Broadband providers with a vested interest in keeping the marketplace a comfortable (for them) duopoly want you to believe everything is great in American broadband. They would have you believe there is little room for improvement, despite the ongoing drop in America’s global broadband rankings and the ever-increasing price for the service.
Google’s announcement this spring that it was looking for a few great communities to provide 1 gigabit broadband service at competitive rates caused a firestorm… of interest. Over 1,100 communities have applied for the service and more than 200,000 consumers have nominated their towns and cities for Google Broadband. Apparently there is plenty of room for improvement after all — from coast to coast and in every state.
The small dots refer to local government applications for the service, the large dots indicate places where more than 1,000 individuals nominated their community.
Communities Applying for Google’s Think Big With a Gig Project
(AK) Alaska
Anchorage
Fairbanks
Juneau
Seward
(AL) Alabama
Auburn
Birmingham
Calhoun County
Fairhope
Heflin
Hoover
Huntsville
Mobile
Montgomery
Pelham
State of Alabama
(AR) Arkansas
El Dorado
Fayetteville
Fort Smith
Hot Springs
Independence County
Mountain View
North Little Rock
Searcy
Siloam Springs
(AZ) Arizona
Bisbee
Flagstaff
Fountain Hills
Gilbert
Goodyear
Maricopa
Mesa
Oro Valley
Payson
Queen Creek
Salt River
Scottsdale
Sun West
Tempe
Tucson
Wickenburg
(CA) California
Alameda
Alhambra
Anaheim
Baldwin Park
Belvedere
Benicia
Berkeley
Beverly Hills
Brentwood
Burbank
Burlingame
Calabasas
Carlsbad
Chico
Chula Vista
Clovis
Coachella Valley
Colma
Compton
Contra Costa County
Corona
Costa Mesa
County of Lake
County of Mendocino
County of Merced
County of Sacramento
County of Tuolumne
Culver
Cupertino
Davis
East Palo Alto
El Segundo
Elk Grove
Encinitas
Fillmore
Folsom
Fontana
Fresno
Fullerton
Gardena
Gilroy
Glendale
Glendora
Grover Beach
Hacienda-La Puente
Hayward
Hesperia
Hidden Hills
Hillsborough
Hollister
Industry
Irvine
Laguna Woods
Lodi
Loma Linda
Long Beach
Los Altos
Los Angeles
Los Gatos
Lynwood
Milpitas
Mission Viejo
Modesto
Monterey Bay
Morgan Hill
Mountain House
Mountain View
Murrieta
Napa
Nevada County
Newport Beach
Oakland
Pacifica
Palo Alto
Pasadena
Petaluma
Pleasanton
Poway
Rancho Cordova
Rancho Cucamonga
Red Bluff
Redding
Redwood
Richmond
Riverside
Rohnert Park
Roseville
Sacramento
Salinas
San Bruno
San Carlos
San Francisco
San Jose
San Luis Obispo
San Marcos
San Marino
San Mateo
San Pablo
San Rafael
San Ramon
Santa Barbara
Santa Clara
Santa Clarita
Santa Cruz
Santa Maria
Santa Monica
Santa Rosa
Saratoga
Sea Ranch
Sonoma
South San Francisco
Stanislaus County
Stockton
Sunland-Tujunga
Sunnyvale
Temecula
Thousand Oaks
Torrance
Trinity County
Truckee
Turlock
Ukiah
Vallejo
Ventura
Victorville
Wasco
Watsonville
West Sacramento
Westlake Village
Woodland
(CO) Colorado
Arvada
Aspen
Aurora
Basalt
Boulder
Castle Rock
Centennial
Colorado Springs
Cortez
Eagle
Erie
Fort Collins
Glenwood Springs
Greeley
Highlands Ranch
Littleton and Centennial
Lone Tree
Longmont
Louisville
Mancos
Mead
Parker
South Fork
Superior
Telluride
Thornton
Woodland Park
(CT) Connecticut
Avon
Branford
Bridgeport
Bristol
Kent
Manchester
New Haven
Norwich
Stafford
Torrington
West Hartford
Westport
Windham
(DC) District of Columbia
District of Columbia
(FL) Florida
Bartow
Boca Raton
Bradenton
Cape Coral Council
Celebration
Charlotte County
Coral Gables
Cutler Bay
Daytona Beach
Delray Beach
Deltona
Doral
Dunedin
Fort Myers
Gainesville
Hernando County
Highland Beach
Hollywood
Indian Rocks Beach
Jacksonville
Key West
Kissimmee
Lake Florida
Lake Wales
Lakeland
Lee County
Leesburg
Longboat Key
Maitland
Marion County
Martin County
Melbourne
Miami
Miami Beach
Monroe County
North Miami
North Miami Beach
North Port
Oak Hill
Ocala
Orlando
Palm Bay
Palm Coast
Parkland
Pinellas County
Port Orange
Riviera Beach
Sanibel
Sarasota
Sarasota County
Seminole County
South Daytona
South Miami
St. Petersburg
Sunrise
Tallahassee
Titusville
University of Central Florida
Village of Key Biscayne
Wilton Manors
(GA) Georgia
Alpharetta
Athens Clarke County
Atlanta
Augusta
Avondale Estates
Bleckley County
Centerville
Cherokee County
Cobb County
Columbus
Decatur
DeKalb County
Duluth
Dunwoody
Fayette County
Henry County
Houston County
Johns Creek
Kennesaw
LaGrange
Macon
Paulding County
Perry
Robins Air Force Base
Savannah
Smyrna
Suwanee
Union
Vidalia
Warner Robins
Waycross
(HI) Hawaii
County of Hawaii
County of Honolulu
County of Kauai
County of Maui
State of Hawaii
(IA) Iowa
Ames
Ankeny
Bellevue
Bettendorf
Cedar Rapids
Clinton
Council Bluffs
Davenport
Des Moines
Dubuque
Fairfield
Indianola
Iowa
Marshall County
Mason
Muscatine
Pella
Sioux
Waterloo
Waukee
West Des Moines
(ID) Idaho
Ammon
Boise
Jerome
Ketchum
Meridian
Middleton
Pocatello
Twin Falls
(IL) Illinois
Aurora
Carbondale
Carpentersville
Chicago
County of McHenry
Crystal Lake
Decatur
Des Plaines
Elgin
Elk Grove Village
Elmhurst
Evanston
Galesburg
Geneva
Harvard
Highland Park
Jo Daviess County
Joliet
Lake Villa
Lake Villa Township
Lisle
Mayor Eric Kellogg
McHenry
Mount Prospect
Naperville
Oglesby
Peoria
Princeton
Quincy
Rochelle
Rockford
South Lake
St Charles
St. Charles and Genevalinois
Taylorville
Urbana Champaign
Village of Algonquin
Village of Bensenville
Village of Bolingbrook
Village of Bradley
Village of Buffalo Grove
Village of Chatham
Village of Cobden
Village of Hinsdale
Village of Hoffman Estates
Village of Manhattan
Village Of Milford
Village of North Aurora
Village of Oak Brook
Village of Oak Lawn
Village of Oswego
Village Of Palatine
Village of Pingree Grove
Village of Schaumburg
Village of Villa Park
Village of West Dundee
Village of Wilmette
Warrenville
Waukegan
West Central
Woodstock
(IN) Indiana
Anderson
Bloomington
Carmel and Westfield
Chesterton
Columbus
Elkhart County
Fishers
Fort Wayne
Goshen
Hobart
Jackson County Council
La Porte County
LaPorte
Muncie
Noblesville
Plainfield
Richmond
South Bend, Mishawaka and St. Joseph County
Tippecanoe County
Westfield
(KS) Kansas
Arma
Baldwin
Bird
Chanute
Coffeyville
Enterprise
Fort Scott
Galena
Lawrence
Leawood
Lenexa
Lindsborg
Manhattan
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Olathe
Overland Park
Pittsburg
Salina
Shawnee County
Topeka
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(KY) Kentucky
Berea
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Jeffersontown
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Russellville
(LA) Louisiana
Baton Rouge
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Oak Grove
Ouachita
Shreveport
St Tammany
Tippecanoe County
(MA) Massachusetts
Amherst
Boston
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Buckland & Shelburne
Cambridge
Chicopee
Concord
Dedham
Easthampton
Essex
Fitchburg
Holyoke
Hubbardston
Lexington
Lowell
Medford
Newburyport
Newton
Norwood
Princeton
Quincy
Salem
Shrewsbury
Somerville
Springfield
Stow
West Boylston
Westborough
Western Mass
Westfield
Weston
Worcester
(MD) Maryland
Baltimore
Bowie
Charles County
College Park
Gaithersburg
Garrett County
Harford County
La Plata
Montgomery County
Oxford
Piney Orchard
Poolesville
Prince George’s County
Rock Hall
Rockville
St. Mary’s County
Sykesville
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(ME) Maine
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Augusta
Blue Hill
Hope
Old Town
Portland
Saco
Turner
(MI) Michigan
Ann Arbor
Bay
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Grand Rapids
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Holland
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Muskegon
Pittsfield
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Rochester
Royal Oak
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Tecumseh
Troy
Village of Franklin
Village of Hillman
Warren
West Branch
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(MN) Minnesota
Apple Valley
Austin
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Dakota County
Duluth
Eagan
Eden Prairie
Falcon Heights
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La Crescent
Lake Minnetonka
Lakeville
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Maplewood
Monticello
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Northfield
Rochester
Saint Paul
Scott County
St. Charles
St. Louis Park
Wells
Winthrop
(MO) Missouri
Ashland
Camden County
Canton
Cape Girardeau
Carl Junction
Carthage
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Cities of Nixa & Ozark
Columbia
Columbia
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Lake Saint Louis
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Apex
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Henderson
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Technology First
Tipp
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(VA) Virginia
Alexandria
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Burlington
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Bellevue
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Cheney
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Duvall
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Mercer Island
Palouse
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(WI) Wisconsin
Appleton
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Kenosha County
La Crosse
La Crosse County
Liberty
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Milwaukee
Monroe
Mount Pleasant
New Berlin
Pleasant Prairie
Reedsburg
Salem Kenosha
Slinger
St. Joseph
Superior
Union Grove
Wateloo
Waukesha
Wauwatosa
West Allis
Winnebago County
(WV) West Virginia
Charleston
Huntington
Hurricane
Leon
Mineral County
Morgantown
Philippi
Princeton
Google today launched a new website which could become a major advocacy center to promote fiber broadband service across America.
Google Fiber for Communities opened with a thank you message for the enormous number of submissions it received for its experimental 1Gbps fiber broadband network. Google expects to announce the winning application(s) for its experimental network sometime this year.
But in the meantime, Google also acknowledges what big telecom companies keep trying to downplay and dismiss — “people across the country are hungry for better and faster broadband access.” That is… better and faster service than their current provider is willing to supply.
The new website provides hints as to its greater purpose:
The name itself. Notice “communities” is plural.
The site intends to mobilize for fiber networks across the country, starting with lobbying for pending federal legislation that would require installation of fiber conduit as part of federal transportation projects.
The site’s links heavily promotes municipal broadband advocates and organizations, including the National Association of Counties, the National Association of Telecommunications Officers and Advisors, the Fiber to the Home Council, the Baller Herbst Community Broadband Page, the Broadband Properties Municipal Fiber Portal, and Muni Networks. Outside of the Fiber to the Home Council, which has some big telecom company members and isn’t above advocating for their interests, the rest of the list suggests Google advocates that communities do for themselves what their local phone and cable companies won’t do — deliver world class broadband service at non-duopoly prices.
Stop the Cap! shares many of these goals with Google, as we are strong advocates for community fiber-based broadband, and believe additional competition is highly needed in America’s broadband marketplace to break up an anti-consumer duopoly that delivers slow broadband service (or none at all) at the highest prices companies can get away with. Thanks to Stop the Cap! reader Jerry here in Rochester for sending word.
A telecom industry front group acknowledged today American broadband in the last decade has not won any awards for speed or price, but if you just give the industry ten more years of deregulation, there will be more competition than ever to change that.
For the Internet Innovation Alliance’s Bruce Mehlman, the cable and phone companies have done a fine job bringing broadband to Americans, especially considering the industry is only ten years old. If you leave things the way they are today, the next decade will bring even more competition from phone and cable companies, he promises.
But consumer groups wonder exactly how a duopoly will ever deliver world class service in the next ten years when it has spent the last ten hiking prices on slow speed broadband and now wants to limit or throttle usage.
This afternoon, National Public Radio’s All Things Considered tried to referee the broadband debate, pondering whether America is a world leader in broadband or has just fallen behind Estonia. Reporter Joel Rose was perplexed to find two widely diverging attitudes about broadband, each with their set of numbers to prove their case.
On one side, consumers and public interest groups like Consumers Union and Free Press who believe deregulation and industry consolidation has created a stagnant broadband duopoly that only innovates how it can get away with charging even higher prices.
On the other, the phone and cable companies, the groups they finance, and their friends on Capitol Hill who believe there isn’t a broadband problem in the United States to begin with and government oversight would ruin a good thing.
Compared with other nations, the United States has continued to see its standing fall in broadband rankings measuring speed, price, adoption rates, and quality. When East European countries and former Soviet Republics now routinely deliver better broadband service than America’s cable and telephone companies, that story writes itself. Embarrassed industry defenders prefer to confine discussion of America’s broadband success story inside the U.S. borders, discounting comparisons with other countries around the world.
For Rep. Joe “I Apologize to BP” Barton (R-Texas), it’s even more simple than that. Even questioning the free market is downright silly.
“As everybody knows, if it’s not broke, don’t fix it,” Barton said at a March congressional hearing to discuss broadband matters. “And y’all are trying to fix something that in most cases isn’t broke. Ninety-five percent of America has broadband.”
Industry-financed astroturf and sock puppet groups readily agree, and dismiss industry critics.
Bruce Mehlman, co-chair of the industry-supported Internet Innovation Alliance, which opposes more regulation, acknowledges that the story of broadband in the U.S. is a classic glass-half-full, glass-half-empty predicament. Still, he says he thinks broadband adoption in the U.S. is going pretty well considering broadband has only been available for 10 years.
“For the optimist, you’d say within a decade we’ve seen greater broadband deployment than you saw for cell phones, than for cable TV, than for personal computers,” Mehlman says. “It’s one of the great technology success stories in history.”
Mehlman says Americans don’t need more government intervention to make broadband faster and cheaper. “We haven’t yet and that’s in the first decade,” he says. “In the second decade, the marketplace is only going to be that much more competitive.”
Kelsey
The problems go further than that, however.
Derek Turner, research director for the public interest group Free Press, told NPR broadband rankings tell an important story. “For the providers to try to say that there’s no problem, it’s merely just a smoke screen,” he says.
Providers would prefer to measure their performance against each other instead of comparing themselves with foreign providers now routinely providing better, faster, and cheaper service than what American consumers can find. They have to, if only because of those pesky international rankings illustrating a wired United States in decline.
Joel Kelsey at Consumers Union tells NPR there is an even bigger question here — what role broadband plays in our lives.
Because 96 percent of Americans can only get broadband from a duopoly — the phone or cable company, the only people truly singing the praises of today’s broadband marketplace are the providers themselves and their shareholders. Consumers see a bigger problem — high prices, and particularly for rural consumers, slow speeds.
“If you talk to [the] industry,” Kelsey says, “they think of broadband as a private commercial service akin to pay TV or cable TV.”
On the other hand, Kelsey says, “There’s a lot of folks who think it is an essential input into this nation’s economy — an essential infrastructure question.”
National Public Radio reporter Joel Rose dived into the battle over broadband numbers between consumer groups and industry representatives. Is America’s broadband glass half-full or half-empty? (June 28, 2010) (4 minutes)
You must remain on this page to hear the clip, or you can download the clip and listen later.
Frontier Communications filed suit Tuesday against Google claiming the search giant stole its patent for giving users one phone number connecting their home, work and cell phones, the core feature of Google Voice.
Frontier, the independent phone company based in Stamford, Connecticut, claims it holds the patent for allowing a subscriber to “be reached on multiple telephone lines from a single dial-in number.”
“Google’s deliberate infringement of the patent has greatly and irreparably damaged Frontier,” the lawsuit charges. Frontier is seeking unspecified damages and an injunction to stop the use of the technology.
The lawsuit distracted from Google’s announcement that Google Voice was out of beta and now available to anyone in the United States. Google Voice lets users obtain a free phone number that will ring multiple telephones and screen calls.
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The one number follow-me feature is hardly new to either Google or Frontier. Phone companies have offered similar features to businesses through telephone products like Centrex since the 1960s.
Frontier filed its lawsuit hours after the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office issued Frontier’s requested patent.
“We believe these claims are entirely without merit, and we’ll defend against them vigorously,” said Google spokesman Andrew Pederson.
Frontier will likely face an uphill battle in its lawsuit, because the company’s patent request from 2007 comes two years after Google Voice’s predecessor, GrandCentral launched service in 2005. Google acquired GrandCentral in 2007, rebranding it as Google Voice. GrandCentral offered the same “one number” feature Frontier is complaining about two years before the phone company applied for its patent.
Perhaps Frontier’s lawyers might acquaint themselves with the concepts of “prior art” and “first-to-invent.”
Dick Cheney's ghost is haunting the halls at the FCC these days as the agency conducts secret, closed-door meetings with just four companies to achieve "common ground" on broadband regulation. Consumers are not invited to attend.
In 2001, Vice President Dick Cheney convened the first meeting of the always-off-the-record National Energy Policy Development Group. Secretly inviting executives of the nation’s largest oil companies and lobbyists for natural gas and mining, Cheney hoped to find “common ground” on energy issues that he could translate into legislation on Capitol Hill. The final report kept the names of the self-interested corporate executives off the member roster, and predictably called for legislative actions that would directly benefit those in attendance.
In June 2010, a series of meetings with FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski’s chief of staff and executives from AT&T, Verizon, Google and Skype got underway to find “common ground” on the issues of broadband regulation and Net Neutrality. With irony, the same FCC that promised it would be “the most open and transparent ever” has barred the press and the public from participation. No consumers were invited. No minutes from the meetings will be disclosed. In short, these are “closed-door” meetings.
Even more surprising, apparently the FCC forgot to invite Comcast, the cable conglomerate most directly responsible for the agency having its authority cut from beneath it in the first place.
When the Washington Post asked Eddie Lazarus, Genachowski’s chief of staff, what was on the agenda, only vague notions about “seizing the opportunity” to find common agreement on issues like Net Neutrality were disclosed. Lazarus added the big four were also there to give input on Congress’ interest in revising the Communications Act.
That’s great news for thousands of Washington’s lobbyists who helped fashion the disastrous 1996 Communications Act that represented Christmas morning for corporate interests — more deregulation in the broadcast business which lead to massive consolidation, giveaways to the cable and telephone industry, and more handouts to wireless companies.
What was supposed to be a law to govern the public interest of the airwaves and telecommunications turned into a lobbyist feeding frenzy. Consumers couldn’t afford the price of admission. Reopening the Communications Act means telecom companies from coast to coast can get busy working on their Christmas wish lists for the 500+ Secret Santas that live and work in the legislative branch of government these days, especially on the Republican side of the aisle.
Of course, the real outrage here is the FCC’s hope that the four companies can reach some agreement on contentious broadband issues and then the agency can do away with the entire matter of broadband regulatory reform. Why fight the battle if you can compromise the issue away? No matter what the four agree on, there are still many outstanding issues relating to consumer protection which cannot be negotiated by four corporate entities.
Those on both sides of the broadband regulatory issue are appalled at the secrecy. Brett Glass, who opposes Net Neutrality and runs a WISP in Wyoming asked, “What happened to Chairman Genachowski’s promises of “the most open and transparent FCC ever?”
Indeed.
Lazarus tried his best to paper over the serious implications of holding secretive meetings in a blog post:
Senior Commission staff are making themselves available to meet with all interested parties on these issues. To the extent stakeholders discuss proposals with Commission staff regarding other approaches outside of the open proceedings at the Commission, the agency’s ex parte disclosure requirements are not applicable. But to promote transparency and keep the public informed, we will post notices of these meetings here at blog.broadband.gov. As always, our door is open to all ideas and all stakeholders.
In part, here was our response to Mr. Lazarus:
There is no transparency or openness in closed-door meetings that bar the public from participation. It’s just more of the same inside-the-beltway deal-making that will undercut consumers. Believe it or not, there is more at stake here than whatever issues Verizon, AT&T, Google, and eBay have to discuss.
And what if the four agreed on anything (improbable)? Does that mean the rest of us are expected to go along to get along?
The FCC’s door is -not- open to all ideas and stakeholders when the chairman’s chief of staff only invites four voices to his table.
There is nothing open and transparent about secret meetings peppered with excuses about why disclosure rules do not apply.
[Update 10:30am ET Wednesday — The DailyFinance quotes a government source: “We fu*ked up,” a government source familiar with the meetings toldDailyFinance. “We deserve the bad press. It was a process foul at a minimum.”]
Be Sure to Read Part One: Astroturf Overload — Broadband for America = One Giant Industry Front Group for an important introduction to what this super-sized industry front group is all about. Members of Broadband for America Red: A company or group actively engaging in anti-consumer lobbying, opposes Net Neutrality, supports Internet Overcharging, belongs to […]
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