saveaccess's blog
Posted on August 30, 2007 - 8:05am.
from: Progressive Party
Burlington Telecom
Today was an exciting day. I got to sign up for telecommunications service with my city’s own provider - Burlington Telecom. My wait had been just under two decades.
What took so long? In 1988, when I was appointed to the Burlington Electric Commission, I had missed the city’s consideration of whether to provide its own cable TV service. While Mayor Bernie Sanders had been clear on the need for local public control, the City Council had been divided and uncertain, and had looked to the electric commission. In reviewing what had happened, I saw a letter to the council from the previous commission chair. In it, he warned that a public system could be a disaster – that cable rates could soar to $15 per month. That helped scuttle any hope of the city creating its own cable system. Sanders negotiated a decent deal for the city, including specific consumer protections, and the franchise was awarded to Cox Cable.
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Posted on August 30, 2007 - 7:57am.
from: Columbia Trubune
Struggling access channel makes plea for help
By T.J. GREANEY of the Tribune’s staff
Published Wednesday, August 29, 2007
The clock is ticking on public access television in Columbia. Without help from city hall, televisions tuned to Columbia Access Television will go black in October.
Posted on August 30, 2007 - 6:46am.
from: Ars Technica
700MHz lobbying: Google good, wireless operators better, Frontline best
By Nate Anderson | Published: August 29, 2007 - 08:49AM CT
Google has stepped up its efforts in Washington, DC over the last few years, and those efforts appear to be paying off. An analysis of lobbying efforts at the FCC this year shows that Google lobbyists managed to record 19 separate phone calls or meetings with FCC staff, including the commissioners themselves—and that's only Google's 700MHz lobbying. But the company's efforts are overshadowed by those of the traditional wireless carriers, which have turned spectrum lobbying into an art form.
Posted on August 29, 2007 - 9:34pm.
from: Vote Gibbons Out
Nevada's AT&T TV Boondoggle
Leave it to Governor Jim Gibbons and the Legislature to subsidize bad tech with bad policy.
The Gube's Noise Machine, or what's left of it, was making, well, noise about the big subsidies the state will be handing corporate giant AT&T by letting it provide cable TV without having to call it cable TV or having to deal with pesky local governments, under a new bill just made into law--AB 526. (ET, RGJ, HL)
Posted on August 29, 2007 - 9:31pm.
From MuniWireless
Why ConnectKentucky Makes a Bad Model for U.S. Broadband
August 27, 2007 By Carol Ellison
The United States risks falling deeper into the world-wide digital divide if states model their future after a Kentucky initiative that embraces DSL as the broadband standard.That’s the fear articulated by Sean P. Aune on Tech.Blorge and it deserves to be echoed here.
DSL’s download speeds range from 128 kbps to about 3Mbps and uploads are even slower. Nevertheless, ConnectKentucky, an initiative in which incumbent providers are heavily invested, is touting the state’s model as one for the nation. Kentucky deserves a lot of credit for extending current broadband options, including DSL, to its rural communities. It enjoys a success rate that’s admirable for a state as rural and mountainous as Kentucky. But should one state’s strategy be super-imposed on a nation, particularly when that strategy is married to technologies that are not delivering the band width needed for the emerging demands of high-speed connectivity?
That is, of course, a rhetorical question. The answer is “it shouldn’t.”
ConnectKentucky is largely focused on expanding service through private providers heavily invested in DSL. It has succeeded in getting a majority of residents in that rural state connected. But, when it comes to national policy, consideration should not stop at just building out current service. Contrast ConnectKentucky to the goals in Minnesota where communities are eying fiber build-outs as the solution.
Aune predicts a DSL mindset will hammer shut the coffin on U.S. competitiveness in broadband connectivity if it’s used as the centerpiece of a national strategy. He’s right—and not just because DSL is slow.
Back in May, we summarized quite a number of the proposals and initiatives being presented in Washington as national leaders debate what could go into a national broadband model. Readers expressed a variety of opinions regarding issues and models that should be considered in the debate.
Kentucky is hardly the only state pursuing aggressive initiatives. New Hampshire and Vermont are also on the fore front. Not coincidentally, these are all very rural, mountainous states where the chief concern is pushing broadband out to remote communities that previously had little to nothing. So anything better than dial-up would have been welcomed. But is that what the nation should settle for?
Communities that enjoy a wealth of broadband choices, such as mine here in the New York metro area, have enjoyed a plethora of broadband options from private providers for some time. Here, the concern is not getting broadband but getting fast reliable service that can support the band-hungry applications customers want delivered. Even more importantly in my area—where memories of Sept. 11 will forever linger—is the question of raliable, redundant, fail-safe service that can handle large-scale public emergencies.
We’re certainly not alone in those concerns and, as areas around the nation achieve universal connectivity and begin looking to what more they want and expect of broadband, the question will increasingly turn from access to speed, reliability, and whatever it takes to run the applications communities deem necessary to their future and well-being.
Click here to read Aune’s remarks.
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Posted on August 29, 2007 - 9:27pm.
from: Ars Technica
FCC Chairman Suspects ‘Grassroots’ Astroturfing in à la Carte Debate
August 28, 2007
By Nate Anderson
FCC Chairman Kevin Martin isn’t usually associated with groups like Consumers Union (publisher of Consumer Reports), Free Press, and the Consumer Federation of America, but he’s with them on the issue of à la carte cable. The groups—and Martin—are in favor of à la carte cable, and all coincidentally believe that much of the “grassroots” opposition to the idea is actually cable-funded astroturf (that is, fake grassroots movements) meant to sway public opinion.
Posted on August 27, 2007 - 8:39pm.
from: Broadband Reports
FCC Boss Riles Cable Astroturf Machine 'A La Carte' cable dust up...
Monday Aug 27 2007 by Karl
As we've noted, both cable and phone operators not only make up completely bogus consumer groups to support their political positions, they also frequently donate cash to minority and disability organizations in exchange for vocal political support for policies that often aren't in constituents' best interest (or vice versa).
Posted on August 27, 2007 - 8:34pm.
from: WMNF Radio
Time short for Pinellas public access TV advocates
08/27/07 WMNF Evening News Monday
By Mitch E. Perry
Pinellas County public access television could be forced off the air next month, perhaps forever.
There are only two public hearings left for advocates for the channel to persuade Pinellas County Commissioners not to cut the entire $331,930 budget.
Posted on August 27, 2007 - 8:32pm.
from: EldoTelecom
Friday, August 24, 2007
Cable company in regulatory no man's land, SoCal city charges in lawsuit
This type of situation may begin to crop up frequently in California, where cable companies can opt to remain under local government franchise agreements or get a statewide franchise from the California Public Utilities Commission under new legislation that took effect this year, the Digital Infrastructure and Video Competition Act.
Posted on August 27, 2007 - 6:55am.
Note: The Telco/Cable closed loop IPTV systems are designed to keep viewers locked into the companies interface via their own set-top box software (TV browser if you will). The cable companies have been developing these features since the late 80's to bring more advertising and home shopping under their control via proprietary interfaces. Viewer subscriptions are a less significant source of revenue than the potential of controlling the flow of advertising, product sales and news and information. IPTV has simply evolved as a cheaper delivery system that delivers more channels via a closed intranet network.
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