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Comments on: How to squelch growth of the high-speed Net

Former Undersecretary of Commerce Robert Shapiro warns against overregulating in the name of social policy.

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Baloney
by mmormando August 18, 2006 8:32 AM PDT
What the author fails to mention is that originally internet access was driven by telephone system access, which was mandated by the build out requirements he decries. Now the US is significantly behind other nations in rolling out hi speed internet, other nations that do have build out requirements, while we're saddled with corporate flunkies in the government who are going to listen to people like the chairman of Qwest who when asked about his opposition of metropolitan fiber networks asked, "Why deliver a cadallac when the consumer is happy with a fiesta?", and call him a genius.
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But PC competition isn't today's monopoly
by dpent August 18, 2006 2:42 PM PDT
He forgets that all these people who are adopting technology are doing so in a COMPETITIVE environment. For hook or crook, today's broadband marketplace is a monolopy in many markets and at best a duopoly in most. Innovation does not hold the same value under those conditions. Protection of cash flow is the driving factor in those cases.

Comparing it to the PC or technology products market is disingenuious. If I could go to a local retailer and buy broadband to install ANYWHERE I could possibly want it then this analysis would work. Problem is broadband doesn't work everywhere can plug in that electronic device I can buy at retail.

Broadband should more like electricity - a utility - than a technology product for that very reason. It is a utility that needs to be pervasive in order to enable the other products in the marketplace.
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Regulation ALWA YS slows growth
by bdennis410 August 19, 2006 3:22 PM PDT
While I appreciate Mr. Shapiro's experience and expertise, I consider his rationale for bundled services erroneous. A La Carte service offerings in fact offer the best way to introduce overall competition for each type of service, leading to lower prices for each. It is the FCC and the do-nothing FTC that reveal the negative effects of political considerations on a real free marketplace. And so no one mistakes my meaning, I wasn't conferring a positive spin on the FCC; in fact they have taken an excess of anti-competitive actions, namely by protecting the telecons and cable companies from open and freely competitive content providers and service offerings.
And the rationale of the telecons and cable that they must have restricted competition in order to recover their "infrastructure investment" is just untrue.
Does anyone honestly think that telecon and cable would refrain from building networks to seize the most humongous profit opportunity in history?
What's the size of the potential market opportunity, you ask?
Well, connecting all 112,000,000 miillion households(we're above 70% now), and say 15,000,000(about 50% now) of the 25 million businesses would generate potential revenues of...wait for it...here it comes...$900,000,000,000 Billion to $1,300,000,000,000 -That's Trillions with a big "T" folks. And that doesn't include multiple outlet charges, ancillary service packages, equipment, and...and...and...
Competitive access could cause those numbers to drop anywhere from 20% to 40%, and still deliver amazing service choices for entertainment, communications and information and so much more.
That's what the rationale should be based on; that the provisioning of services of all types, from entertainment, to communications, to information and whatever, in and of themselves offer the best opportunity.
Subsidies in the form of restricted competition, and outright allowance of monopolies just fly in the face of true free market supporters.
What cable and telecon want, and have succeeded in achieving, is a "guaranteed" ROI and profitability, free from the risk of the marketplace.
And that my friends is not what we're all about, and is in fact why cable and telecon rates have been so high for so long.
And don't look for relief anytime soon. The bundling of services along with restricted competitive access guarantees that we will face unreasonably high prices forever.
Want a reality check? Just look at how the services were developed and are being offered in Europe and Korea, Hong Kong and Singapore. Where there is competitive access, broadband penetration is higher and the cost is less. The US is , by varying definitions, 12th to 16th in Broadband access, even though Internet access overall penetration may be higher.
If this makes you frustrated and angry, do something. Write, call, email your elected representatives and call for freely competitive access.
http://www.firstgov.gov/Citizen/Topics/Voting.shtml

Diogenes
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Regulation ALWAYS slow growth and competiton
by bdennis410 August 19, 2006 3:24 PM PDT
While I appreciate Mr. Shapiro's experience and expertise, I consider his rationale for bundled services erroneous. A La Carte service offerings in fact offer the best way to introduce overall competition for each type of service, leading to lower prices for each. It is the FCC and the do-nothing FTC that reveal the negative effects of political considerations on a real free marketplace. And so no one mistakes my meaning, I wasn't conferring a positive spin on the FCC; in fact they have taken an excess of anti-competitive actions, namely by protecting the telecons and cable companies from open and freely competitive content providers and service offerings.
And the rationale of the telecons and cable that they must have restricted competition in order to recover their "infrastructure investment" is just untrue.
Does anyone honestly think that telecon and cable would refrain from building networks to seize the most humongous profit opportunity in history?
What's the size of the potential market opportunity, you ask?
Well, connecting all 112,000,000 million households(we're above 70% now), and say 15,000,000(about 50% now) of the 25 million businesses would generate potential revenues of...wait for it...here it comes...$900,000,000,000 Billion to $1,300,000,000,000 -That's Trillions with a big "T" folks. And that doesn't include multiple outlet charges, ancillary service packages, equipment, and...and...and...
Competitive access could cause those numbers to drop anywhere from 20% to 40%, and still deliver amazing service choices for entertainment, communications and information and so much more.
That's what the rationale should be based on; that the provisioning of services of all types, from entertainment, to communications, to information and whatever, in and of themselves offer the best opportunity.
Subsidies in the form of restricted competition, and outright allowance of monopolies just fly in the face of true free market supporters.
What cable and telecon want, and have succeeded in achieving, is a "guaranteed" ROI and profitability, free from the risk of the marketplace.
And that my friends is not what we're all about, and is in fact why cable and telecon rates have been so high for so long.
And don't look for relief anytime soon. The bundling of services along with restricted competitive access guarantees that we will face unreasonably high prices forever.
Want a reality check? Just look at how the services were developed and are being offered in Europe and Korea, Hong Kong and Singapore. Where there is competitive access, broadband penetration is higher and the cost is less. The US is , by varying definitions, 12th to 16th in Broadband access, even though Internet access overall penetration may be higher.
If this makes you frustrated and angry, do something. Write, call, email your elected representatives and call for freely competitive access.

Diogenes
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why either or?
by punterjoe August 20, 2006 4:55 AM PDT
Sure, competition is what drives progress. But utterly unrestrained, a virtual monopoly could eventually ensue, in which case the dynamic isn't outperforming competitors but the stagnation of wringing profits without additional investment/advancement. (Sound familiar cellphone users?) Regulation should be the ever present threat that compels the players to keep competing by ensuring that potential rivals have access to the playing field. Have we learned nothing from the gilded age of late 19th century America and trust busters (like Theodore Roosevelt) of the early 20th? Or the situations that led to the creation of the SEC?
Competition - definitely. But with responsible oversight.
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Bundling?
by Yortuk August 20, 2006 7:03 PM PDT
Since when has bundling ever been to the advantage of the customer?
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"Build-out" red herring
by Yortuk August 20, 2006 7:06 PM PDT
This issue isn't witholding acess to customers, it's witholding access to service providers. Free acess for providers is where all the internet innovation has come from. The telecoms want to shut out competition from other providers.
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