Of Municipal Broadband, Astroturfing And Figuring Out What The Real Story Is
Grok Headline matches for Of Municipal Broadband, Astroturfing And Figuring Out What The Real Story Is
The Ups And Downs Of Municipal Broadband
The Ups And Downs Of Municipal Broadband
04/14/2004 11:51 AMFollowing last month's Supreme Court ruling stating that
state
s could outlaw municipal broadband, ZDNet has an interesting
interview with
Jim Ballmer, one of the lawyers fighting to let municipalities offer
broadband, should they want to. Meanwhile, the very large UTOPIA
municipal broadband (offering fiber to the home) project in Utah was
dealt a huge setback last night when Salt Lake City
decided
not to support the project, after a fairly intense fight over the
issue. Qwest is rejoicing, as they've been complaining about UTOPIA
ever since it was first conceived. However, the folks behind UTOPIA
are clearing trying to push ahead, and hope that they'll be signing up
a few other cities to help out soon. The big questions now are
whether or not the other cities involved are willing to foot the
larger part of the bill and whether or not they'll be able to find
enough subscribers to make AT&T still be interested in being a service
provider on the network. Once again, we return to the
example
of Burlington, Vermont, where a municipal fiber connection with
ownership by its own users means much more opportunity for everyone
except companies who previously had the local monopoly on
providing (much slower) broadband access. A municipal solution that
allows companies to sign on as providers builds on the idea of a
natural monopoly while still allowing true competitive market
pressures to provide people with better services.
Municipal Broadband at SXSW
Municipal Broadband at SXSW
02/07/2005 01:07 AM Events move so fast, my head spins: a few days after covering the
flurry of activity around the New Millennium Research Council's report
discouraging municipal broadband, I was asked to moderate a panel on
the discussion on March 14 during the South by Southwest (SXSW) music,
arts, and interactive festival and conference in Austin, Texas. Esme
Vos is also on the panel, from MuniWireless.com, and we should have a
rip, and might I add, roaring time. The interactive part of the event
runs March 11 to 15; the overall event is from March 11 to 20....
NRMC Report on Municipal Broadband Is
Out
NRMC Report on Municipal Broadband Is
Out
02/05/2005 09:27 PM I've read the report, and it's worth downloading and reviewing: The
report from the NMRC is called "Not In The Public Interest - The Myth
of Municipal Wi-Fi Networks -- Why Municial Schemes to Provide Wi-Fi
Broadband Services With Public Funds Are Ill-Advised." I've studied it
now and have some comments. Before reading my comments, you should
review that report and one that's a predecessor and cited in this
report and in some of the advance publicity from The Heartland
Institute, which co-produced the report--The Beacon Hill Institute at
Suffolk University's Municipal Broadband in Concord: An In-Depth
Analysis. (See also Karl Bode's more irate analysis of the report.)
I'm going to back in time to March 2004, when the Beacon Hill
Institute report was published because many elements of it are
embedded in the NMRC report. The Concord report from Beacon Hill
analyzes whether a proposed network in Concord, Mass., has any hopes
of producing a good return with low risk. The report looks at four
cities, including Tacoma, Wash., and Ashland, Ore., and also examines
RCN, a cable operator that tried to offer competitive broadband
services in areas with incumbent operators. Some financial details in
the report on Tacoma and Ashland date to 2001 partly because financial
information isn't readily broken out for these two projects. Based on
aspects of the Beacon Hill report, it was clearly primarily written in
late 2003 when full-year figures for 2002 were all that would have
been available. It's tricky to tease out where they got numbers for
Ashland and Tacoma even after studying and following the footnotes and
reading reports at the various project sites. For instance, a citation
on Ashland borrowing as much as $20 million from other city agencies
to make up revenue shortfalls in their fiber network is attribute to a
site called Dynacorp-sucks.com that was "last accessed January 28,
2003" in the footnote reference. There is no record of this site at
Archive.org, either, which doesn't mean it didn't exist, but means I
cannot research what used to be there. On the Ashland Fiber Network
site and City of Ashland's site, I cannot find recent numbers on cost
and capital expenses, except that in the 2003-2004 budget, income from
AFN outstrips expense by about 15 percent ($2.67 million in versus
$2.33 million out). There appears to be no primary research in the
Beacon Hill report, such as...
Senators back municipal broadband
Senators back municipal broadband
06/24/2005 03:32 PMIn the face of opposition from the telecom industry, some US senators
are supporting municipal broadband.

Does Municipal Broadband Save Jobs?
Does Municipal Broadband Save Jobs?
04/30/2004 01:33 PMJust as certain states (at the urging of big broadband providers) are
trying to
ban
municipal broadband offerings, Broadband Reports is looking at
whether or not municipal broadband
helps create
jobs and boost the local economy. It seems like it's a mixed bag
- but in a fairly expected way. Obviously, it has the ability to do
two things: (1) give jobs to local residents working for the municipal
broadband service provider and (2) help create new jobs for those who
need broadband. However, it's unlikely (on its own) to suddenly turn
any town or city into the next Silicon Valley. Still, with some towns
unable to get broadband any other way, it can clearly help towns
keep jobs that
would otherwise go away. Considering the fact that, these days,
many jobs
require broadband access, it seems somewhat
ridiculous for states to mandate that their towns and cities can't
come up with their own solutions.
Model Anti-Municipal Broadband Bill
Model Anti-Municipal Broadband Bill
12/22/2004 01:27 AM Esme Vos has uncovered (and has available for download) the model
bill for state legislatures to ban municipal broadband: The
inestimable Vos has emerged as a firebrand for fighting back the
rhetoric of incumbent teleopolies that have put out the meme that
there are unfair tax breaks and unfair advantages that a municipal
operation has over private enterprise. This ignores the subsidies
provided--estimated at over $700 per person in Pennsylvania over the
last 10 years of a failed Verizon development plan,
non-refundable--and "taxes" that telcos and cable companies are often
able to collect for their own coffers. Vos now posts the bill that
someone--she'd like to know the individual--wrote to distribute to
various legislatures under the guise of competition. Competition means
not taking money from taxpayers, charging them by overpriced tariffs
defended to the death, collecting and keeping funds intended for rural
or impoverished citizens to have universal access, and fighting for
the right to squeeze the pipes to prevent interesting competitive
services from rising. Competition does mean building neutral
infrastructure paid for by access fees that allow all comers to
compete on a level playing field to let the market determine the best
use of resources. It's strange how businesses that hate regulation in
theory love how it supports their business models. Also strange how
many folks who claim to want real markets only really want big
businesses to be able to dictate to their markets what things cost. I
looked at the innards of the Word doc that Esme posted, but the only
secret information it contains is about her computer, not any previous
computers. On Monday morning, she posted the list of board members of
the American Legislative Exchange Council, the group behind the model
legislation. Update: Sascha Meinrath calls astroturf on three
organizations, including ALEC, that are behind anti-municipal
telco/cable/telecom service bills, pointing out that their boards'
members are mostly made up of folks that more likely have their own
companies' interests at heart despite the mission statements....
Podcast: Municipal Broadband Panel
Discussion
Podcast: Municipal Broadband Panel
Discussion
03/17/2005 03:44 AM Listen to an hour of discussion at South by Southwest Interactive
(SXSWi) on municipal broadband: Deep in the heart of Texas, mere
blocks from the State House where a bill is under consideration to ban
all forms of municipal networking, I led a panel discussion at SXSWi
with three people well poised to discuss the issues: Esme Vos of
muniwireless.com, Rich MacKinnon of Austin Wireless, and David
Isenberg of the SMART Letter. The conversation was fairly focused, and
you'll hear the same themes over and over again: disruptive technology
is threatening incumbents who are trying to prevent all forms of
experimentation and innovation by municipalities because any success
on these fronts could produce competitive private businesses. All
three panelists agreed the innovation and competition were good, and
all four of us at various times agreed that utilities should probably
not have anything to do with broadband except in facilitating
competition by removing barriers to access to poles and conduits, or
by contracting private firms to build neutral networks onto which any
provider can roam. The audio quality is mixed: you can hear the
panelists quite well, but questioners and commenters from the
audience--including well-known quantities like Jock Gill, Dewayne
Hendricks, Cliff Skolnick, and Jon Lebovsky--are a little faint. You
can download the audio in MP3 format either directly as MP3 [31 MB] or
as a ZIP archive [24 MB]. An article in yesterday's Austin Business
Journal--in which publication my picture will appear in about two
weeks in an unrelated story--points out that even airport-based Wi-Fi
and broadband could be threatened because the contract that the
Austin-Bergstrom International Airport has with Wayport would be
banned under the first form of the house bill....
US senators offer bill to protect
municipal broadband
US senators offer bill to protect
municipal broadband
06/24/2005 06:54 PMWASHINGTON - Two U.S. senators have jumped into a growing debate
about whether cities should be allowed to create tax-funded broadband
services, with the two introducing a bill that would prevent states
from outlawing municipal broadband projects.

Fourteen U.S. states have passed laws limiting municipal broadband
services, with large Internet providers lobbying against city-offered
services.
The Community Broadband Act of 2005, introduced Thursday by
Senators John McCain, an Arizona Republican, and Frank Lautenberg, a
New Jersey Democrat, would prevent states from outlawing municipal
broadband service while requiring cities to regulate their own
broadband services the same as they regulate competitors. For example,
a municipal broadband service would have to pay the same franchise
fees as other providers.
Several cities, including Philadelphia, have explored offering
municipal broadband, typically using Wi-Fi technology, in recent
months. Late last year, Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell signed
legislation preventing further municipal broadband projects, but along
with the bill came an agreement between the city of Philadelphia and
Verizon Communicatons Inc. over a city-run Wi-Fi network.
The Community Broadband Act is needed to meet President George
Bush's goal of universally available broadband in the U.S. by 2007,
McCain said in a speech Thursday. McCain noted that the U.S. ranks
16th among nations in broadband penetration.
"This is unacceptable for a country that should lead the world in
technical innovation, economic development and international
competitiveness," McCain said. "As a country, we cannot afford to cut
off any successful strategy if we want to remain internationally
competitive."
Private investment in the Internet should be protected and
continued, he added. "However, when private industry does not answer
the call because of market failures or other obstacles, it is
appropriate and even commendable, for the people acting through their
local governments to improve their lives by investing in their own
future," McCain said. "In many rural towns, the local government?s
high speed Internet offering may be its citizens only option to access
the World Wide Web."
Verizon and SBC Communications Inc., which both offer DSL (Digital
Subscriber Line) services, have opposed municipal broadband, as has
Time Warner Cable, saying tax-funded services should not be allowed to
compete against existing commercial services. A spokesman for Verizon
said Friday the company had not reviewed the McCain/Lautenberg bill
and had no comment on it. An SBC spokesman didn't immediately respond
to a request for comments.
The two telecom giants, however, helped fund a study released in
February that said municipal Wi-Fi networks could have "grave
flaws."
The New Millennium Research Council study suggested municipal
broadband services could dedicate tax dollars to rapidly outdated
technology. The study also noted that municipal broadband networks
could be expensive to maintain. "Municipal Wi-Fi networks present a
number of serious problems that are being overlooked as cities rush
into committing millions in taxpayer dollars to pay for network
development and expansion," the study said.
The McCain/Lautenberg legislation stands in contrast to a bill
introduced in May by Representative Pete Sessions, a Texas Republican
and former SBC employee. The Sessions bill, the Preserving Innovation
in Telecom Act of 2005, would outlaw municipal broadband services in
areas where competing commercial services exist. The bill has been
referred to a House subcommittee.
Sessions introduced the bill to ?discourage local governments from
wasting taxpayer funds on building duplicative infrastructure while at
the same time encouraging private-sector companies to offer
continually innovating service in underserved areas by removing the
specter of government competition" he said in a statement when the
bill was introduced.
On Thursday, 40 groups representing local governments, the IT
industry and consumers sent a letter to members of Congress asking
lawmakers to support pro-municipal broadband legislation. Among the
groups signing the letter were the League of California Cities, Public
Knowledge, the Rural Broadband Coalition, Consumers Union and the
Fiber to the Home Council.
SEE ALSO:
Da
ta privacy gets a hearing
BT's 'new wave' services contribute more to
revenue
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Heavy-Hitters Join Pro-Municipal
Broadband Legislative Battle
Heavy-Hitters Join Pro-Municipal
Broadband Legislative Battle
06/24/2005 10:01 PM Dell, Intel, Texas Instruments, and others want more broadband to
sell more gear to consumers: They've increasingly gotten involved in
the ongoing debate over whether incumbent monopolies and duopolies
deserve right of first refusal for broadband deployment in their
service areas over municipalities because of incumbents' investments,
municipalities' tax-free and bond-raising abilities, and the role of
government in competing with private enterprise. The Wall Street
Journal walks through the issue, starting with a small town in Texas
that's building broadband because SBC can't or won't. The Texas
legislature was considering a telecom "reform" bill--a bill which
removed many public service and oversight controls on telcos--that
would also have banned municipalities from participating in broadband.
The original bill was so broad it would have banned virtually all
private-public partnerships that the FCC and the Bush Administration
have stressed for extending broadband into the furthest reaches of the
country. The backlash is now coming since Texas's bill hit defeat for
a variety of reasons, partly including Dell's founder picking up the
phone and calling legislators. You see, computer makers would enjoy
selling more equipment and one way to do that is broadband. (Homes
with broadband connections tend to buy newer equipment and more
computers, among other reasons.) Pete Sessions (R-Texas) has
introduced a bill at the national level to pre-empt local legislation
(there's that anti-federalism again) governing municipal operation of
broadband. Sessions is the representative from SBC: a former employee
with huge stock and stock options held directly (not in trust) with a
spouse who currently works there. His chief of staff told the Wall
Street Journal that "the congressman's ties to SBC do not present a
conflict of interest." Except in that he has millions of dollars at
stake over SBC's continued performance in the market....

New group urges public/private sector
partnership to facilitate municipal
broadband
New group urges public/private sector
partnership to facilitate municipal
broadband
04/16/2005 05:07 AMA group called the High Tech Broadband Coalition is encouraging public
and private sector partnership to facilitate municipal broadband.
Ricochet Offers Broadband Portable
Internet to Municipal & Public Safety
Workers
Ricochet Offers Broadband Portable
Internet to Municipal & Public Safety
Workers
05/12/2004 05:28 AMdBusinessNews.com May 12 2004 9:41AM GMT
The Real Story Behind the April 9th
Insurgency in Iraq
The Real Story Behind the April 9th
Insurgency in Iraq
05/22/2004 10:59 PMusing our wives and children as human shields .. read what he has to
say .. first-hand
account
intellectualconservative.com/article3444.html
track this
site | 4 links
Astroturfing gone bad.
Astroturfing gone bad.
12/29/2003 01:49 PM Astroturfing
gone bad. Why aren't newspaper editors fighting this?
They've seen it before. Its one thing to offer a press
release and another to ask
visitors of the Bush-Cheney website to mail their newspapers
the same form letter.
Broadband over Powerline Moves into Real
Trials
Broadband over Powerline Moves into Real
Trials
06/14/2004 10:14 AMBits over juice starts to take off in trials, though its future is
still uncertain: A Washington state public utility is working with a
private Internet provide in an inexpensive 60-day trial to see how
well BPL actually works, and whether customers will find it
interesting. Nationwide, a few dozen trials have about 2,000 actual
customers. The future of the technology depends on the real cost and
the real speed when it's deployed in the field. Unlike unloaded copper
wire, which has known properties, the numbers of systems and the
distances involved in BPL add variables that need performance testing.
Broadband has to avoid truck rolls to houses to keep costs
affordable....
JBoss's Fleury Abjures Astroturfing
JBoss's Fleury Abjures Astroturfing
05/21/2004 03:47 PMMost Popular Online Activity: Figuring
Out A Way To Go Somewhere Else
Most Popular Online Activity: Figuring
Out A Way To Go Somewhere Else
08/11/2004 01:37 PMFor all that fear that the internet was causing people to spend less
time actually seeing other people, it turns out that the number one
activity online appears to involve figuring out a way for someone to
get out of their home to go somewhere else. According to the latest
study from the folks at the Pew Internet and American Life Project,
the
number one activity
online is finding maps (this is based on the percentage of people
who use the internet for this activity, and not how often this is
being done, of course). Coming in at second is communicating with
others. In other words, it appears that there are people out there
who only use the internet for finding maps, but who never actually
send out any email or do any other form of internet-based
communication. The study also notes that many of the online map users
have now learned that it no longer makes sense to ask for directions
offline.
And You Think Your Library Has Problems
Figuring Out Public Printing Issues
Now?!
And You Think Your Library Has Problems
Figuring Out Public Printing Issues
Now?!
04/29/2004 11:11 PMPhone
Makers Team with Printers
"Nokia, Samsung, and Siemens have teamed up with big names in
printers to ensure that printing from mobile phones becomes as easy as
desktop printing.
The Mobile Imaging and Printing Consortium (MIPC) today announced
that mobile handset makers Nokia, Samsung, and Siemens have become
strategic members of the consortium. MIPC is an industry group founded
by Canon, Epson, and HP to drive solutions and implementation
guidelines for providing users with easy to use mobile printing of
pictures taken with camera phones.
MIPC expects to have their first set of printing guidelines
available during the second half of 2004. Existing connectivity
technology standards and solutions such as Bluetooth wireless
technology, printing from memory cards and PictBridge will be the
underlying connectivity platforms for the consortium's work. What if
any licensing conditions there will be for the consortium's guidelines
is unclear.
According to research firm InfoTrends, camera phone users will
print over five billion images in 2004. That number is expected to
grow to 37.2 billion printed pictures in 2008, when, InfoTrend
predicts, 85% of all mobile phones sold will include an embedded
camera." [infoSync
World]
Homeland Security figuring out how to
suspend election in case of terrorist
attack
Homeland Security figuring out how to
suspend election in case of terrorist
attack
07/11/2004 01:34 PMThe upcoming issue of
Newsweek reports that Homeland
Security's Tom Ridge is looking into how he can call off the election
in the event of a terrorist attack.
Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge warned last week
that Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network may attack within the United
States to try to disrupt the election.
The magazine cited unnamed sources who told it that the Department
of Homeland Security asked the Justice Department last week to review
what legal steps would be needed to delay the election if an attack
occurred on the day before or the day of the election.
Link (Thanks, Todd!)"
NYT Store
U.S. vs. Microsoft: The
Inside Story of the Landmark Case
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"
NYT Store
U.S. vs. Microsoft: The
Inside Story of the Landmark Case
Price:
$24.95. Learn More.
Real
Estate
Spotlight on...
Golf
Properties
Live right on the
green...
Hamptons Homes
Montauk,
Easthampton, more...
• Search Other
Areas
Microsoft and..."
11/01/2003 04:13 AMMicah Wright Comes Clean, Ranger Story A
Hoax (This Is Apparently A Big Story In
The Blogosphere, But To Be Honest, I
Haven't Even Heard Of This Clown)
Micah Wright Comes Clean, Ranger Story A
Hoax (This Is Apparently A Big Story In
The Blogosphere, But To Be Honest, I
Haven't Even Heard Of This Clown)
05/03/2004 03:57 AMComic Book Resources has the full
scoop
comicbookresources.com/news/newsitem.cgi?id=3613
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site | 4 links
"REMEMBER WHEN MOQTADA AL-SADR was going
to lead a popular uprising across Iraq?
(That was April's we're-losing story).
Well, he didn't, and here's the story of
how we won. I wonder how much attention
it'll get..."
"REMEMBER WHEN MOQTADA AL-SADR was going
to lead a popular uprising across Iraq?
(That was April's we're-losing story).
Well, he didn't, and here's the story of
how we won. I wonder how much attention
it'll get..."
06/24/2004 11:11 AMThe Raw Story | A rational voice »
Exclusive: Print document of Republican
Schiavo talking points leaked to Raw
Story
The Raw Story | A rational voice »
Exclusive: Print document of Republican
Schiavo talking points leaked to Raw
Story
03/24/2005 05:02 PMthat clumsy Republican talking points memo .. proper perspective ..
Raw Story
rawstory.com/news/2005/index.php?p=202
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site | 4 links
How to Pay for Municipal Networks
How to Pay for Municipal Networks
09/21/2004 02:46 PMSome municipalities may have already learned some lessons about
offering telecom services that they can consider when deciding to
build Wi-Fi networks: Some of the most successful municipal offerings
of wired telecom services started out with small trial networks and
were offered by municipalities that already offer utility services to
customers. But beyond whether a municipality has experience with
billing and marketing a service, Wi-Fi presents a bunch of additional
uncertainties. In the wired example, in many cases the market doesn't
have any other option for broadband Internet access and customers
definitely pay for the access. In the case of Wi-Fi, in many cases
other service providers may already offer wireless access. Plus,
cities have to decide whether they want to offer access for free or
for a fee. If they want to deliver free networks, they have to decide
how to fund it, considering both the initial outlay and ongoing
support costs. Ultimately, citizens of communities may end up
deciding. In St. Cloud, Fla., the city is trying to decide how to pay
for the ongoing maintenance of the network and will likely ask
residents to decide on a ballot referendum. If municipalities decide
to ask residents to pay for access, they have to hope they can cover
their costs. At this stage in the market, based on the experiences of
commercial Wi-Fi providers, it's not clear that an operator can make
money from for-fee networks....
[f2c] Municipal wifi
[f2c] Municipal wifi
03/31/2005 02:36 PM(After a morning with no women speakers or questioners, we now have a
panel with a woman on it. Yay.) J.H. Snider moderates. [Sketchy
coverage follows...] Varinia Robinson is in charge of Philadelphia's
municipal wifi project. You have to get your muni wifi in by Jan. 1,
2006, or else you have go to your local provider. This was done to
protect "competition." The city thinks it'll cost $10.5M to build it
and $1.5M annually to maintain it. It will cover 45 square miles and
provide a mnimum of 1mb up and down. It's an ubiquitous indoor
network. To break...
World warms to municipal Wi-Fi
World warms to municipal Wi-Fi
06/25/2004 04:11 AMFrom Taipei to New York, it's wireless a-go-go
Los Angeles Looks to Build Municipal
Wi-Fi
Los Angeles Looks to Build Municipal
Wi-Fi
06/24/2004 09:36 AMThe Los Angeles Community Redevelopment Project is looking for
proposals to build a free Wi-Fi zone in downtown: MuniWireless.com has
the RFP (request for proposal)....
Let's Ban Municipal Networks Nationwide
Let's Ban Municipal Networks Nationwide
06/05/2005 10:56 PM Anti-Federalism rears its ugly head with Rep. Sessions's bill: The
bill would ban municipal networks where any competitive service
existed in the municipal area of governance. A grandfather clause
allows existing services to proceed. The language of the "Preserving
Innovation in Telecom Act of 2005" is so hilariously broad and
ill-defined that it could kill all kinds of projects that the
incumbent carriers this is meant to protect would support or are
involved in deploying. It has such a broad grandfather clause that it
could allow massive projects to continue if even a tiny portion of the
service was in use. I doubt it will go anywhere because in its current
form, it's a shotgun full of buckshot, not a surgical weapon. A broad
consortium of businesses and public policy groups will certainly try
to get it killed. I doubt it will get many supporters because of its
broad sweep. For instance, this bill would kill all future airport
Wi-Fi that's not already built out because government entities would
be unable to "provide" services if Wi-Fi were operating anywhere else
in the airport authority's municipality's domain. It's pretty easy to
read that interpretation....

Ohio Tries to Suppress Municipal-Fi
Ohio Tries to Suppress Municipal-Fi
12/19/2004 03:18 PM Esme Vos dissects the latest state bill that caters to incumbent
operators: Existing law prevents municipalities--with their tremendous
tax-free advantages as opposed to the massive subsidization of telcos
and cable operators--from running their own cable TV systems. A
modified bill, introduced by a graduate of the colleges of Zig Zigler
and Dale Carnegie, adds telecom services to that mix. Esme would like
to know which companies are behind this particular emendation to
Ohio's law. [link indirectly via GigaOm]...
New Twist on Municipal Hotspots
New Twist on Municipal Hotspots
06/28/2004 02:42 PMManchester, New Hampshire, plans to announce in mid-July that a
hotspot will be available downtown for anyone to use free for one
hour: It appears that the city decided it wanted a network and put out
a request for proposal. Signull Technologies offered to fund and build
the network and then offer one free hour per day per user. An hour a
day might be useful for folks who may want to check email during their
lunch break or for visitors to town. The agreement sounds like a good
way for Signull to pull in potential customers and for the city to
offer a useful service for visitors and residents....
Is free municipal wifi good?
Is free municipal wifi good?
09/02/2004 08:06 AMPhiladelphia is considering investing $10M to blanket 135 square miles
with wifi coverage. Some people for whom I have the highest respect,
and from whom I've learned a lot, I anticipate are going to denounce
this. Their argument is that the government is exactly the wrong
entity to make decisions best made by the market. Why? Because:
Government agencies are ill-equipped to make technical decisions.
Governments are corrupt. The incumbents have too much influence. Even
if Philadelphia makes the right decision, it will lock the city into
one technology that will be hard to displace. There is no such
thing...
Disputing Municipal Network Failures
Disputing Municipal Network Failures
03/19/2005 02:24 AM
The
folks at Tricitybroadband.com have a page that refutes
failures: Many of the anti-municipal networking foes have
released misinformation about what they describe as financially flawed
or failed networks around the U.S. Unfortunately, although there are
certainly municipal services that haven't worked out--there have to be
some failures--the ones that are bandied about are typically
misrepresented. Tricitybroadband.com has a regularly updated page that
provides the official response and financial details refuting this
misinformation.
The point here would be to work with facts: if the facts that the
utilities, cities, or Tricitybroadband is presenting are incorrect,
then other facts could refute them. We could have, say, a real debate
going in which real information was presented, examined, and
conclusions reached.
Gurley and Ellison on Municipal Rights
Gurley and Ellison on Municipal Rights
03/19/2005 02:24 AM
Bill Gurley of
Benchmark Capital offers a fantastic, capitalist, classically
conservative essay on municipal telecom/broadband:
Benchmark is an investor in Tropos, disclosed in Gurley's essay, but
his essay is one that should make those that favor self-determination
in government and true competition cheer. He peels back in six points
the problems with the rash of laws sparked by a March 2004 Supreme
Court ruling to restrict municipal involvement in telecommunications
infrastructure and service.
In brief, these laws: favor incumbents by eliminating competition,
enforce the idea that oligopolies are competition, restricts American
innovation, restricts leverage for municipalities over incumbent
development, eliminates community service aspects of broadband, and
removes self-determination. I call this classically conservative
because he's in favor of competition, although many conservatives
would exclude municipalities from being involved as competitors.
"In what is ostensibly the cornerstone "democracy" on the planet, one
would think that the citizens in each of America's cities could simply
"vote" on the services they believe make sense for their city to
provide."
Carol
Ellison writes about the tale of two companies interested in the muni
space: Ellison runs through the issues facing Tropos, a
Wi-Fi metropolitan mesh provider, and DynamicCity, which offers fiber
to the premises (FTTP). "The anti-muni bills present a scenario where
their companies aren't submitting bids to win the business. They're
forced into negotiations with a competitor, the incumbent carrier,
which understandably will want to protect the market and keep its
competition out."
Free municipal WiFi in Jerusalem
Free municipal WiFi in Jerusalem
09/05/2004 11:56 PM
Xeni Jardin:
Following up on
last week's post about the city of Philadelphia considering free
wireless 'net access for all, BoingBoing reader
cyphunk says, "Pfff. Jerusalem
(Israel) is already rolling out free wifi for the ENTIRE city --
starting with major commercial areas."
Link to news story.
State of Municipal Wireless Report
State of Municipal Wireless Report
03/14/2005 05:47 PM Esme Vos at Muniwireless.com has published her regular comprehensive
report: This free report is invaluable because it contains the detail
that's often hard to pull together about deployed municipal wireless
networks. It should be ammunition for any debate in which the question
of whether there are successful networks out there is raised. This is
also a good thing because most of the anti-municipal broadband folks,
both the reasonable ones and the ones who are acting by proxy for
incumbents, keep citing fiber-optic network costs and failures. (Even
though most of those networks were or are successful, which is an
entirely different topic of discussion.) The report also covers the
state of legislation to prohibit or limit municipal broadband....
PA incumbents get to veto municipal wifi
PA incumbents get to veto municipal wifi
02/01/2005 09:09 PMFrom an article by Wes Simonds at Wifi Planet: The terms of the bill
essentially give Verizon and other local carriers the right to veto
all citywide hotspot plans similar to Philadelphia's in the state of
Pennsylvania beginning Jan. 1, 2006. As Jock Gill suggests, we could
use some model legislation to preempt this type of anti-user,
corporate welfare in other states. [Thanks to Dewayne Hendricks for
the link.]...
Bill would thwart municipal Internet
Bill would thwart municipal Internet
02/01/2005 09:14 PMIndystar.com - Tue Feb 1, 08:50 am GMT
Xpress Municipal & Utility Clearance
Xpress Municipal & Utility Clearance
11/03/2003 11:13 AM11/03/03 - Server Ready
Municipal Wireless Goes Beyond Internet
Access
Municipal Wireless Goes Beyond Internet
Access
07/29/2004 05:22 PMWi-Fi Planet Jul 29 2004 8:18PM GMT
Verizon CEO Calls Municipal Wi-Fi 'a
Dumb Idea'
Verizon CEO Calls Municipal Wi-Fi 'a
Dumb Idea'
04/16/2005 08:41 PMGrok Description matches for Of Municipal Broadband, Astroturfing And Figuring Out What The Real Story Is
GrokA matches for Of Municipal Broadband, Astroturfing And Figuring Out What The Real Story Is
Of Municipal Broadband, Astroturfing And Figuring Out What The Real Story Is