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The growth of municipal broadband networks
- Subject: The growth of municipal broadband networks
- From: young at jsyoung.net (Jeffrey S. Young)
- Date: Mon, 28 Mar 2011 08:31:11 +1100
- In-reply-to: <4DE0E80D542147239C7F416E289278FA@DELL16>
- References: <[email protected]> <[email protected]> <4DE0E80D542147239C7F416E289278FA@DELL16>
On 27/03/2011, at 6:35 PM, "Michael Painter" <tvhawaii at shaka.com> wrote:
> Owen DeLong wrote:
>> On Mar 26, 2011, at 11:36 PM, Jay Ashworth wrote:
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>> From: "Owen DeLong" <owen at delong.com>
>>>> As such, I'm sure that such a move would be vocally opposed by
>>>> the current owners of the LMI who enjoy leveraging it to extort
>>>> monopolistic pricing from substandard services.
>>> As I noted, yes, that's Verizontal, and they have apparently succeeded
>>> in lobbying to have it made *illegal* in several states. I don't have
>>> citations to hand, but there are a couple sites that track muni fiber;
>>> I can find some.
>>> Cheers,
>>> -- jra
>> Laws can be changed if we can get enough momentum behind
>> doing the right thing.
>> Owen
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regulatory_capture
>
While I agree that laws can and should be changed and I agree that the
USA's telco privatization scheme no longer fits the pace of technology,
those who believe have a long way toward momentum. Those of us who
believe in a muni or a national broadband infrastructure are opposed by a
mountain of money (to be made) and an army of lawyers. For instance,
when this army couldn't hope to have muni networking outlawed on a
national basis they turned to each state legislature. They're ticking off the
states one by one:
http://www.cybertelecom.org/broadband/muni.htm
jy