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Dollar-a-Holler News: Former Congressmen-Turned-Industry-Hacks Attack Unlimited Internet

Ford, Jr.: Making his former public service pay-off with dollar-a-holler advocacy on behalf of Big Telecom.

Former U.S. Senator John Sununu and former U.S. Congressman Harold Ford, Jr., share several things in common:

  1. Voters tossed them out of their elected offices (or refused to elect them to higher ones) for poorly representing their interests;
  2. Both are honorary co-chairs of Broadband for America, the country’s largest Big Telecom-industry-funded astroturf effort;
  3. They don’t understand the concept of content provider traffic-hosting, and the traffic expenses they already pay.

Both jointly penned a letter in the San Jose Mercury News accusing Netflix of enjoying undeserved streaming profits, “subsidized” by large cable and phone companies that deliver broadband Internet service to paying customers:

Netflix’s current pricing model allows unlimited downloads for $7.99 per month. Netflix saves, with every download, approximately 40 cents that would otherwise be paid to the U.S. Postal Service. If the average customer downloads 10 movies and TV shows a month, Netflix will save $4 a month for each of its 23 million customers.

Obviously these massive transmissions over the Internet are not really free. Someone is paying for them. That “someone” is the millions of broadband subscribers, whether or not they are Netflix customers.

How is that fair?

Netflix argues that the marginal cost to the network providers of streaming a half-hour TV show to a residential customer is “one penny.” This ignores the hundreds of billions of dollars in sunken network investments needed to create that one-penny marginal cost efficiency at the customer’s end.

[…] It hardly seems fair to make users of these services pay more in order to subsidize Netflix’s costs of delivering their videos online.

This call for a fairer pricing model and a more realistic long-term investment strategy has bipartisan support. In 2010, the FCC said government policy should not discourage “broadband providers from asking subscribers who use the network less to pay less, and subscribers who use the network more to pay more.”

Neither former elected official comes to the debate with any direct experience as a telecommunications specialist, but since when does that matter.  They know how to deliver talking points-on-demand.

Sununu: New Netflix Math

Netflix, like every content producer on the Internet, pays hosting and content delivery fees to place their content online.  Netflix hires a content delivery network to regionally distribute its video streaming to ensure the best, and most efficient route to ensure an uninterrupted viewing experience.  While Netflix’s incremental costs may seem low, they still amount to millions of dollars annually in transport costs.  And the online video streamer already pays extra additional fees to some of the largest broadband providers in the country, including Comcast.

The other factor Ford and Sununu ignore is the bill at the other end — the inflated cost for broadband service consumers already pay.  For $40+ per month, consumers pay for service precisely to obtain the content of their choosing, and millions choose Netflix.  That monthly broadband fee, far in excess of the actual cost to provide the service, more than compensates providers for the “network investments” that are now declining at a rapid rate, even as broadband bills keep rising.

No doubt part of your broadband bill goes to pay for industry astroturf operations like Broadband for America, which doesn’t represent a single consumer, even though you are paying for it.  Of course, the marginal cost to hire industry lobbyists and their former legislative friends who today represent their interests (not yours), is pretty low on a per subscriber basis.  It hardly seems fair to us that subscribers should be footing the bill for groups like Broadband for America, who regularly advocate against consumers’ best interests.

If providers are looking for more money to improve their networks, perhaps they can start by cutting off Broadband for America, an industry mouthpiece that cannot even get its core arguments anywhere near actual facts.

FCC to AT&T: Justify Your Spectrum Demands, Merger With T-Mobile

Phillip Dampier August 9, 2011 Astroturf, AT&T, Broadband "Shortage", Competition, Consumer News, Editorial & Site News, Public Policy & Gov't, Rural Broadband, T-Mobile, Wireless Broadband Comments Off on FCC to AT&T: Justify Your Spectrum Demands, Merger With T-Mobile

The Federal Communications Commission today raised the hurdle for AT&T when it told the wireless company it would consider its proposed acquisition of wireless spectrum from Qualcomm in concert with its application to acquire T-Mobile USA.

The FCC wrote both AT&T and Qualcomm regarding the ongoing review of both transactions:

“The Commission’s ongoing review has confirmed that the proposed transactions raise a number of related issues, including, but not limited to, questions regarding AT&T’s aggregation of spectrum throughout the nation, particularly in overlapping areas. As a result, we have concluded that the best way to determine whether either or both of the proposed transactions serve the public interest is to consider them in a coordinated manner at this time.”

AT&T Donates $9,000 to the United Way of Northwest Florida, which promptly returns the favor with a nice letter to the FCC supporting the telecom company's agenda.

At issue is whether AT&T is warehousing wireless spectrum it actually has little intention to use and whether or not AT&T is being honest when it suggests it needs to acquire T-Mobile USA to expand the number of frequencies open for its growing wireless network.

Critics of the merger claim AT&T has plenty of unused spectrum available to deliver service, particularly in the rural areas AT&T claims T-Mobile can help it serve.  T-Mobile is not well-known for its service in smaller communities and rural areas, preferring to rely on roaming agreements to achieve national coverage.  With its proposed acquisition of valuable spectrum in the 700MHz range from Qualcomm, excellent for penetrating buildings and delivering reliable service, the FCC may be wondering if the proposed merger with T-Mobile is necessary at all.

Gigi Sohn from Public Knowledge doesn’t think so.

“We are pleased that the Commission has decided to consider AT&T’s purchase of Qualcomm spectrum in the context of AT&T’s takeover of T-Mobile.  It doesn’t matter whether both transactions are in the same docket; the fact that the Bureau will consider them together in any manner is a strong statement,” Sohn said.

“This April, several public interest groups, Consumers Union, Free Press, the Media Access Project, Public Knowledge, and the New America Foundation, asked for the Commission to take that action because we said that both deals together would ‘further empower an already dominant wireless carrier to leverage its control over devices, backhaul, and consumers in ways that stifle competition,” Sohn added.  “We look forward to working with the Commission on these issues which are so vital to the economy of this country.”

Companies that have acquired wireless spectrum at government auctions have not always put those frequencies to use.  At least one firm warehoused spectrum as an investment tool, earning proceeds reselling it to other providers.  Others have simply squatted on their spectrum, sometimes to keep it away from would-be competitors.

Of course, considering AT&T is a master of dollar-a-holler astroturf operations and lobbying, it’s only a matter of time before a renewed blizzard of company-ghost-written letters start arriving at the Commission telling them AT&T needs both the Qualcomm spectrum -and- the merger with T-Mobile.

Groups like the NAACP, United Way of Northwest Florida, the National Puerto Rican Coalition, and the U.S. Cattlemen’s Association ought to know, right?

Thanks to Stop the Cap! reader Bones for alerting us.

Cisco: The ‘Not Anymore’ Network for 6,500 Employees Facing Layoffs for Executive Mistakes

Welcome to the unemployment network.

Cisco announced this week the imminent layoff of some 6,500 of its employees in a desperate bid to boost the company’s stock price and get back on the good side of Wall Street, angered by a series of acquisition blunders by the company’s management and a growing loss of confidence in the future of some of the company’s legacy broadband products.

The cuts at Cisco, which include 2,100 employees who took a voluntary early-retirement program, were announced July 18th, with tepid applause from many investors who don’t believe the company slashed nearly enough positions to get the company’s cash on hand up (although it currently amounts to nearly $30 billion, much of it stashed in overseas accounts).  They wanted at least 10,000 members of Cisco’s “human network” to be cashiered.

While thousands of employees pay the ultimate price for the company’s low stock price, the executives that steered Cisco’s enormous business networking ship onto the rocks are still firmly at the helm.  In fact, Cisco CEO John Chambers received compensation valued at $18.9 million in fiscal 2010, according to documents filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. His total package is up 33% from 2009, when he received compensation valued at $14.2 million.  That’s quite a reward for what Wall Street perceives as utter failure.

Under Chambers’ watch, Cisco overspent top dollar for Pure Digital Technologies, the San Francisco company responsible for the Flip handheld video camera.  You know, the one now discontinued by Cisco less than two years after acquiring the company for $590 million (and up to $15 million in retention bonuses for key executives.)  In fact, Cisco may still be paying off a deal for a product consumers have now long-since forgotten.

Chambers (AP)

Currently, there is no indication Chambers will be significantly punished for the various blunders under his watch.  But his latest decision to jettison thousands of workers has thrown a high-pressure, well-funded lobbying campaign on behalf of large corporations trying to get a tax break repatriating billions stashed in overseas bank accounts, into chaos.

Cisco’s CEO was among the loudest supporters of the tax slash for corporate entities who have parked much of their free cash overseas to avoid Uncle Sam’s tax bite.  Chambers has publicly said he wants to bring $30 billion in company profits back to the States, but only if he can do so at a discount.  Ironically, Chambers promoted the tax holiday as a job creator, claiming Cisco would add as much as 10 percent to his workforce if the deal was approved.

That promise doesn’t mean much after this week’s employee clear-cutting by the networking company.

It’s certainly upsetting the lobbying apple cart in Washington, potentially ruining the Money Party for other super-sized corporations looking for a tax break handout.

Companies like Duke Energy said the $1.3 billion it wants to repatriate to the U.S. would create 15,000 to 20,000 jobs.  But many Democrats remain skeptical the promised jobs will ever materialize.

Rep. Lloyd Doggett from Texas notes we’ve been here before.  Back in 2004, HP got a tax break to bring back almost $15 billion with the promise the company would create jobs.  Instead, it slashed its workforce by 14,500 employees in a year.

“As a leading proponent of this corporate tax giveaway, Cisco is announcing massive layoffs instead of investing in American job creation with the billions it already has available,” Doggett said. “Once again, it is clear that large multinational corporations have no intention of using any repatriation tax windfall to create jobs.”

This left the WinAmerica Campaign, a corporate-funded group promoting the tax cut, scrambling to deliver an adjusted message to Congress.

Oops... we need a new message.

Doug Thornell, a spokesman for the group, told Bloomberg News the effort “isn’t about just one company.”

“It’s about the benefit to the broader economy,” he said. “It’s whether we continue a failed policy that lets a trillion dollars languish overseas when our economy desperately needs the help.”

With up to 6,500 former employees about to join unemployment lines, Cisco isn’t doing much to help, especially when those responsible are not held accountable for the mistakes that left the company in its ultimate predicament.

[flv width=”360″ height=”290″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/Bloomberg Henderson Says Job Cuts Not Enough for Cisco’s Problems 7-18-11.mp4[/flv]

Bloomberg News talks to a Wall Street analyst who doesn’t think Cisco has cut nearly enough jobs to get the company worthwhile for investors again.  (5 minutes)

GLAAD Withdraws Support for AT&T/T-Mobile Merger; Reaffirms Support for Net Neutrality

Phillip Dampier July 13, 2011 Astroturf, AT&T, Competition, Net Neutrality, Public Policy & Gov't, T-Mobile Comments Off on GLAAD Withdraws Support for AT&T/T-Mobile Merger; Reaffirms Support for Net Neutrality

In the wake of a scandal that forced the resignation of the president and a board member of one of America’s largest gay civil rights organizations, The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) has withdrawn its prior support for the merger of AT&T and T-Mobile and reaffirmed its support of strong Net Neutrality policies.

In a letter filed with the Federal Communications Commission earlier today, GLAAD did an about-face on its earlier support for the merger, telling the federal agency it now has a “neutral position” with respect to the deal.

Mike Thompson, GLAAD acting president, used the communication to also express the group’s strong support of Net Neutrality, which guarantees a free and open Internet.

“A rigorous review process considered GLAAD’s unique mission and concluded that while AT&T has a strong record of support for the LGBT community, the explanation used to support this particular merger was not sufficiently consistent with GLAAD’s work to advocate for positive and culture-changing LGBT stories and images in the media,” Thompson said in a statement.

Thompson’s belief that AT&T has a strong record of support for gay and lesbian issues remains controversial in many segments of the gay community. John Aravosis of Americablog would take issue with Thompson, accusing AT&T of “screwing” the gay community in the state of Tennessee:

AT&T was one of the companies whose local representatives sits on the board of directors of the Tennessee chamber of commerce.  You remember them, the group that endorsed and actively lobbied for the measure repealing gay and trans rights ordinances in the state, mandating it so that no trans person can ever change their birth certificate gender in the future, and banning any future civil rights ordinances for anyone in the future.  That AT&T.  The AT&T that weighed in early with a statement, when we asked the 13 companies to disavow the legislation and call on the governor to veto, but then whose statement pretty much didn’t say anything.  The AT&T then that emailed me multiple additional statements AFTER the governor signed the hateful bill into law.

Aravosis

GLAAD has taken its first steps to move as far away from dollar-a-holler advocacy as possible as a result of the hostile reception GLAAD’s original position got from rank and file members of the civil rights group.  After AT&T’s financial contributions to the group were exposed, along with the interests of one of their board members with direct ties to the telecommunications company, GLAAD accepted the resignation of group president Jarrett Barrios and board member Troup Coronado.

Remaining board members want the controversy to be over and done with.

“I am confident that Mike made the right decision both in withdrawing GLAAD’s endorsement of the AT&T merger application and in affirming our support of general net neutrality principles,” said GLAAD board member Tony Varona.

Politico obtained a statement in response to these events from AT&T:

“As we’ve previously said, we recognize, and fully respect that these organizations, which do important work, will make up their own minds about whether to support the merger or remain neutral. And, though it should go without saying, the decisions made by these organizations will not in any way impact our desire to work with, partner with or support those organizations in the future.”

 

Media Fail: While American Networks Ignore AT&T/T-Mobile Merger, Russia Today Exposes the Truth

[flv width=”490″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/RT ATT Buys Support from Non-Profits 6-10-11.flv[/flv]

It’s a bad day for American television journalism when Russian State Television manages to tell viewers the facts about the merger of AT&T and T-Mobile that American networks ignore.  Russia Today is Moscow’s external television service, and delivers English language news to a global audience.  Public Knowledge’s Art Brodsky gets to tell RT viewers the real facts about dollar-a-holler groups advocating for AT&T,  a story American networks might not want to share with AT&T ad dollars at risk!  (7 minutes)

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