Net Neutrality Links
I’m adding this link to the Net Neutrality Page.
There Is A Utopia For Net Neutrality
In this case, weââ¬â¢re talking about a real UTOPIA, the clever acronym for the Utah Telecommunication Open Infrastructure Agency, a group of 14 cities which banded together to build a fiber-to-the-home network that will eventually provide 100 mbps service.
[ . . . ]
From the start, UTOPIAââ¬â¢s developers thought through the public policy issues, particularly the competitive ones. Their answer was not to compete with private-sector companies, but to provide a platform for them.
UTOPIA said in its background materials it solves the competitive issue very simply, ââ¬Åby offering a network that is open to a variety of competitors that vie for customers based on the price, quality, and innovativeness of their services rather than on the basis that the customer has no other choice.ââ¬Â
[Keith Wilson, president of DynamicCity, the networkââ¬â¢s operator] said the wholesale model eliminates the Net Neutrality objection right from the start because any service provider can get access to the UTOPIA network. Thatââ¬â¢s where the ââ¬ÅNet Neutrality on steroidsââ¬Â description comes from. The fact that any provider can get on the network ââ¬Åtakes the wind out of the sails of the incumbents,ââ¬Â Wilson said.[ . . . ]
The individual service providers arenââ¬â¢t bound by the Net Neutrality, Wilson said, ââ¬ÅThe [Net Neutrality] problem exists when the network owner is wielding influence. When the owner is inherently open to all providers, then they [the providers on the network] can shoot themselves in the foot. They have to take the risk with their users who might be offended [by violations of Net Neutrality] and go to someone else.ââ¬Â
There are so far five service providers using the UTOPIA network. Four are local, MStar, Sisna, Veracity and XMission. AT&T is also offering service. MStar is the only one offering data, phone and TV.
How do customers make out with UTOPIA? Hereââ¬â¢s a brief comparison. Comcast charges $68 per month for 3 mbps service. Qwest charges $54.99 for 3 mbps or $44.99 for 1.5 mbps.
On the other hand, MStar charges $39.95 for 10 mbps, XMission charges $40 for 15 mbps, and even AT&T can charge $39.95 for 15 mpbs.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Related
NET NEUTRALITY PAGE
Wow. And if those 14 cities keep up with that infrastructure, they’ll always have something. What an incredibly simple idea.
Good Morning, Katie,
I’ve had this one for a few days. It’s heartening to read, isn’t? It appears that we can do some things if we don’t form groups that aren’t too big and make rules that aren’t too detailed, and try to make one size fits all. 🙂