AT&T Wants $100 Million From California Taxpayers For Aging DSL (dslreports.com) 224
An anonymous reader quotes an article on DSLReports: AT&T is asking California taxpayers to give them $100 million so that it can provide several parts of the state with unreliable, slow and expensive DSL service. Under Assembly Bill 2130 (written by AT&T lobbyists), AT&T would receive $100 million from state taxpayers. In return, AT&T would only need to provide 10 Mbps download and 1 Mbps upload and would have little to no oversight over whether the $100 million is even being used for the DSL service.
and unsurprisingly... (Score:4, Insightful)
they'll get it.
Re:and unsurprisingly... (Score:5, Insightful)
Comcast, Time Warner, and AT&T are having a contest
1. Who can be the biggest dick to their customer.
2. Who can screw over local governments the most.
3. Who can screw over State governments the most.
4. Grand Prize, screw over the Federal Government and ALL taxpayers.
Re: and unsurprisingly... (Score:2)
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The US power grid is a commercial enterprise. It's built with the minimum of redundancy needed to keep operating when a line goes down for maintenance, because unused capacity is seen as money wasted. This was demonstrated in 2003, when a single power line failed - and caused a series of cascade failures and desyncronisations that knocked out power to half the north-east US and a chunk of Ontario. The US has flaky power - and if electricity had a speed, it'd be slow too.
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You may be interested in knowing that, as written, your sig does not make sense. Mostly because the last "word" isn't a word in Hebrew.
DSL isn't necessarily unreliable (Score:2)
Unreliable DSL is a plant problem, not a technology problem.
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Regardless, what AT&T is capable of delivering is unreliable DSL service.
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I agree, the downside with DSL is that you also need copper, and to get that you "need" a landline.
Buried optical fiber is the way to go. It costs a bit to put it down but when it's there it will stand up to a lot of what nature can put out except earthquakes, but the fault lines are often known today and can therefore be circumvented. You may not know when the quake will happen, but when it happens you may at least know where it probably will occur. So don't cross a known fault line without appropriate rem
Re:DSL isn't necessarily unreliable (Score:4, Insightful)
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It depends on your telecom operator. Some won't give you DSL without a land line.
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Not all Telco's offer dry loops to non-business customers without jumping through hoops, and this is when you specifically know to ask about it.
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AT&T seemed to do everything in their power to screw over the ISP (Sonic). I called AT&T multiple times and it eventually turned out that they had told us the wrong wiring closet for our circuit, so Sonic came back and rewired, but I think AT&T late
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I'm not sure about the backbone structure of cellular communications, but I have see that cell phones are also more effected by earthquakes then copper. Keeping copper as a backup is a good idea if you want
Re: DSL isn't necessarily unreliable (Score:2)
Copper is good for voice service, especially with a simple corded phone, but nobody you might want to call has POTS anymore.
Meanwhile, the problem with cell phones is that the networks go over capacity the instant that a disaster happens.
Except 911 calls, which are prioritized and handled very differently by the system, cell phones don't work after any emergency.
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Right now I get 12Mbps VDSL, which presumably needed to have fiber to my neighborhood before they would even consider it (yes, I can increase this to 48Mbps if I wanted to spend the caps). My mother only gets 1Mbps as that is the best AT&T could offer. So how are they getting 10Mbps with normal DSL to rural areas which presumably are not close to the telephone switches?
I agree though, if they are digging new lines then they should be putting in fiber.
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Rural California is even more sparse in places than rural Finland (maybe not as much as Lapland though). On the other hand a lot of "rural" California is not sparse at all, there are many unincorporated tiny towns that find it difficult to even get reliable water and electricity.
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Ummm..what about fibre optic cable. Toronto we've had fibre optic cable [...] In Tokyo, they've had [...]
Yes, in large cities where the population density is measured in thousands per square kilometer, it makes a lot of sense.
The locations being mentioned are rural areas. Some have a population of approximately 0 per square kilometer, it can be 5+km between homes. Others are smaller towns where the population may be single-digit or double-digit per square kilometer.
Currently fiber doesn't make sense financially until you begin to approach 1000 per km2. Then you can have enough customers to justify the cost
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If the copper isn't already there it doesn't make sense financially until the same 1000 per km2. The bulk of the cost isn't the material, it's the installation and the costs for installing copper and fiber are about the same these days if not on the side of fiber given coppers price and long term maintenance costs. The problem is we have millions of miles of copper laying out there and rather than upgrade it to significantly better technology we simply try to use the existing asset poorly.
The rest of the wo
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You don't need fiber to the home. Even major California cities don't have that. But for example consider the mountain regions in California. They get good electricity, they even have decent mobile phone coverage from AT&T. So they really only need copper from the mobile phone backhaul to the houses. It won't be as good as a fat cable but 10Mbps down is a helluva lot better than dialup, assuming AT&T will give decent non-gouging rates.
My mother didn't have good phone service growing up in the Si
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In my market with CenturyLink many rural areas get slightly better service, unless you are at the very extent of line distance. This is because, at least in the city center, the lines to the CO are buried, old, and have definite pla
Umm... no. (Score:5, Insightful)
You think we don't see how poorly that arrangement has worked for us in the past? Kindly fuck off.
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They may have bought enough politicians to get what they want, but I doubt the public will fall for it.
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To: California State Govt.... (Score:3, Funny)
Please Piss up a live wire. Take your 20 year old DSL tech and cram it where the Sun cannot shine.... :-D
ATT = The Shittiest Company next to Comcast that Exists.
(Hi Comcast! YES, you are STILL the worst!)
Well, Yes, (Score:5, Insightful)
But AT&T probably has given at least ONE or two of those millions to the people they're asking for the hundred million. It's really just an investment. The DSL has nothing to do with it.
I'll take it over Comcast and a cap! (Score:5, Interesting)
I just downgraded to a 2 meg connection for $80 a month so I won't go over the cap with Comcast which was 30 megs. I have no choice in the matter and feel that is a good deal if AT&T won't do caps. 10 megs if fine. DSL is fine for streaming and more appropriate for geeks who do 100 gig caps easily each month. Cable operators are jerks in the matter where they sell LOOK 100 megs ... only 2 gig cap and $10 for each other gig in very small print.
I know the European readers are shocked and or laughing in disbelief at my comment but welcome to America.
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I just downgraded to a 2 meg connection for $80 a month so I won't go over the cap with Comcast which was 30 megs. I have no choice in the matter and feel that is a good deal if AT&T won't do caps. 10 megs if fine. DSL is fine for streaming and more appropriate for geeks who do 100 gig caps easily each month. Cable operators are jerks in the matter where they sell LOOK 100 megs ... only 2 gig cap and $10 for each other gig in very small print.
I know the European readers are shocked and or laughing in disbelief at my comment but welcome to America.
Compared to Europe, or even some 3rd world countries, North America (Canada and USA) seem awfully backward and old fashioned. So much stuff seems extremely retro or even antiquated; the banks, the electrical systems, the plumbing, the cars, the music you hear on the street (constant flashbacks to the '80s).
I'd thought North America was a centre of innovation and modern technology, so much for 'the New World'!! More like going back in time 30 years.
Re:I'll take it over Comcast and a cap! (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, well, you guys are just getting started on mass shootings and we've been doing them for fucking decades. When Charles Whitman was blasting people from the University of Texas tower, you guys couldn't even organize a proper sports riot.
Now we've got so many mass shootings they barely make it above the fold of the paper. You guys have one and you make it seem like it's a big fucking deal. Get over yourselves.
Re:I'll take it over Comcast and a cap! (Score:5, Funny)
I hate to break it to you, but we drive the same Japanese cars you Europeans do.
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I recently moved from rural Europe to USA. In europe I got 1 MB for around $60 and people within 10km of me were still on ADSL. I am now getting 100MB(speed wise I average 120MB) and lots of TV and music channels for around $105.
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Part of the issue is that you are just seeing comparisons of European cities to the worst of rural america.
I recently moved from rural Europe to USA. In europe I got 1 MB for around $60 and people within 10km of me were still on ADSL. I am now getting 100MB(speed wise I average 120MB) and lots of TV and music channels for around $105.
Try downtown Seattle.
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I don't know what you are referring to lumping the banking systems of Canada and the US together but they are fairly different. The banks in Canada have much tougher regulations. Our credit cards have had chip and pin for quite a while (about a decade?) and they have had NFC chips for tap and pay for years now.
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AT&T imposes transfer caps on their ADSL subscribers while although the ToS for their U-verse and GigaPower states a transfer cap, they're not enforced.
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Please kindly refrain from using the term America when refering to the United States (in this case, California?). I hated the internet services while in San Francisco myself.. I had a capped (WTF???) 24mbps (maximum speed available in the middle of SF ???) / 2 mbps (that`s last millennium!!!) from AT&T (they had signed something to be the only one providing service through the building, with fiber to the premise), for a ridiculous price, a bit more than twice what I pay for uncapped 60/30 in a remote region in Quebec, Canada, before accounting for the USD / CAD exchange rate!
So yeah, US / California sucks for internet speed, but that`s not like this everywhere in America.
And its probably better than the Internet access in downtown Seattle.
10Mbps is still faster than what I can get... (Score:2)
I've been arguing with AT&T for nearly a year now about getting a faster connection to our house. We live in the "woods", but no more than 10 miles from places with enough people to provide them with pretty fast U-Verse speeds. All they can provide me is 768kbps, no amount of begging and pleading has ever even gotten a tech out to even *check* if they can give me more (our direct neighbor gets 6Mbps, still slow but nearly an order of magnitude higher than mine). They have though promised to send someone
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If they are in the "woods" (i.e. somewhere rural) they are probably not close enough to that neighbor for WiFi to be an option.
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Wi-Fi is not the only wireless method, thankfully because it's one of the worst. But it's the most common if you don't want to deal with something that's not off the Best-Buy shelf. People sometimes have good medium range results using the pringle's can as a directional antenna. Won't be great but you'll have a signal. Or get 900mhz range equipment.
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But are the longer range radio technologies (e.g. 900MHz) legally usable without special licensing?
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There is a public range available. You just need the radio maker to have FCC seal of approval.
Good deal (Score:2)
In all fairness. speaking from overseas.. this sounds like a good deal. If all rural area gets 10/1Mbit net, or better, for only 100M.. then it's a pretty good deal.
And getting anyone connected should be priority for any state. Just only once you have and use net you realize it's about as essential as electricity. So even if tax payers help connecting more remote area's, i'd still see it as a good thing.
Relativating again.. If AT&T were to promise that kind of speeds on landlines nationwide at that pric
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In all fairness. speaking from overseas.. this sounds like a good deal. If all rural area gets 10/1Mbit net, or better, for only 100M.. then it's a pretty good deal.
That would be a great deal. Unfortunately this is AT&T we're talking about. They'll take the money and run, like they have in the past. We'll be $100 million poorer, they'll be $100 million richer, and absolutely nothing else will change. We've been here before, and the taste hasn't quite left our mouths yet.
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However AT&T is giving no guarantees, there will be no oversight, and the cost to the consumer will be very high. Later on they will lobby that because of all this money spent that 10/1 should count as "broadband".
Though I agree that 10/1 is good enough even for streaming, assuming you only stream one program at a time (and in rural areas it is indeed possible to teach children to limit the amount of tv they get, get their chores done, and even eat lima beans).
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Even parts of Silicon Valley don't get broadband.
Let it begin (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Let it begin (Score:5, Insightful)
Counteroffer should be that AT&T pays back the BILLIONS in subsidies they have already received and actually builds out the fiber that they've already promised to build!
And then the state should confiscate it and then use competitive bidding to decide who gets to manage it. Why? Because FUCK YOU, AT&T, that's why!
Not a dime up front (Score:5, Interesting)
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BEND OVER CALIFORNIA (Score:3)
We want to give it to you in true AT&T Style! Don't worry, you'll only feel like your getting screwed....
hehehe well, you are getting screwed. Deal with it. Don't worry, your legislators are coming out ok. We've paid them well.
Signed, AT&T
Of course they did... (Score:2)
no.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Didn't we give these companies billions in tax credits and incentives in the late 90's and early 2000's to upgrade and expand their infrastructure? Now they want more? Dont they make any money from the fees they charge customers to pay for this sort of stuff? Why do they need the taxpayer to cough up cash for them?
Also, I live three houses down from where Century Link in installing fiber in denver. Though I can see the equipment from my window and am less than a football field away, I'm not optimistic regarding my chances for getting FTTH, or even something better than cable service.
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April 1st (Score:2)
Corporate Welfare - Bannana Republic (Score:2)
Without taxpayers money, ATT&T might not pull through : P
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
AT&T had $5 BILLION free cash flow in 3rd quar (Score:5, Informative)
According to AT&T's press release dated October 22, 2015, AT&T had $39.1 billion in consolidated revenue, up 19% from the previous period (primarily due to the DirecTV purchase).
They also had $10.8 billion in cash from operations and $5 billion in free cash flow [att.com].
Apparently making a few billion dollars in a single quarter equates to not being able to spend $100 million to upgrade their own equipment. Who would have thought?
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Isn't the issue here the extremely long ROI for rural improvements? Is AT&T obligated to build out these areas that won't be profit centers for them? I'm guessing the state throwing money at them changes that equation.
Is AT&T the only provider who can do it? Did they even bid this out? I might have to RTFA here soon. :)
Business as usual (Score:5, Insightful)
This is Business as usual in the Corporate States of America.
The companies write the laws that say we have to pay them.
profit.
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The real Taker Class (Score:2)
AT&T is a prime example of the real Taker Class (tm).
Better than Chicago... (Score:2)
I guess they have too much money in California (Score:2)
Otherwise they would, you know, maybe try to make sure what they have is well spent...
The only appropriate answer to AT&T (Score:2)
Fuck you!
It's their damn network, they need to maintain it or get the fuck out of the state.
If they want money from the state (ESPECIALLY a sum like 100 million, they better have a fiber replacement strategy in hand when they come begging for the money.
Careful California (Score:2)
Deductions (Score:2)
Since taxes are on my mind right now... If we give AT&T this $100 million, do we get a deduction for this act of charity?
Are these not for underserved, rural communities? (Score:2)
Are these requests not for underserved, rural communities? They need help, and the NRTC, try as they may, might not be able to serve the telecommunications needs of these communities.
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And yet they cannot even afford to upgrade their aging transit system...
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well maybe if we can add a $2.00 min tax to jail and prison phone calls + $3.00 min added fee that we will kick back 75% of then we can get it done.
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Huh? Verizon isn't even in half of New England. Fairpoint is the provider for VT, NH, and ME, and they suck. I had 30mbs over DSL briefly but had to cut it in half because it kept losing sync. We're never getting fiber. Ever.
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Government is preventing competition. In many parts of this area there's one cable provider and one telephone provider, they get exclusive rights for some number of years by the city or town. The two providers know they don't have to offer higher speeds if they both stay slow, so that's what they do. Municipal fiber might help, but it's probably only the cities that can do it, which leaves out rural. It's doubly annoying for me, I know there's a major fiber bundle just down the road, but will either pro
Universal Service (Score:5, Informative)
In the old POTS system, there was a standard where calls in cities and business telephone services overcharged heavily in order to subsidize the much more expensive rural phone lines, so that everybody in the country had a MUCH better chance of being able to afford a phone line if they wanted to.
In theory that is probably the argument behind this--but in practice it is probably just that AT&T paid them a few million in donations and want a hundred million steered toward AT&T.
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It was called "long distance" and "international" calls as well as the taxes for phone-line rental. But at what cost did those high levies on telephone traffic prevent advancement of technology? ISDN was a 64K/bits system charged a few cents or pence by the kilobyte.
Re:Universal Service (Score:5, Interesting)
Does that mean the $100 million DSL lines will be property of the taxpayers, and AT&T will merely provide the labor without getting any ownership?
Or does AT&T want us to buy their cake, eat most of it and rent the remaining crumbs back to us at a profit?
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It means the taxpayer pays for the lines and AT&T owns them.
And dictated by pretty much a one party system in California. Isn't this the Mussolini definition of corporate fascism?
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Bah, we'll just raise taxes on the rich. What's another $100 million transferred from productive people to lobbyists and the coffers of a megacorp? /California
Re:The U.S government is EXTREMELY corrupt. (Score:4, Insightful)
And if you talk about taxes, a vast amount of our horribly complex tax code exists solely for the purpose of keeping "the rich" from paying taxes. Tax breaks are free money, and they invariably go to the rich.
Were you born that stupid, or did you practice to lower your mental abilities?
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The current maximum capital gains tax in the US is 20%. The vast majority of US citizens pay less than that for income tax after deductions.
According to the IRS, IRA contribution limits are $5,500 per year and $6,500 per year for those older than 50. Mitt Romney isn't more than 15,000 years old.
"Tax breaks are free money, and they invariably go to the rich." No it isn't and no they don't. Tax break are money t
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35% is actually almost exactly the mean tax per income.
(That is to say, about 35% our collective incomes goes to paying our collective taxes, so a theoretical average person pays about 35% in income taxes).
Re:The U.S government is EXTREMELY corrupt. (Score:4, Informative)
The devil is in the details. Saying the capital gains tax in the United States is 0% to 15% is disingenuous. The details are more nuanced. Some useful definitions are at https://www.irs.gov/uac/Ten-Fa... [irs.gov].
Short-term capital gains (investments held less than 1 year) are taxed at ordinary income tax rates, which are typically higher than the special treatment given to long-term capital gains but could be lower if the individual earning the gains is in a lower tax bracket because of their overall income being low.
For the folks with high incomes, long-term capital gains are 20%. For folks with somewhat smaller incomes, the long-term capital gains rate might be 15%, and for those with incomes that cause them to have a tax rate already below 15%, the capital gains rate could be as low as 0%. The fat cats with big incomes are not paying anything like the 0% tax on THEIR capital gains, but COULD be paying less than ordinary income tax rates if most of their income is from capital gains rather than ordinary income.
In the end, the Alternative Minimum Tax can and does swoop in and raise the overall tax rate paid to 26% to 28%, again depending on overall income and how well someone has done reducing their overall tax rate with deductions and other treatments. Anyone triggering AMT also has a number of deductions taken away from them, making the 26% to 28% tax due on a greater portion of their gross income as well. More on the AMT https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/... [irs.gov]. Oh, and, in addition to AMT, the Affordable Care Act also added an additional 3.8% net investment income tax onto both short-term and long-term capital gains for individuals making over $200,000/year, so they are likely to be paying a total of 23.8% on their long-term capital gains, not someplace between 0% and 15%.
The reason given for the lower tax rate on long-term capital gains is typically to encourage people and corporations to invest their money (put it to work) instead of just sitting on it, and to keep it invested (for at least a year) instead of being speculative and trading it in and out, disruptively.
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they're running fiber to that stuff. (Score:3)
so why not run fiber OUT, too? GPON is going to be cheaper to work with in the long run, and customers could get gigabit speeds for that $100 million.
oh, that's right... almost no oversight on that deal.
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This is just another example of Government for sale.
Having private industry write legislation would be a huge scandal in any other democracy I can think of, but it is almost unremarkable in the US.
This is interesting [talkingpointsmemo.com]
I would argue that with the gerrymandering of electorates and the way money dictates outcomes in US politics, you really don't have a democracy anymore.
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And realize who is really running your governments.
The people with money and connections.
Just like every other government in the world. Or did you think there was another option?
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http://www.ubnt.com/ [ubnt.com] + RadioMobile + Renogy solar panels and charge controller + 155Ah VMaxTanks SLA/AGM battery (or two)
I was in your situation and did a 5 mile PTP backhaul with PowerBridge M5 400mm dishes and 900MHz for PTMP. I was actually worse off with only satellite internet availability that had terrible latency (700-1500ms+) and strict bandwidth caps (38GB/month, throttled at 85%) and no bandwidth accounting reporting. I actually had to gang together two WildBlue connections to get that and was p
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So you've listed the equipment supplier, the software to orient, the solar charge controller and panels and the battery. But who is the service provider? Because buying all that equipment buys you nothing if you can't get access at low latency.