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You can see them parked outside of libraries and coffee shops in towns scattered across the hills of Western Massachusetts. They’re identified by the blue glow emitting from inside their cars.
Across the state, 95 towns have limited or no access to high-speed Internet. People in Massachusetts’ more rural western half have had to resort to a game of Internet hide and seek — searching out wireless hotspots, with laptops plugged into car lighters and nestled in their laps.
Maureen Mullaney of Ashfield, Massachusetts, lives in one of these under-served towns. She seeks out these roadside hotspots so her children can do research for school projects. “How silly is it that in this day and age you have to get in your car, drive to the general store so your daughter can researchers the rivers and traditional clothing of Chile?” she asks.
“Even if every person in my town is screaming out loud for high-speed Internet that would still just be 1,800 people.”
But Maureen and her neighbors are not alone. While a generation of Americans can barely remember life without a Google search at our fingertips, millions of households still can’t send an e-mail, let alone pay bills online, check the weather or conduct research for school.
A Broadband Backwater
The shortcomings of the U.S. broadband market are tremendous - more than 10 million U.S. households remain un-served, while nearly 50 million homes are priced out of subscribing to broadband services - and the social and economic consequences are dire.
Late last month, yet another global survey confirmed this, showing the U.S. to be more of an Internet backwater than a world leader. According to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Internet access and services in America have slid to 15th place among 30 developed nations, a drop from our 12th place ranking in 2006, and from fourth in 2001 when the OECD began its international survey.
In real terms this means Internet users in Japan pay little more than half the price (65 cents to the dollar) for an Internet connection that’s 20 times faster than what’s commonly available to people in the United States.
Yet people in the U.S. are still stuck off the grid, or with unreliable and slow dial-up, with little relief in sight.
A Man, No Plan, The Internet
The reasons for America’s digital decline are many. But first is this: Other developed countries have enacted comprehensive national plans to connect more of their citizens to a fast, affordable and open Internet. The U.S. stands alone among OECD countries without a national broadband program.
We do have national broadband rhetoric, though — and an army of well-heeled apologists to trumpet “successes” and gloss over problems. And the damage is now beginning to show.
In 2004, President Bush pledged “to have a universal, affordable access for broadband technology by the year 2007.”
As if on cue, last year, Mr. Bush’s chief Internet officer John Kneuer declared “Mission Accomplished” — that all the international surveys were misleading and that the “free market” had ensured that Americans across the country enjoy real choice in high-speed internet access.
The Hand of the Duopoly
Kneuer’s Pontius Pilate approach is now familiar to the Bush administration — America’s problems will disappear with a wave of the magical hand of the free market.
What he and his White House compatriots refuse to acknowledge, though, is that a free market approach for Internet services in the U.S. is a chimera. The only hand in play here belongs to the phone and cable duopoly, which controls broadband access for more than 98 percent of homes.
The net effect of this duopoly is a dearth or real choices; allowing providers like AT&T and Comcast to exact high prices from Internet users, while delivering connections that are too slow — and, often in the case of cable, too congested - to meet growing demand.
The market imbalance is beginning to take its toll. A Brookings Institution study counts 300,000 new American jobs each year for every 1 percent increase in broadband adoption.
Larry Page, Google’s co-founder and president, put it a different way. “We’re pretty far behind and for us it’s a big problem because we have our main headquarters in the U.S. and our employees have only a one megabit service,” he told me during his recent visit to Washington.
“If we’re thinking about building the next generation of Internet services they’re not going to be on one megabit services, they’re going to be 100 megabit services and we’re not going to end up developing those… In terms of the U.S. being competitive, it’s very important for us to be leading that rather than following. And we show no signs of being able to do that.”
Free Market Mumbo Jumbo
Our inability to truly wire the nation is itself the result of poor policy decisions. For decades, U.S. communications legislation has been held captive by lobbyists working for–you guessed it– the phone and cable companies.
These Internet service providers are among the most prolific spenders in Washington. They spend hundreds of millions of dollars on lobbyists, campaign contributions, P.R. firms and paid junkets to help ensure that special rules are written in their favor.
For all their talk about the free market, the cable and telephone giants work aggressively to force through regulations that protect their market duopoly, close the door to new market entrants and competitive technologies, and increase their control over the content that travels across the Web
Japan Pries Open Its Market
In 2000, Japan faced a similar dilemma — an Internet industry stifled by the heavy hand of a few network gatekeepers. But the government responded by pulling together the nation’s leaders from the pubic and private sector to launch an “e-Japan strategy” aimed at connecting 40 million of Japan’s 46 million households within five years.
The Japanese government quickly moved to create a highly competitive private sector by compelling regional telephone companies to open their residential lines to wholesale access by other competitors. They also adopted policies to prevent the type of online discrimination that has reared its head recently in the U.S.
In 2001, Japan counted only 2.2 broadband subscribers per 100 inhabitants. By mid-2004, ultra-high-speed broadband connections were available to more than 80 percent of Japan’s citizens. By 2006, Japan declared that it had surpassed the broadband goals of e-Japan and was ready to launch its next national strategy, called “u-Japan“. The “u” takes the nation’s broadband beyond “ubiquitous,” to become “universal,” “user-oriented,” and “unique.”
Getting Behind a Big American Idea
Free Press’ own research found that most of the countries with similar universal and open access policies had nearly twice the level of broadband penetration as those that did not.
The OECD seems to agree. “Governments providing money to fund broadband rollouts should avoid creating new monopolies,” according to its report summary. They recommended that any public broadband infrastructure “should be open access, meaning that access to that network is provided on non-discriminatory terms to other market participants.”
Public policy should be designed to make it profitable for corporations to behave in ways that better serve both the free market and the public interest. And we’re seeing more and more from international examples that that requires a shared vision with a light but clear legislative touch. (This issue will be widely discussed this coming weekend as Internet activists, visionaries and innovators come together in Minneapolis at the National Conference for Media Reform).
When President Eisenhower set Americans to work building the nations’ Interstate Highway System he mobilized members of Congress from both sides of the aisle to appropriate federal funds and create corporate incentives for the construction of 41,000 miles of new roads. It was the largest infrastructure project in American history to that point, but the $25 billion in federal money set aside to build the nations main arteries yielded an almost immediate return to our nation’s economy.
The construction of a universally accessible Internet superhighway ranks as important today, and it can be accomplished with even stronger collaboration between the public and private sector.
Future policymakers who are serious about America’s well-being should learn from our failings and from success in other countries so we can deliver the vast benefits of an open connection to every American. It’s time we started construction.
–by Timothy Karr
Popularity: 1% [?]
We are a plum ripe for the picking. In Texas, it seems, there is now a test under way to ’sell’ Internet minutes to user/subscriber’s as we currently do for cell phone users.
I wonder, is the current status of the Internet in the US tied to yet another money scheme?
Anyone want to field that one?
Sure is. This country has balkanized the Internet and made a whole lot of little phone companies rich off the back of their generally poor users.
I live in Third World America served by a a nationally owned little phone company Fairpoint Communications. They provide dial up at 31.2 kps and that costs 22.95 a month. For 44 and change I can get slow high speed service at 63 kps.and there are no hotspots.
I could take to satellites and pay 67 a month for irregurar sat service. Guess who paid for the r&D for Mr. Hughs service? And then there is a good Deal from Alex Jones at 674 a year in advance for his business service,extra money down.
They the major players are cutting a fat hog in the ass for worse service than Uganda.
This is living within 50 miles of Colorado Springs technical capital of Colorado. And one wonders how they invented the internet with such brillant economic models out of the twelfth century.
The argument for needed Internet reform of the U.S.’s priest-king and royal monopolist system is perhaps persuasive here. Aceess to the Internet needs to be universal, for non-specific uses. Thanks to totalotarian law-making public-fraud basis and to our a-strategic neocon non-leaders, the U.S.’s citizens are ,as usual, paying much more for much less and sinking rapidly by world standards.
Name an area where this is not happenng? Top- down management by money skimming tsars and their thieving incompetent executive cohorts never worked anywhere–and it never well. The German trains ran on time during WWII–but they were full of Nazis. And unless we abandon this Medieval postmodernistic malarkey, we can self-evidently never have anything in the empire except a wistful memory of a great country we nearly had only 60 years ago. Sad; and sick.
One more point. The chosen analogue to the National Highway fomented under Ike as a solution to our transportation future produced short term benefits; but it cost 1 1/2 trillion dollars in real modern numbers, encoruaged the use of gas guzzlking cars, solved nothing in regard to diversified or public or renewable-fuel transportation, wrecked Route 66, was never even nearly completed and led directly to the government’s subsidization of suburbia, abandonment of cities, misgovernment, mindless road building, neglect of infrastructure, neglect of real planningh, CEO overcompensation, overdepndence on oil, and icreased governmental interference, pollution, pr lying, failures and tsardoms in a wide range of other areas.
So perhaps the better analogue would be to compare the Internet to the printing presses on which newspapers were first printed. This innovation freed men for the first time in human history from having to go through pseudo-religious, royal or governmental gatekeeper censors in order to be able to participate in the national marketplace of ideas.
In the decades when anyone could start a newspaper, if we had had regulation of the FORMS of expression–of proof, facts and evaluations by standards–the content would have taken care of itself.
In such a day, any man had an excellent chance of participating, and running off his own flyers, giving a speech, reaching people at least locally, even if he couldn’t convoince the local editor of the newsworthiness of his ideas. How many people did it take in those days to publish a two page weekly? Think about it.
Obviously, it’s senators now who hold the key to destroyng or maintaining the Freedom of the Internet. That’s who Media Channel and others need to be targeting. Preaching to the choir, to us who use it, is laudable, and may produce self satisfaction–but it accomplishes nothing else…
Sponsor an essay cotest 1000 words on: “Why do we need an Internet free of gatekeeper tsars and fees?” Publish a dozen of the best; and award the winner an i-Pod. Free idea. ood or not?
By Danny Schechter
As millions of homes are foreclosed upon, as unemployment grows and inflation mounts, it is time to understand the origins of the crisis and the need to fight for economic justice.
Written by veteran media critic and Emmy winner Rory O'Connor, Shock Jocks features unsparing profiles of the ten worst conservative radio talkers in America, including Michael Savage, Bill O' Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Don Imus and the rest.