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FCC Says Gutting ISP Oversight Was Great For Broadband (vice.com) 141

Earlier this week, the FCC proclaimed that broadband connectivity saw unprecedented growth last year thanks to the agency's policies like killing net neutrality. But, as Motherboard points out, that's not entirely true. The lion's share of improvements highlighted by the agency "are courtesy of DOCSIS 3.1 cable upgrades, most of which began before Pai even took office and have nothing to do with FCC policy," the report says. "Others are likely courtesy of build-out conditions affixed to AT&T's merger with DirecTV, again the result of policies enacted before Pai was appointed head of the current FCC." Also, last year's FCC report, which showcased data up to late 2016, "showed equal and in some instances faster growth in rural broadband deployment -- despite Pai having not been appointed yet." From the report: The broadband industry's biggest issue remains a lack of competition. That lack of competition results in Americans paying some of the highest prices for broadband in the developed world, something the agency routinely fails to mention and does so again here. [...] Still, Pai was quick to take a victory lap in the agency release. "For the past two years, closing the digital divide has been the FCC's top priority," Pai said in a press release. "We've been tackling this problem by removing barriers to infrastructure investment, promoting competition, and providing efficient, effective support for rural broadband expansion through our Connect America Fund. This report shows that our approach is working." One of those supposed "barriers to broadband investment" were the former FCC's net neutrality rules designed to keep natural monopolies like Comcast from behaving anti-competitively.

"Overall, capital expenditures by broadband providers increased in 2017, reversing declines that occurred in both 2015 and 2016," the FCC claimed, again hinting that the repeal of net neutrality directly impacted CAPEX and broadband investment. A problem with that claim: the FCC's latest report only includes data up to June 2018, the same month net neutrality was formally repealed. As such the data couldn't possibly support the idea that the elimination of net neutrality was responsible for this otherwise modest growth. Another problem: that claim isn't supported by ISP earnings reports or the public statements of numerous telecom CEOs, who say net neutrality didn't meaningfully impact their investment decisions one way or another. Telecom experts tell Motherboard that's largely because such decisions are driven by a universe of other factors, including the level of competition (or lack thereof) in many markets.

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FCC Says Gutting ISP Oversight Was Great For Broadband

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  • by Futurepower(R) ( 558542 ) on Sunday February 24, 2019 @01:24PM (#58173036) Homepage
    Lying has become a standard policy in the U.S. government.
    • Since when was it not standard? Can you think of a time? Can you think of any government that did not start off lying?

      The entire premise of vote for me and I will do something for you is a "Liar's Game" and nothing else. People think they need government when in reality, government needs people more.

      The Governments of mankind have caused more death and suffering of humans than all wars, disasters, or crime has. Think about that for a minute. Additionally, the first people wanting Democracy are the ones

    • Lying is a requirement to get appointed or elected.

  • We went from "killing the NN will be the end of the Internet as we know it" to "unprecedented growth in broadband connectivity last year" not being "entirely true" due to to FCC policies.

    The sky still might fall, but for now I hope the folks who claim with complete confidence what will happen in the country and the world might want to reappraise their other claims.

    • it's still tied up in courts. That said, my ISP didn't used to have bandwidth caps and they added them right after Trump got elected. That is not a coincidence.

      It can take years for the damage caused by bad policies and ideas to really be felt. That's the problem. It lets you shift the blame. This has been happening since at least Reagan. Folks elect a Republican for a change, the GOP wrecks shit, the Dem comes in and fixes as much as they can, doesn't fix everything in 8 years and then we get another R
      • This is not about policy. If an honest candidate comes out with a Democratic Socialist platform and people vote for it, that's fine by me. Vox populi, vox dei -- the voice of the people is the voice of God, the basic principle of democracy. What I object to is the *mob*, the army of self-righteous leftists trying to shut down anyone who wanted to say why he might vote for Trump or disagree with mandatory gender neutral pronouns or why they think ending NN is not necessarily a bad idea and so on. Far worse t

  • Like: "FCC Falsely Says Gutting ISP Oversight Was Great For Broadband"

    • Like: "FCC Falsely Says Gutting ISP Oversight Was Great For Broadband"

      More like:

      " FCC Says Gutting ISP Oversight Was Great For Broadband Providers"

      Not so much for their customers.

  • by alzoron ( 210577 ) on Sunday February 24, 2019 @02:02PM (#58173174) Journal

    ...that those net neutrality rules had never actually come into effect so claiming that killing them made things better wouldn't make any sense even if the rules were terrible.

  • by jythie ( 914043 ) on Sunday February 24, 2019 @02:41PM (#58173310)
    One would not expect to see ANY significant changes one way or the other. While the FCC has punted on NN, it is still a public policy issue, is showing up in state legislation, and is working its way through various courts. Big ISPs are not going to make major changes, either in terms of building capacity or changing filtering policies until they have an idea of what the next decade or so is going to look like.
  • -If broadband gets worse, advocates were right that the change would make it worse.
    -If broadband gets better, it would have happened anyway.
    -If there were problems before the change, those are irrelevant and coincidental.
    -If there are exactly the same problems after the change, those are because the rules changed.

    Nothing can ever shake the faith.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 24, 2019 @03:03PM (#58173406)

    I am sitting and charging my car on the way home from the airport. In a whole week in the IS having used residential fiber as well as residential cable modem and TMobile LTE, all I can say is... damn the US is in the dark ages.

    I truly was amazed at how bad the internet is in America. It actually is noticeably worse than it was last year at the same time.

    And the ridiculous restrictions like only letting 3 devices tether to a phone was just stupid.

    I am happy to be back in Europe!

  • Great for broadband if you're an ISP . . . . .

    . . . . not so much if you're a consumer.

    Guess whose side the FCC is on ?

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