience. I get it, you think we're stupid. Why are you here?
No it does not apply to the magazine when it is printed and sent via a truck and then van and then motorbike.
Why not? Some small publication with a small audience has no way to invest in a custom delivery method, and has to rely on a slower, more regulated, less efficient common carrier. But a larger, m
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Waaaaaaahhhhhh, it's not fair people are always making fun of americans (not all Americans of course not those North and South of the particularly cranking bit in the top middle half), their ignorance, spelling and their feets and inches, also their politicians, so many ass clowns on parade. Have you not never consider it is fun to make fun of American Exceptionlism, the ego, it's just so ripe for pricking. From my perspective it is more, bwah hah hah, then Waaaaahhh, obviously you look upon life through m
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Also, are computers not involved in routing service for POTS service? PSTN isn't run anymore by manual operators and hasn't for some decades now.
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There was a manual phone directory service in a small town that held on to it for cultural reasons. They ceased functioning about ten years ago, if I recall correctly. They were in the state I now call home, I did not live here then, and I think they were Byron Pond or something along those lines? Basically go left out of my driveway, head down 16, get on 17, and go down to Coburn Gore (spelling?). Take that left up (it takes you way back to Weld and to Farmington if you want to head that far and do not min
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No, you will get lost. Go RIGHT out of my driveway. The other way takes you to Eustis. Yes, I have to label my mittens - and keep them on a string.
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This argument looks like a copyright infringer claiming copyright doesn't exist because the music, photo, whatever passed through a computer where it was deconstructed into ones and zeros, making it data, which is not able to be copyrighted.
Like the parents-murdered who threw himself on the mercy of the court as an orphan.
IANAL, etc.
more interesting when the FCC said the same thing (Score:2, Interesting)
This argument was even more interesting 13 years ago when the FCC ruled "that cable modem service is properly classified as an interstate information service and is therefore subject to FCC jurisdiction." https://transition.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Cable/News_Releases/2002/nrcb0201.html [fcc.gov]
You might think that gives the ISPs a slam-dunk case, but what makes this complex is the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit's decision in the Portland case, which classified cable modem service as both an "information servic
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The Portland case doesn't really say that. It basically says that information services use telecommunication services to develop and deliver the information services. It in essence says cable companies were telecommunication companies when they offer telecommunications services carrying information services over their infrastructure.
http://www.techlawjournal.com/... [techlawjournal.com]
The news brief you linked to was about the FCC using this to develop and roll out broadband because it now has authority that can restrict or ov
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Which is why you are probably not a lawyer. Never, ever, assume good faith or commonsense. Never. I have dealt with the court system in so many different cases that, frankly, I am 100% certain that everyone involved (or those exposed long enough) are sociopaths. I feel bad for the liars that end up in the system - the ones that actually had altruism in mind. No, they become tainted.
Ask a lawyer (liar) what is the first word that comes to mind when you say, "Orange." Then ask them, "Explain your thought proc
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Contrariwise show me a form of telecommunication that does *not* involve computers. Even plain old telephone service. Even if you discount the digital switching equipment, the PBXs at business locations are computers.
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This person is wise in the way of the US Just Us System. Your legal-fu is worthy - I can tell by how you carry yourself.
Okay, I maybe smoked a little weed tonight. Maybe... It is mostly legal here but I can't be arsed to get the prescription. I can afford the fine. Call it my weed tax. You can not, realistically, go to jail for it here either. You can have pounds of the stuff and you get a $1000 fine. $350 for most amounts. You really gotta piss 'em off to get in trouble with it - I mean you need a gun, a b
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The definitions are from "47 U.S. Code 153 - Definitions" where:
---
(50) Telecommunications
The term “telecommunications” means the transmission, between or among points specified by the user, of information of the user’s choosing, without change in the form or content of the information as sent and received.
(24) Information service
The term “information service” means the offering of a capability for generating, acquiring, storing, transforming, processing, retrieving, utilizing
United States Telecom Association (Score:5, Funny)
The United States Telecom Association is arguing that its biggest service is not a telecom. Right...
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"He can go about his business."
"Move along."
The issue is not title 2 (Score:3, Insightful)
The issue is the franchise licenses that give cable companies last mile monopolies on internet service.
Open up last mile delivery of service to more providers... or you're handing ISPs a government backed monopoly contract.
Fiber optic cable is CHEAP. I could run cable from where I live to the trunk line for at most a couple grand... And that would service about 10 gigabit internet connections.
This whole issue is like the stupid debates we always have about entrenched government backed monopolies versus just "anyone"...
Look at what is happening with cellphones versus the land line providers. Land line prices are collapsing and that is because people are ditching them for cellphones which is a "less" monopolistic market.
Look, anyone that knows anything will tell you... give one company the ability to dictate prices and they're going to exploit it.
Period.
And the government really isn't any better here. You give the government the ability to dictate prices or control the service and they're going to do the same thing where they'll either slack off because you're not going to fire them if they're lazy... or they'll just bill you more through your taxes... and you can't even fire the fucks.
So look... if you want service that isn't shitty... you need some competition. You need people to be able to vote with their feet and their wallets. They have to be able to say "this service is shitty so I shall give it ZERO dollars and this service is superior so I shall give it whatever seems reasonable to me."
And that controls prices.
In any market or industry or situation where that is not happening market forces cannot control prices. Consumers have to have choices. And the choice between DSL and Cable is bullshit.
We shouldn't even be maintaining the copper lines anymore. Its fucking dumb. Fiber or choke on yak semen.
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While I agree with parts of your argument, land lines are expensive more because they have millions of miles of physical wires to maintain. Cell towers do not have this burden.
Also, Cell phone service for any smart phone is MUCH more expensive than landlines now if you are single. It's sort of like "$100 for 4" or "$100 for 1".
That said, I use smartjack (flawlessly) over my internet. $19 a year. It's mainly a backup to find my cell phone and for extremely long gaming calls (can't get one player to use
Re:The issue is not title 2 (Score:4, Insightful)
The cell towers buy internet bandwidth from wired networks and thus the cost of a cell tower is the cost of their share of land line bandwidth PLUS the cost of the tower.
Keep in mind further that the links that connect cities together either are not or REALLY should not be anything but fiber. If you're replacing cobber lines with more cobber lines... then you're dumb. Fiber is just cheaper. It should be what is run everywhere.
And while people will say "but we can't afford it"... I think they'd find the money damn quickly if competitors could run fiber along the same towers or in the same conduits to compete against them for customers.
They lethargy we see from the ISPs comes from the fact that people are legally forbidden on pain of getting their brains blown out from competing with them.
You cannot run competing cable. And that is why they fuck us.
As to cell phones being more expensive... this is a false comparison because you're not comparing the cost of JUST the cellphone telephone service. You're including the cost of text messaging and mostly the cellphone data services which are the bulk of those fees.
You can easily buy unlimited cellphone and texting plans for 25 USD. That's UNLIMITED. And if you want a metered plan then you can pay as little as 6 dollars a month if you're not using the system very much.
I'm personally paying about 18 dollars a month for my cell phone and I have a smartphone. I have a moto X second generation.
Now here people will say "but don't you miss anywhere wireless data"... about as much as you miss that on your laptop. Which is to say you care if you care but I think most people use wireless data because they basically get forced into it, dont' know how to turn it off, and then just get lazy about doing certain things.
A big one I hear all the time is "what about google maps, you need that right"... I have a lot of storage space on my phone and I use about 2 gigs of it for stored maps which gives me a comprehensive map of my own state and the four adjoining states. No data connection required. I turn on my GPS... that associates the GPS with the stored maps... and I can navigate just fine.
Here someone will say "what about email! Surely you need access to email at all times don't you!?"... no. Anyone that needs to get ahold of me right fucking now will call or text. I also have an email client set up on my home system that forwards alerts based on some message rules to my text message. Aka... I have some systems that will send me an email when something goes wrong with a system. That email is then forwarded to the text messaging gateway. I have a few of those set up for when some people email me. It doesn't send the whole email. It sends the name of the person and the subject line. Enough information for me to know whether I should turn on my data radio in my phone or not. I generally don't. I also find that wifi networks are pretty much ubiquitous at this point and all free. So what the fuck is the point? I spend 80 percent of my time inside one wifi hotspot or another. And in the remaining 20 percent... if you actually need me right MEOW... then fucking call or text you filthy barbarian.
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Pretty soon it will be smarter to have a "land line" format phone that actually connects to a local cell tower (no lines to maintain, install, etc.).
ATT has been doing exactly that [att.com] for quite some time now.
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A lot of the carriers have been doing the same. They did it with that money they collect from your phone bills designated to connect poor and rural areas. Instead of running land lines, they can build out towers for their cellular networks and claim compliance thereby getting their share of the cash.
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Only 10gbps get a dark fiber run and you can cost effectively get to 80gbps via a cwdm passive mux.
We should be decoupling provider services and the last mile with an all passive all optical last mile. Providers can meet at the CO (or backhaul or pay others to backhaul) and hand off a CDWM channel to the muni. Macsec encryption can keep the muni from sniffing anything. If the muni is smart it rolls out muni access. Throw in IPv6 and it become easy to have a single router send things across the muni next
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Yep. Exactly. The sad thing is that people's eyes glaze over when they see that and instead just say "hey ISP, I give you dictatorial control over the communication system of the entire community... because this is complicated and I don't want to deal with it."...
And the thing is that isn't that complicated really. What the City should be offering is conduits. A pipe in the ground where people can run cable. That's it.
I think politicians can manage empty pipes. If they can't... then gargling sulfuric acid m
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Why ipe in the ground fiberoptics from the 70's will carry that same 80+ gbps as what you install today. Not quite as far but no real matter.
Pipe have problems they get full, companies will relay the same infrastructure but in gear on poles to make it cheaper and less reliable. It starts to be a competitive advantage to have them full so the next guy can not put his own in place or have to wait. The last mile needs to be unified and firmly under muni control. Once you get to the CO it's trivial to throw
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If the pipe fills and the municipality charges a set fee for running cable then the city will be getting enough money to upgrade the cable.
As to the idea of some company wasting space in the cable with crap... if they're willing to pay for that space they can use it. The city will collect the money and use it to upgrade the cable.
Its not a big deal. Run a 1 foot diameter pipe down the street for busy areas and run a three to six inch pipe for more rural areas.
We should all have gigabit internet that is chea
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You're missing the point one pair to the CO per residence/office/building should suffice now and long into the future. Having the muni own the last mile let's providers enter a market without a massive build out. That increases competition which is good for the consumers.
Companies wasting space happens, it's an issue now in shared settings. You have at least a short term advantage to consume everything available so that your competitor has a longer build out time etc etc.
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I'm okay with the Muni offering a last mile hook up so long as they don't have a monopoly on the franchise.
If other ISPs can run last mile lines then I have no problem with the muni offering that service.
My issue is with a monopoly on the franchise. I don't want ANYONE to have a monopoly on it.
Not a corporation.
Not the muni.
FUCKING NO ONE.
Let me be very clear.
My problem is when the Muni says you CANNOT run last mile cable. THAT is my problem. Not who runs it. Anyone can run it that wants to run it so far as
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The problem is the last mile is a natural monopoly of sorts. If you have been to other countries you will often see telephone poles thick with wires from many companies. Abandoned wires from defunct companies, companies "accidently" damaging other cables, and generally a giant mess. That is the effect of a completely deregulated last mile.
A single fiber plant is that middle ground. For it to be fair everybody has to pay the same per wavelength and those proceeds have to go solely to maintaining/paying f
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Natural monopolies don't need governments telling you that you can't compete with someone by law.
Last mile is not a natural monopoly. Intel just about has a natural monopoly... its not total but they have a strong big of market dominance because they make a superior product at a price for that quality that competitors have a hard time matching.
And that is how natural monopolies work.
Government backed monopolies however work by the government saying "compete with X and I'll shoot you in the face."
Last mile h
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As I said you have apparently never been to a country that lets anything go up on a pole. Very soon they become unmanageable, wires start blocking out the view ruining common space. Burying them runs out even faster as good building practices have pretty wide exclusions zones between pipes.
Muni fiber is the middle ground everybody can compete offer whatever they want without ruining the commons. It's little different than forcing everybody to use the same poles or would you advocate every provider has to
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A tired argument with a standard response.
1. who says I'm letting you actually climb up the pole and do it yourself? Letting anyone run the cable does not mean I do not have civic engineers do it that are employees of the muni.
2. who says I have to use poles instead of conduits?
3. who says that I can't charge use fees that allow me to scale conduits or poles to demand so that infrastructure doesn't get congested?
Just because something is fucking hilariously disorganized in India doesn't mean that a better r
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1 By anyone meaning all comers pay a fee (12c a pole a year around me last I checked), install by certified linemen.
2 You keep saying conduit, it realy does not work well for last mile. It's more expensive and you can still only run one cable. Direct burial cable and tunnels are the general used options. Tunnels give you the flexibility but are great initial expense and upkeep.
3 Your limited to a 2d layout for buried cable, if you stack things you can not maintain them in any reasonable manner. So you'r
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1. who is allowed to run cable is restricted to the franchise holders and that's frequently one or two companies.
2. high ways are more expensive than dirt roads... one becomes more practical than the other as traffic increases. If you only have a couple people running cable then the poles are fine. The criticism you're laying is what happens when there is too much cable to run on a pole... to which I responded... conduits. If your'e running that much cable then you can use the fees you're collecting to run
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What was that, AC troll? I can't hear you... login and try again.
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I was up skiing during the Great Ice Storm of 98. Every power line was down - 14 days and 13 nights without power. The entire time? I had a POTS connection. Copper is not going anywhere. Not until Fiber is run underground to replace it. And that, my good man, is a fuckton more than a couple of grand. We rural people tend to vote more so, yeah... It is not going to happen any time soon. I still keep a regular house phone. I don't know the number and I do not actually recall using it now that I think about it
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can you cite your wind mill?
As to copper... my uncle has a similar set up in the hills. Off grid... He ran a fiber line from his house about a mile from the road to the road. And then had internet/phone/tv installed there... then he moves the entire signal to his house using a media converter through the fiber.
Long story short... he the comforts of a fully wired house while being extremely rural.
Fiber is the way to go.
Interesting or desperate (Score:2)
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So what. (Score:4, Insightful)
EVERY call made in the US today is processed by "computers", long gone are the days when you had old style analog switches and rotary phones.
Since every call made is already processed in one way or another by a computer this has set a precedent over the past several decades that gives the FCC the legal power they need to enforce these rules.
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This.
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Yes exactly. There is going to be very little technical difference between routing phone call data and internet data. In fact isn't a phone call a 64kbs data stream?
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Last I checked(it's been 15+ years) voice calls are 56kbps over a 64k channel(the extra was for signalling I believe) and data is 64kbps. Modem calls count as voice.
Back in the day when telcos starting doing more voip internally on their networks and I was still working for an ISP we noticed that our users were getting unusually slow connections and a lot of dropped calls.
After a few calls to our rep at PacBell she got to the bottom of it... according to her and a manager she brought on the live they were
telecomms have been using computers for a while... (Score:1)
..basically since 1891, when the Strowger switch was invented. And if you don't know the story behind this; it's really worth looking up if only to discover that undertakers were an important part of early telephony progress...
If that's the best they can come up with... (Score:2)
Long distance since the 80's, anyone? (Score:4, Insightful)
All phone calls are processed by computer... (Score:2)
My mother worked on the last analog telephone central in Czech Republic, which was put out of commission before the end of last century. Since then every single phone call has been processed by a computer. I doubt there are any analog telephone centrals left anywhere, because at the time you had one floor of entire building replaced by a machine that fit in a broom closet.
So this argument could be applied to every single service that is actually regulated by title II and so is moot.
Telecoms without computer processing (Score:2)
No problem with not being "FCC provider" (Score:1)
The dividing line (Score:2)
We see certain for profit entities try to skip over that line once again to get the best of both worlds and none of the responsibilities.
It's like they're in a jumprope contest.
And... (Score:2)
Internet access qualifies as information service, not a telecommunication service, because it involves computer processing.
... So does actual telephone service - which is *clearly* a telecommunication service.
Sure! (Score:4, Insightful)
Honestly, force internet to be like a utility. dont let them be for profit and force them to spend at last 50% of all profits on infrastructure build out.
These asshole CEO's don't want to do the right thing, then it needs to be done at gunpoint with regulations and laws. Let the SWAT teams raid a CEO office for once instead of a poor persons house.
Communications Act of 1934 (Score:1)
From the Communications Act of 1934:
(43) TELECOMMUNICATIONS.--The term "telecommunications" means the transmission,
between or among points specified by the user, of information of the user's choosing, without
change in the form or content of the information as sent and received.
Sounds familiar? Thus these are not telecommunications:
- Has communication between or among points NOT specified by the user (i.e. a switch, unknown routers)
- Sent information doesn't match received, for example added OSI layer header
Oh wow! (Score:1)
Double-edged sword (Score:2)
So do you want to be forced to use non-computer based solutions for your Title II-regulated phone systems? Be careful what you wish for, $MEGACORPS.
Re:Common carriers are for cows. (Score:5, Interesting)
The pig says 'oink'.
The chickens say 'cluck cluck'.
The horse says 'neigh'.
The duck says 'quack quack'.
The geese say 'honk honk'.
The sheep say 'baaaa'.
The dog says 'woof'.
The frog says 'ribbit'.
The coyote says 'aaaahwoooooo'.
The rooster says 'cockadoodledoo!'.
The cat says 'meow'.
And the turkey says 'gooble gobble'.
Now please go play with your See and Say [phonographia.com] quietly somewhere else, k? The adults are having a conversation, sweetie. If you're good, maybe you'll get a cookie later.
************
Now, then, ISPs: I have only one thing to say about them and all their little temper tantrums they keep having: MUH PROFIT MARGIN. Get over it, ISPs, and get correct.
Re: (Score:1)
what does the fox say?
Re:Common carriers are for cows. (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
The fox says 'Yiff.'
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
For those of us who may be in a slightly good mood... You prompted me to go find this:
http://www.hobbyfarms.com/hobb... [hobbyfarms.com]
Yes, it is an "interactive" See And Say. It didn't even make me lower my security or prompt me for anything. Nice...