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Congress has passed — and the president has signed — the Broadband Data Improvement Act. It may now be possible to get some useful information about where the United States sits in the world when it comes to the deployment and adoption of broadband Internet services. If this turns out to be the case, it will be the first time we would have any real idea.
For reasons best known to itself, the FCC has for years adamantly refused to collect the data necessary to understand the
true state of the deployment of broadband Internet service in the United States. Earlier this year the FCC, under the threat
that Congress would order it to change its ways, did say it would collect better data in the future.
(See "FCC: Consistent to a fault, but there is a (small) hope".) Even with the somewhat better data there was no good reason to think that the FCC would produce more useful statistics,
considering its track record. Now Congress has acted and there is some additional reason to hope.
The recently adopted law is aimed at improving "the quality of Federal and State data regarding the availability and quality of broadband services
and to promote the deployment of affordable broadband services to all parts of the Nation."
The law mandates some useful ways to attain the first goal but does not do anything useful towards the second other than enable
regulators to shame broadband service providers that are not doing a good job.
The law requires the FCC to compile a list of poorly served parts of the country. I guess this is so carriers in those areas can be publicly chastised for their poor behavior.
The law also requires that the FCC figure out how U.S. broadband deployment compares with that in other countries in a systematic, apples-to-apples way. The results of this study will be useful at least to the degree that they may devolve a consistent agreement as to where this country sits. I've seen rankings that vary between No. 8 and 20 in the world -- the number seems to heavily depend on the goals of the person quoting it.
The law also requires the FCC to figure out if it would be useful to collect data on the actual speed that customers are getting rather than the fantasy numbers provided by carriers. If feasible to obtain, this value could force truth in advertising -- such a concept!
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Comments (3)
The state of broadband deployments in ElboniaBy Anonymous on October 17, 2008, 6:30 pmThe FCC list on underserved areas here in Elbonia can start with the fifty states. Here's a hint, if you are measuring bandwidth in kilobit units per second, you...
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BroadbandBy Anonymous on October 17, 2008, 9:14 amThere are 2 issues that needs to be looked at realistically but likely wont be: 1)The FCC uses an outdated definition of what exact speed constitutes broadband. 2)Several...
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Black Hole in WashingtonBy Anonymous on October 15, 2008, 2:57 pmI live in an area with no DSL or Cable and must get my broadband via Wildblue, a satellite service. It maxes out @ 1.5M down and 100k up on a good day- sometimes...
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