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Windstream Suffers Major Landline Failure in Nebraska; Several Counties Lose Phone, 911 Service

Phillip Dampier April 1, 2010 Consumer News, Video, Windstream 1 Comment

Windstream Communications customers in eastern Nebraska have spent much of today without access to emergency 911 services, and many were without their own landlines as well.  A switch failure in downtown Lincoln caused the outage impacting several counties starting at 7:45 Thursday morning.

Emergency services personnel were forced to rely on cell phones and amateur radio operators to process calls for emergency service, and several law enforcement personnel were staged in outage areas to assist with any calls for help.

Emergency dispatch centers were silent for much of today.  Those attempting to call 911 received a busy signal.

“You know there’s people out there that are going to need help at some point, there always is, and they’re unable to get that help,” Cass County dispatcher Deb Thiessen told KETV in Omaha.

“It’s very rare there’s an outage of this type,” said Cass County Chief Deputy Brad Lahm.

[flv]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/KOLN-ABC Nebraska Windstream Suffers Major Outage 4-1-10.flv[/flv]

KOLN-TV and NTV report on today’s major Windstream outage.  (5 minutes)

[flv width=”640″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/KETV Omaha Windstream Failure No April Fools Joke 4-1-10.flv[/flv]

KETV-TV in Omaha also covered the outage in their viewing area. (2 minutes)

Comcast’s Usage Meter Rolled Out to Most Customers Nationwide

Phillip Dampier April 1, 2010 Comcast/Xfinity, Data Caps 4 Comments

Comcast's usage meter is now available in 25 states

Comcast customers in at least 25 states have been notified that Comcast’s new usage measurement meter is now up and running.  Comcast introduced a 250 GB monthly usage limit in August 2008 after the Federal Communications Commission stopped the company from throttling usage-intensive file-trading applications.  Comcast has enforced the cap among those customers who regularly exceed it by wide margins, usually warning customers by phone or mail that they must reduce usage or face account suspension.  The usage meter application allows the company to direct customers to the self-measurement tool the company hopes will reduce the need for warnings.

Customers in Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Washington, D.C., West Virginia, and Wisconsin should have already or will receive e-mail from the company officially notifying them about the launch of the usage meter.

Since the meter was introduced, broadband usage and pricing has increased for many customers, but the usage cap has not.  While generous by current standards, an inflexible usage limit will increasingly trap customers who use Comcast broadband service for high quality video streaming, file backups, or file trading activities which can consume considerable bandwidth.

Informally, Comcast has allowed some residential customers to purchase second accounts if they intend to blow past their usage allowance, because the company currently offers no official provisions for those who exceed the limit.

1st Anniversary of Time Warner Cable Internet Overcharging Experiment for Texas, North Carolina, New York

Today marks the first anniversary of news that Time Warner Cable planned to expand an Internet Overcharging scheme being tested in one Texas city to four additional cities within its service area.

Residents of Rochester, New York, the Triad Region surrounding Greensboro, North Carolina, as well as Austin and San Antonio, Texas first learned of the planned expansion of so-called “metered broadband” from a Business Week article dated March 31st, which has since accumulated more than 450 comments to date:

Web users, the meter is running. In a strategy that’s likely to rankle consumers but be copied by competitors, Time Warner Cable is pressing ahead with a plan to charge Internet customers based on how much Web data they consume. Starting next month, the company will introduce tiered pricing in several markets.

In April, Time Warner Cable will begin collecting information on its customers’ Internet use in the Texas cities of Austin and San Antonio and in Rochester, N.Y. Consumption billing will begin in those cities later this summer. In Greensboro, N.C., the billing changes will begin sooner. Spun off from Time Warner this month, Time Warner Cable had been testing a plan to meter Internet usage in Beaumont, Tex., since last year.

Proposed pricing models created by Time Warner Cable would have tripled broadband bills to an unprecedented $150 a month for consumers seeking the same level of broadband service they enjoyed a month earlier.  For a cable industry that was used to pushing through rate increases well above the annual rate of inflation, such an enormous rate increase was unprecedented, even for them.

For consumers willing to ration their broadband use, the news was slightly better — you’d still pay more for less service, and be exposed to overlimit fees and penalties should you exceed your monthly allowance, which was as low as a 1 GB per month for one proposed plan.

While residents of Beaumont, Texas had to endure these prices for several months prior to the announced expansion of experimental Overcharging, once news hit tech-savvy cities in Texas, New York, and North Carolina, an all-out consumer rebellion began.  Residents in Austin met with city officials to discuss alternatives to a cable company that threatened Austin’s high tech status.  For residents in Rochester, already coping with a 5 GB usage allowance for Frontier Communication’s DSL service, it was a clear-cut case of monopolistic greed.  In North Carolina, working to transition its way towards a digital economic future, an Internet rationing plan would hurt the economy of the entire Triad region.  San Antonio residents were equally unimpressed with the cable operator as well, demanding alternative providers.

Former Congressman Eric Massa (D-NY)

Consumers banded together on Stop the Cap! and other consumer-oriented websites to coordinate the pushback effort.  Protests were held, the media was engaged, and at least in New York, the politicians were not going to sit back in Time Warner Cable’s favor.  Former Rep. Eric Massa expressed outrage at the company for its new pricing plan and Senator Chuck Schumer personally called Time Warner Cable CEO Glenn Britt.

A few lapdogs in the trade press and “dollar a holler” astroturf groups praised Time Warner Cable’s price gouging plans.  One even went as far as to suggest Time Warner Cable “took one for the team” — referring to a cable industry just waiting to test some Internet Overcharging of their own.

Time Warner Cable dispatched some of their social media minions to try and explain away the outrageous price increases, offering to “listen” to consumers with suggestions about how to “improve the plan.”  One, like TWCAlex offered “proof” consumers wanted this kind of pricing.  The disingenuousness of the effort rivaled Lord Haw Haw’s Germany Calling propaganda broadcasts on the Reichssender Hamburg.  Company officials ignored the overwhelming consensus that consumers didn’t want metered or capped service and then weeks later those who did submit comments were notified they were “deleted without being read.”

Meanwhile, Rep. Massa’s office began drafting legislation to ban the unprecedented pricing schemes, culminating in a bill introduced in 2009 to ban unjustified usage caps and metered billing.

On April 9th, Landel Hobbs, Chief Operating Officer of Time Warner Cable, issued a recitation of the reasons why Time Warner Cable felt justified in exposing customers to up to 150 percent rate hikes — reasons we’ve managed to debunk over the past year’s coverage:

With the ever-increasing flood of content on the Internet, bandwidth consumption is growing exponentially. That’s a good thing; however, there are costs associated with this increased Internet usage. Here at Time Warner Cable, consumption among our high-speed Internet subscribers is increasing by about 40% a year. As a facilities based provider, we’ve built a network that must be maintained and upgraded. We have increasing variable costs and we have to continue to invest in the network itself.

As we’ve since proven, Hobbs statements to the public obscure the facts in his own company’s financial reports which are remarkably consistent quarter after quarter: revenues for broadband service are increasing while the costs to provide it are falling.  In fact, broadband is rapidly becoming the most important element of the cable industry’s quest for fat profits.  Time Warner Cable, as well as others, have plenty of financial resources from the billions in profits they earn from broadband every year to provide cost-effective upgrades that benefit them as well as consumers at today’s flat rate prices.

Just a few weeks ago, Hobbs told investors consumers are so devoted to their broadband service, the company could raise broadband prices anytime they like.  Funny how “increasing costs” never came into the discussion there.

This is a common problem that all network providers are experiencing and must address. Several other providers have instituted consumption based billing, including all major network providers in Canada and others in the U.K., New Zealand and elsewhere. In the U.S., AT&T has begun two consumption based billing trials and other providers including Comcast, Charter and Cox are using varying methods of monitoring and managing bandwidth consumption.

As Stop the Cap! has illustrated repeatedly, such consumption billing schemes are despised by consumers -and- most countries see them as hampering their digital economy.  Australia and New Zealand have government initiatives to improve broadband service to the point where consumption billing and usage caps are a distant memory.  Canada’s usage based billing schemes come from market concentration, particularly from Bell which is by far the largest wholesale supplier of bandwidth in the country.  Their quest for profits, along with a compliant regulatory body (the CRTC) has made such ripoff pricing commonplace.  The result on Canada’s broadband rankings are clear as the country continues to fall further behind other OECD nations.  Canadians do not want such pricing, but when a duopoly is allowed to exist unfettered by appropriate oversight, the end result is always the same – higher prices for poorer service.  In the United Kingdom, several flat rate plans are available, with more on the way as the UK embarks on its own Digital Economy plan.

There are other reasons why such consumption billing schemes are in place in other countries – namely insufficient international capacity to move traffic back and forth outside of the region.  That too is being addressed.

That other cable operators are overcharging consumers or limiting their usage is hardly a surprise considering insufficient competition in the marketplace makes that possible.  However, Comcast’s 250 GB limit is far more generous than anything Time Warner Cable proposed, Cox rarely enforces their limits, and Charter recently announced it had abandoned theirs.

For good reason. Internet demand is rising at a rate that could outpace capacity within a few years. According to industry analysts, the infrastructure may not be able to accommodate the explosion of online content by 2012. This could result in Internet brownouts. It will take a lot of money to fix the problem. Rather than raising prices on all customers or limiting usage, we think the fairest approach is to move to a tiered model in which users pay more if they use more.

Hobbs’ reliance on the “exaflood” or the “zettabyte” theory of Internet brownouts comes courtesy of the prostituting, industry-backed Discovery Institute — the people who will cough up bought and paid for “research studies” that say anything the buyer wants them to say and Cisco, which makes a handsome buck off selling broadband network equipment to providers they panic with stories of Internet data tsunamis and brownouts.

Hobbs

Two weeks after the Business Week article, Senator Schumer flew to Rochester and joined a few of our local Stop the Cap! members and myself to announce the end of the nightmare — no more Internet Overcharging consumers in any of the three states. Even Beaumont was soon freed from the ripoff pricing experiment.

But Time Warner Cable promised that one day, they could be back with the same schemes, after “educating their customers.”  Stop the Cap! has spent the last year assembling an extensive record of just how unjustified these pricing schemes really are, and we’ve been educating consumers about how an duopolistic broadband industry is seeking to monetize and control as many aspects of America’s online experience as possible.

We’ve exposed dozens of astroturf and other industry-backed groups trying to peddle the broadband industry agenda, often trying to hide who is paying the bills.  Whether it’s scare stories about broadband brownouts, fear that oversight and regulation will drive away investment and reduce service, or the need to stop Net Neutrality — it’s all designed to protect provider profits, not help consumers.

There is nothing fair about Internet Overcharging schemes.  There has never been a true consumption billing scheme that charged consumers nothing if they didn’t use the service, and the prices being charged for consumption above one’s allowance are often several thousand percent above actual cost.  Indeed the CEO of Crown Fibre Holdings CEO Graham Mitchell, admitted the truth about such pricing schemes when he told Techday that where ISP’s engage in such pricing schemes, they don’t make their money in providing access to broadband; they make it out of data caps.

We have no illusion providers won’t be back for a second bite at your wallets, which is why the education effort continues.  Over the last year, we’ve expanded our coverage to promote better broadband, and to expose bad actors among the broadband cable, telephone, wireless, and satellite industry.  We’ll continue to expose lobbying efforts to legislate away oversight, consumer protection, and limit potential competition.  Stop the Cap! also continues to fight for improved rural broadband that moves beyond today’s satellite fraudband that delivers woefully slow, heavily limited and expensive service.  We’ll also coordinate efforts to push back whenever Internet Overcharging schemes appear on the horizon, and we won’t let go until such language is banished from customer agreements and Acceptable Use Policies, whether they are formally enforced or not.

One year later, America’s broadband users are safer from such schemes, but not yet safe.  Thanks to all of our readers for staying engaged.

Netflix Starts Wii Video Streaming, Prepares for Potential Reality of Five-Day Mail Delivery

In what some believe may be the beginning of the end of the U.S. Postal Service, the plan to eliminate Saturday mail delivery this week was formally introduced to the Postal Regulatory Commission, an important step on the journey to sever home delivery to homes and businesses over the weekend.

In what the Commission called one of the most significant changes the Postal Service has ever presented to them for review, the proposal to sack Saturday mail seeks to take a bite out of a deficit the post office claims will reach $238 billion in ten years.

As more Americans move to broadband for online banking and bill paying, e-mail, and online commerce, mail volume continues to decline.  The recession isn’t helping either, as increasing postal rates challenge the torrent of profitable junk mail that reaches every American home.

But one decidedly-digital company is cringing at the thought of losing Saturday mail delivery — Netflix, the DVD-rent-by-mail firm whose sea of red envelopes moving to and from post offices around the country is a bright spot for a postal service under financial siege.  This single company expects to spend $600 million in postage this year alone.

The prospect of Netflix customers facing several days in a row with nothing new to watch horrifies those who’ve become accustomed to Saturday DVD delivery.

Netflix has tried to move towards video streaming movies and television shows over broadband connections.  Last week Netflix began offering Nintendo Wii owners the opportunity to stream the company’s on-demand library directly through the video game console, joining the PS3.

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But Slate reports on-demand streaming at the prices studios are demanding means it will be a very long time before Netflix’s 100,000 title library is available for instant viewing:

While instantly streamed movies obviously eliminate postage costs, they are not a cost-free proposition for Netflix. Analysts suggest that the streaming technology itself is very cheap—it costs roughly five cents to stream 90 minutes of content—but the licensing fees can be exorbitant. Netflix won’t release the data on how much it pays for online licensing, but can apparently be quite expensive. Dan Rayburn, an analyst with Streaming Media, has said that he’s seen some streaming movies that cost as much as $4 per play.

The other potential skunk at the garden party is your Internet Service Provider, should they implement Internet Overcharging schemes like usage caps or usage-based billing.  That five cent price tag for 90 minutes of content Netflix pays would be considerably higher from ISPs seeking to charge thousands of percent markup for bandwidth.

America’s social commentators are concerned five day delivery is the beginning of the end for an institution that reaches every American.

CNN contributor Bob Greene notes no business has ever gotten ahead in the long term by reducing service to customers even as they continue to increase prices:

If mail delivery goes from six days to five, more and more Americans may decide they just don’t need it. People have available to them, as none of us needs to be reminded, computers with e-mail capability. You can correspond with friends and family and business associates; you can pay bills; you can send greetings.

Using the U.S. mail already means accepting that letters will be held up for a day between Fridays and Mondays. Elimination of Saturday mail would extend the bottleneck. And this is a country that increasingly demands speed; you’d think that someone, if only in an effort not to fall further behind, would be suggesting a seventh day of delivery be added.

Last year, the volume of U.S. mail fell by 26 billion pieces — from 203 billion to 177 billion.

The Postal Service, in gambling that doing away with a day of delivery will help heal its financial wounds, may be risking a lot.

There’s not much of a track record in American business for cutting back on services and then seeing the long-term bottom line grow. Companies that boldly announce they are going to cut their way to prosperity often cut their way to death.

If delivery is reduced to five days, and the number of letters mailed each year plunges further, the Postal Service could find itself in the position of having to eliminate even more services. Five days could conceivably go to four, or three; and if that didn’t stop the plummet in available funds, what would be the next step?

The letter carriers’ union isn’t happy about it either.  They’re convinced the post office’s plan will never survive Congressional oversight, and that in the end Saturday delivery will survive.

“We don’t see this thing — despite the hoopla that the postal service management has come up with — being approved by Congress,” said Drew Von Bergen, chief spokesman for the union that represents about 200,000 mail carriers, and 100,000 retirees.

Von Bergen told a reporter for KCRG-TV the mail carriers union sees the proposal as an overreaction to the dramatic decline in mail volumes that has resulted from a deep recession. If the postal service cuts Saturday delivery now, it will accelerate the demise of the postal service as other delivery services take up the slack, and Americans become disaffected with mail delays.

“It’s not just delivery,” Von Bergen said. “It’s delivery and collection. You’re talking about a two-day stoppage of mail movement in this country: Prescriptions, DVDs, packages people ordered by mail.”

On holiday weekends, the mail would stop for three days, Von Bergen added.

The unions are convinced the source of the nightmarish budget deficits comes from one thing: health care funding for retirees.  The recent health care reform legislation passed by President Obama does almost nothing to address the relentless immediate increases in health care costs which the Post Office must pre-fund in a type of escrow account.  If the government eliminated the pre-funding requirement, the U.S. Post Office would have finished 2009 with a cumulative surplus of $3.7 billion over its last three fiscal years according to American Postal Workers Union President William Burrus.

[flv width=”480″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/KESQ Palm Springs Post Office Moves Closer to Ending Saturday Delivery 3-29-10.flv[/flv]

KESQ-TV in Palm Springs, California pondered the loss of Saturday mail delivery with area residents and mail carriers in this report that aired Monday evening.  (3 minutes)

CNN: Wiring the Wrong America – Ski Resort Town for the Wealthy Gets Stimulus Money While Rural Minnesota Left Behind

One of the frustrations communities filing for federal grant money often face are the onerous terms and conditions that arrive with the application.  In many cases the rules are so complex, an entire industry of paid consultants to advise would-be grant applicants has grown up with the bureaucracy.  Miss one qualification and your potentially worthwhile application gets an automatic rejection.  Hiring an expensive consultant (often formerly employed in a government agency as an application processor) can often work miracles for a potentially dubious application.

Although some terms and conditions are included to prevent potential waste, fraud, and abuse or are intended to close potential loopholes, many others are influenced by elected officials trying to steer funding into projects they want to “pre-qualify.”  Often the intentions are obvious to would-be applicants, who discover only one company in their midst is capable of meeting all of the requirements of a grant program.  It never hurts to have a powerful member of Congress sign a cover letter of support for an application either, especially if that member of Congress helps oversee your agency’s annual budget.

And so we come to the broadband stimulus program, which has its own bureaucratic red tape and pre-conditi0ns to be met before funding becomes available.  Big phone and cable interests have already been rigging the system through broadband mapping projects that magically show broadband service in areas where none exists.  That’s critically important, because an application can be rejected out of hand if it seems to duplicate or overlap an existing broadband provider’s service area.  Incumbent players have wasted no time filing objections to thousands of broadband grant applications, often citing broadband maps which show a would-be applicant wants federal tax dollars to compete against them.

Mount Washington Resort – Bretton Woods, New Hampshire (left), Town Office – Minneiska, Minnesota (right)

Larger players sat out most of the first round of broadband stimulus applications, which often involved “last mile” projects which would deliver real results to those stuck on dial-up.  These projects actually provide service to individual homes and businesses where none existed before.  Many of the largest telecommunications companies are seeking a better deal for themselves from so-called “middle mile” project grants which allow them to improve their broadband infrastructure without actually hooking up a single new customer.

The collateral damage of this high stakes poker match is visible in rural communities in states like Minnesota, where some found their stimulus applications rejected because they couldn’t afford a requirement for 50 percent in matching funds.  That won’t be a problem for a New Hampshire community that did win $1 million in stimulus funding.  They are lucky enough to host the Mount Washington Resort at Bretton Woods, which will have broadband available in every room, in part thanks to taxpayers.  The resort, now undergoing a $50 million dollar luxury renovation, encouraged the local phone company to apply.  A single night booked for this weekend at the Omni Mount Washington Resort starts at $259 on the economy rate.  The “Winter Wonderland Inclusive Package” will set you back at least $569 a night.  At least now you can Twitter about it with all of your followers.

In contrast, Minneiska, Minnesota (population 116) doesn’t have a hotel, or broadband access, but you can drive down the road to the Winona Days Inn and get a room this weekend with a queen-sized bed for $65 a night. If the bed has a mattress similar to that on the purple mattress review, then it’s comfortable enough.  Winona is big enough to get DSL service, so Days Inn throws in Internet access for free.  You can contemplate that over your free hot waffle breakfast.

[flv width=”640″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/CNN Wiring the Wrong America 3-12-10.mp4[/flv]

CNN asks the question, are we wiring the wrong America for much-needed broadband service?  Before you answer, yes we noticed CNN used the sounds of a fax line to simulate the sounds of a dial-up connection, too.  (3 minutes)

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