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Broadband Stimulus Plan: How About Some Data First?

by: Ryan Singel  |  Wired

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(Photo: Getty Images)

    During the Great Depression, the government tried to revive the economy with the New Deal's public work projects, and ended up paying people to dig unneeded ditches.

    In today's deep recession, digital age advocates are trying to persuade President-elect Barack Obama to put billions into a nationwide broadband build-out as part of his planned economic stimulus package.

    Given that the internet has grown into an indispensable tool for the economy, for people's personal lives and for the nation's political discourse, spending billions to keep it stable and expand its reach is simply common sense.

    But how do we make sure that the billions aren't spent creating the 21st century equivalent of ditches to nowhere?

    The question of how to spend that money most effectively is largely unanswerable, since almost no one knows anything about the internet's infrastructure and those that do know aren't sharing that information with policymakers or regulators.

    In a radio address earlier this month, Obama already signaled that the stimulus package will earmark billions to spur broadband deployment in order to keep the U.S. from sinking even lower than 15th on the list of well-wired countries.

    There are many urging that the $800 billion or so economic stimulus plan include money for broader broadband. Higher education IT consortium EDUCAUSE suggests $100 billion (.pdf) be spent on fat fiber optic links to homes, while FreePress, a net neutrality advocacy group, has a $44 billion plan. For its part, the FCC has a pending proposal to open a swath of the airwaves dedicated to free, but filtered, wireless internet.

    But the problem is that no one knows the best way to make the internet more resilient, accessible and secure, since there's no just no public data. The ISP and backbone internet providers don't tell anyone anything.

    For instance, the government doesn't know how many people actually have broadband or what they pay for it.

    In short, how can anyone decide what's the best way to build a bigger information super-highway when the toll operators won't say anything about the current use of the road?

    Bruce Kushnick, a longtime advocate for more broadband and a founder of TeleTruth, blames the FCC.

    "The FCC has essentially created a fictional story about broadband's growth and deployment," Kushnick said. "Had the FCC done the actual work to examine the history of broadband and then questioned why America was not getting properly upgraded, we wouldn't be 15th in the world in broadband."

    In September, the FCC found that its data collection on internet broadband was incomplete and thus ruled that AT&T, Qwest and Verizon could stop filing some reports - because the requirements did not extend to cable companies, too.

    FCC Commissioner Johnathan Adelstein dissented in part, writing:

Just as an airplane pilot would not land a plane with eyes closed and instruments off, the Commission must ensure that its decision-making is guided by sufficient data. Particularly as telecommunications markets move to a less regulated model, the FCC can also play an important role by providing information directly to consumers that will empower them to choose among competitive carriers.

With so many benefits from the Commission’s efforts to collect and share market information, we should be skeptical about proposals to effectively jettison a host of reporting requirements that may help the Commission perform its consumer protection, broadband, competition and public safety functions.

    Should Congress attach net neutrality rules to any federal funds?

    Should governments subsidize companies like AT&T even more? Compel cities to lay down and rent out fiber to the home?

    How much pipe is already laid? Who owns the pipe now, and who should own the pipe in the future?

    Should broadband companies be regulated like utilities or be subject to common carrier rules like airlines are? How much competition is there already?

    What happened to all the promises that the nation's phone companies made about cheap DSL? What's been the effect of freeing the phone companies from having to lease their lines at wholesale prices, besides the closure of thousands of small ISPs? Where's the congestion? What pipes are not used and why not?

    There's simply a lack of information. The tubes are private. The connections between them are ever shifting and their mere existence is covered by non-disclosure agreements.

    KC Claffy, the principal investigator for Cooperative Association for Internet Data Analysis or CAIDA, recently gave a presentation to a group pulled together by the Department of Homeland Security's science and technology group, comparing the lack of transparency about how the internet works to that lack of information which brought down the international banking industry.

    Claffy writes:

The FCC is not exempt from the facts either - the agency should be pursuing empirically grounded validation of the claimed efficiency of its own policies, even if it requires trading temporary spectrum unlicensing as an experiment to gather realistic baseline data on wireless network behavior to policymakers. The academic community could even help design such a network, geared toward public safety objectives and supporting scientific research balanced carefully against individual privacy.

It is thus in interest of taxpayers for governments to promote and sometimes directly fund universal deployment of network infrastructure. More generally, government needs to prevent monopoly control over essential resources, mandate collection of traffic reports from ISPs to validate their claims, be a better role model for operational security and coordinate the development of a road map for Internet security similar to that of the energy sector.

    To be fair, the FCC did finally move in March to require more detailed reporting from ISPs and to update its definition of broadband so that only connections of 768Kbps or faster count (the low end of most DSL offerings). For years, the FCC classified any connection of 200Kbps or higher as broadband, allowing the agency to make inflated claims about the number of people with quality connections to the net.

    Under the new rules, a telecom also can no longer say that a ZIP code is wired for the millennium so long as one house in the area subscribes to a service at 200Kbps.

    Billions for a better internet, sure - but in absence of some real data, some real experiments, and some real verifiable science, that money is likely to be wasted or simply handed off to big telecom companies that have already proven they aren't in any hurry to wire us up to future.

  

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Comments

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WHAT?? The poor should have

WHAT?? The poor should have free internet access? But then they might be educated as to who were the evil doers -- the ones responsible for the financial meltdowns and the invasions and all that. Gee, they might also be able to access educational materials or even run businesses or some such thing. NO. Only the rich should have access to the internet. ---- NOT!

That's a pretty sleazy and

That's a pretty sleazy and blithe dismissal by Singel of FDR's Works Progress Administration, which did a helluva lot more than "pay people to dig unneeded ditches." Come to my little town up here in in what was then the outer reaches of nowhere, and you'll see imprinted in a very nice sidewalk near my house "WPA, 1935." From that year through 1943, the WPA provided almost 8 million jobs, As Wikipedia points out: "The program built many public buildings, projects and roads and operated large arts, drama, media and literary projects. It fed children and redistributed food, clothing and housing. Almost every community in America has a park, bridge ore school constructed by the agency."We also had a Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp not far from town here during those hears. The crew there helped maintain national park trails, etc. Singel's dismissive bit of denigration obviously was stated by him either out of ignorance or for convenience in making his point. I also sincerely doubt that he is anywhere near old enough to have actually experienced the Great Depression as some of us did.

Out of the hundreds of

Out of the hundreds of thousands of miles of ditches that were dug, one would be hard pressed to find many miles that were unneeded. I lived through that era, and I have jet to find ditches, rock embankments, and culverts that are not still being used to good purpose. Don't let us try to soften the Right wing by admitting what isn't true just to make them feel better.

The only way broadband is

The only way broadband is ever going to reach rural America is through satellite. I live in a rural community and was told by the local telephone company, that we will never see DSL,there just are not enough houses in the area to make it economically possible. Satellite can reach anywhere, and the government controls many communication satellites, it would be a matter of setting up a few server farms(with up links), getting a fair price for already existing dish systems, selling them at a fair price, then hiring hundreds of installers . Most people would be willing to pay, if the price was commensurate with dial up ISP's, and the speed was somewhere close to cable networks.

Yet another example of the

Yet another example of the government creating an industry, turning it over to private corporations and then letting them screw everyone as if THEY (the corpses) were the one's who legitimately spent all the money on R&D. The internet is a perfect example of how the government is plenty capable of "doing something right," but of course government gets no credit. People make fun of Al Gore for having been responsible for the internet (he did make sure the money was there to lay down those pipes in the first place). Maybe we should re-nationalize the internet and throw all those vulture-middle-men to the wolves?

I've found that access to

I've found that access to the Internet doesn't necessarily lead to education of the "masses", rather the "masses" seem to discover sources of "disinformation" more readily. (Blaming gays for the Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac melt downs for instance.) Not much different than listening to Fix News. But, that doesn't matter -if- your goal is to enable the USA to compete in the new international market. The alternative is Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe. (Bush is "this close" to filling that role.) Total control of the information available to the "subjects" at the expense of seeing your country dissolve before your eyes. Even corporations recognize that nearly instant access to information for their employees is required if the corporation is going to survive. The "masters of the universe" are walking a fine line. Their "subjects" (employees) must have information in order to effectively serve the corporation, but the more information the "subjects" have the more likely they are to turn on the "masters". 'Tis a quandary. Look in the mirror... Which are you?

Any data collected, much

Any data collected, much less disseminated, by the FCC and DHS is not only worse than useless, but absolutely guaranteed to have been put there for the benefit of major corporate campaign donors. Sorry, even though I spend ten hours a day on-line -- mostly looking for a job, these days -- I can't consider broadband "indispensable," especially considering that half the businesses and government offices have net-nannies so stupidly restrictive that you have to hand-carry any memo containing the word "free" to the building across the city. In a few years, UNIX sysadmins can be turned loose on modernizing the structure, but in the meantime, Priority One is keeping the electricity on and regaining some semblance of manufacturing capability and know-how. Priority Two is to fund the libraries, where there are public access terminals available, and books and newspapers and librarians if the net goes down. It's no coincidence that the political party whose main base is the ultra-stupid concentrates on cutting funding for libraries. And if we treated spammers and mal-ware spreaders as the thieves and terrorists that they are, we could considerably unclog the information superhighway.