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Networking The Internet United States IT

Ask Slashdot: When and How Did Europe Leapfrog the US For Internet Access? 495

New submitter rsanford, apropos of today's FCC announcement about what is officially consided "broadband" speed by that agency, asks In the early and middle 90's I recall spending countless hours on IRC 'Trout-slapping' people in #hottub and engaging in channel wars. The people from Europe were always complaining about how slow their internet was and there was no choice. This was odd to me, who at the time had 3 local ISPs to choose from, all offering the fastest modem connections at the time, while living in rural America 60 miles away from the nearest city with 1,000 or more people. Was that the reality back then? If so, what changed, and when?
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Ask Slashdot: When and How Did Europe Leapfrog the US For Internet Access?

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  • by jaseuk ( 217780 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @03:52PM (#48933851) Homepage

    EU wide publically funded projects to bring high speed broadband across Europe?

    We had plenty of choices for dial-up too, what we lacked particularly in the UK was free local calls, that made modem calls expensive compared to the US. Since then everything has been going our way.

    Jason.

    • by Qzukk ( 229616 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @03:58PM (#48933895) Journal

      publically funded projects to bring high speed broadband

      In the US we gave our telcos massive tax cuts in the 90s in exchange for fiber rollout. The telcos took the money and ran.

      • by myowntrueself ( 607117 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:17PM (#48934137)

        publically funded projects to bring high speed broadband

        In the US we gave our telcos massive tax cuts in the 90s in exchange for fiber rollout. The telcos took the money and ran.

        Don't worry I'm sure the market will sort it out...

        Thats why you have free market, capitalism and democracy!

        • by halivar ( 535827 ) <`moc.liamg' `ta' `reglefb'> on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:21PM (#48934183)

          A market where utilities have government-mandated monopolies is not free.

          • by jeffmeden ( 135043 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:41PM (#48934309) Homepage Journal

            A market where utilities have government-mandated monopolies is not free.

            Google is demonstrating that there isn't a mandated communications monopoly per se, but just an extremely high barrier to entry and some incumbent legislation that moves out of the way as soon as enough people are teased with hyperfast internet hookups.

          • it's not government mandated, it's a *natural* monopoly

            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N... [wikipedia.org]

            things like fire, police, healthcare, powerplants: there is no market for such things. for a number of reasons. with broadband it's because of high barrier to entry: no one has the billions to gamble on entering the market with uncertain payout

            oh google does. so go ahead and wait 40 years until they get to your city

            but if you make believe (like the usa does) that things like broadband and healthcare are free markets, you just wind up with grossly expensive, inefficient jokes

            what we need is universal healthcare, and government owned fiber

            i hear it already: "oh you evil socialist statist..." *drool, snort*

            i don't like the government. but unlike some people, i recognize that on the topic of *natural* monopolies, government control is the least horrible situation, and certainly better than the usa's joke of healthcare system or approach to broadband

            capitalism is a wonderful tool. i love capitalism

            for example: governments should own all fiber, and then lease it to private companies to deliver services. any private company can lease to provide any service. that's wonderful capitalism, embraced in a manner of fair competition. without the bullshit notion they own the fiber too, and there's "competition". no there isn't. and there never will be. and no government policy is to blame. it's the simple nature of the sector fo the economy: too high of a cost to enter. no one else can afford to roll out the fiber

            capitalism is not a fucking religion, and it has its limits

            natural monopolies represent those limits

            if you don't understand what a natural monopoly is, stop talking about economics, you don't understand the topic

            government is not your enemy, rent seeking parasites CORRUPTING your government are. you want to remove the corruption and have your government work for you. not weaken and remove government, thereby allowing the monopolists to rape you even more

            there's just a certain kind of person in the world that think government is the problem no matter what. and on topics where the real problem is something else: natural monopolies, they simply enable the monopolists by misdirecting their anger at the wrong target (government). propaganda funded by the plutocrats are happy to feed this error, because indeed, with a weakened government, they get to rape you even more without even the pesky need to buy off congresscritters and pass warped regulations at all

        • by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:22PM (#48934193) Homepage

          Unfortunately, the US does not have free market capitalism on broadband communications. In most areas it is either monopoly or duopoly, with local government regulating it. So it is really like having the worst of both systems and the best of neither.

          • by frisket ( 149522 )
            And the telcos (and ISPs) bribing the local politicians to make it stay that way.
          • As much as I don't like existing ISPs, I'm not sure I'm really in favor of a government-run (municipal) ISPs either. It's not hard to imagine, like highway funding, the federal government offering money for municipal ISPs, contingent upon compliance with a few minor requirements. Or criminal penalties for "excessive" bandwidth, or unsanctioned usage. Or for it to come full-circle, with private companies offering muni's better, faster connections, and funding it through tolls.

            But maybe I'm just a pessimis

            • There is also a third option. The government builds the ISP and then sells it off.

              My very first dialup internet connection was this. It was called Global Info Links and was an entity owned and run by Ipswich City Council. They built all the necessary infrastructure for it to work because the telcos didn't believe there was a business model there. 2 years later they sold the business off to private equity for a healthy profit.

              So in the end the tax payer got a service that the market wasn't going to provi

            • No the way it works is that government builds and maintains the infrastructure - the physical cables and such - but then leases access to this infrastructure out to private companies so that those companies can offer retail services to the consumer on it. In countries/regions that have done this, the government itself isn't in the business of actually being your ISP, and it's not interested in doing so.

        • It would be nice if we actually had a free market. Instead we have local franchise authorities everywhere that dictate who can and can't offer telecom services.

        • by readin ( 838620 )
          Exactly. While Europe usually seem willing to commit fully to the second best choice - a government controlled industry, Americans seem to get stuck in the worst choice - an industry so heavily regulated that the virtues of the free market are extinguished but not heavily regulated enough for the government to take responsibility for the consequences of government actions.

          So now we have a bunch of government created monopolies and government regulations wreaking havoc across the landscape, and when the
    • by sonicmerlin ( 1505111 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:01PM (#48933939)

      The US government has given the telcos hundreds of billions of dollars in USF fees over the last 15+ years. No one in the world has subsidized broadband as much as we have.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:10PM (#48934045)

        No one in the world has subsidized telco profits as much as we have.

        Fixed that for you.

      • by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:10PM (#48934047) Homepage

        Well ... nobody has been scammed by the telcos as much as you have.

        If you gave them hundreds of billions and got nothing in return, blame your politicians, and shoot their lobbyists.

        Subsidized and conned aren't the same thing.

      • by Holi ( 250190 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:11PM (#48934059)
        We subsidized something, it turns out it certainly wasn't broadband.
        • by myowntrueself ( 607117 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:19PM (#48934161)

          We subsidized something, it turns out it certainly wasn't broadband.

          I think you subsidized the bonus payouts to the telco executives...

          Don't worry I'm sure the benefits will trickle down through the economy
          LOL

          • I think you subsidized the bonus payouts to the telco executives...

            Don't worry I'm sure the benefits will trickle down through the economy
            LOL

            Maybe a few more hookers got coke snorted off their butts, as a result.

      • by AK Marc ( 707885 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:12PM (#48934071)
        But the others subsidized the build. We subsidized the service. There's a difference.

        Also, unbundling caused 1000s of CLECs to pop up. But that was too much competition for the bells, so CLECs were shut out, restoring the monopoly/duopoly (depending on location). Had the unbundling continued, locking out bells from their own network, then we'd be much better off than Europe. But the government is bought and paid for (both sides), so we got the government we deserve by voting them in.

        Transforming the copper/fiber network to a distribution-only model is what works best. Anything else fails.
      • by myowntrueself ( 607117 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:18PM (#48934147)

        The US government has given the telcos hundreds of billions of dollars in USF fees over the last 15+ years. No one in the world has subsidized broadband as much as we have.

        And, apparently, no one in the world has as little to show for the investment...

    • We had plenty of choices for dial-up too, what we lacked particularly in the UK was free local calls, that made modem calls expensive compared to the US. Since then everything has been going our way.

      However, the issue of free vs metered local calls hasn't been relevant for a long time. I don't think government intervention is a great explanation either, given that the UK telecoms network was privatised.

      For large parts of Europe I think there's a simpler explanation - a combination of population density and

      • by Pentium100 ( 1240090 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:13PM (#48934089)

        There is another reason (at least in my country).

        Instead of giving money to ISPs and asking them politely to connect rural areas to a fiber network (like I understand happened in the US resulting in the ISPs taking the money and doing nothing) the government in my country is laying the fiber cables itself and then leases it to anyone who wants to use it at a set price. Which means that if ISP A does not want it, ISP B will get it.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Here in the US, there was a sea change that happened in 2000-2002. When consumer-level broadband happened, the old school "boutique" ISPs went extinct just because they couldn't offer the bandwidth of DSL or DOCSIS.

        Europe didn't have that entire cottage industry be swept away in the span of 9-12 months as was done in the US.

        It would have been nice if the small, mom-and-pop ISPs could have continued existing and making money. There was some odd pride in having an E-mail address at a place like io.com, eden

    • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:11PM (#48934061) Journal
      Also: the free market, which the government actually helped bring about: some telco's had to be dragged kicking and screaming into that. In the Netherlands, the incumbent telco PTT (now KPN) was first forced to co-locate equipment from other ISPs (they actually sabotaged that equipment from time to time), then forced to share the local loop for a reasonable fee. And in this country almost all homes have cable, which meant another option for obtaining Internet. As a result we've always had a good many choices of ISPs and decent fees. I now have fiber to the home, and a choice of 3 ISPs on that fiber. Then there's ADSL and cable if I want another option (but who'd want to with 500 Mb up/down?)
    • EU wide publically funded projects to bring high speed broadband across Europe?

      That is part of it. Another reason is that for infrastructure there is a first mover disadvantage. Later implementations can learn from the early mistakes, while the first mover is stuck with them. That is a big reason that cell service sucks on America: we had a really good POTS system, so we layered cellphone service on top of it. Few other countries made that mistake.

      • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

        The US wasn't the first adopter of mobile telephony. Japan and a group of European countries got there first. And the major carriers in the US no longer support the first system, so there's no good reason to be "stuck with" the mistakes.

    • In addition to which in Europe the last mile is owned by one company while the backbones are owned by multiples. Plus regulation is pretty heavy too.
    • by theVarangian ( 1948970 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:20PM (#48934169)

      EU wide publically funded projects to bring high speed broadband across Europe?

      We had plenty of choices for dial-up too, what we lacked particularly in the UK was free local calls, that made modem calls expensive compared to the US. Since then everything has been going our way.

      Jason.

      Yeah, who would have thought that European 'socialism' would be more effective at bringing the internet to the masses than American private enterprise? But sarcasm aside, here are the world's 16 most connected countries according to a study done by Harvard University for the FCC:

      1 Sweden
      2 Denmark
      3 Japan
      4 South Korea
      5 Switzerland
      6 Netherlands
      7 Finland
      8 France
      9 Belgium
      10 Norway
      11 United Kingdom
      12 Germany
      13 Iceland
      14 Italy
      15 Portugal
      16 United States

      • Yeah, who would have thought that European 'socialism' would be more effective at bringing the internet to the masses than American private enterprise?

        Unfortunately, the Internet service market in "socialist" Europe is actually more free market than in the U.S. You guys have multiple companies vying to provide and improve internet service. In the U.S., most local governments have regulated the market (under the guise of limiting unsightly wires by restricting who can build in public easements) so most A

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

      The UK isn't doing very well. Many people can't get 25Mb because that's way above what ADSL2 can offer them and there is no alternative. I only have a choice of one ISP (Virgin) and they suck.

      I remember back on 2004. My girlfriend in Japan had 100/100Mb fibre and it cost her about £20/month. Over a decade later nothing like that exists in the UK. That's how far behind we are.

    • Two years ago, I was in France and the UK. 4G was still not really deployed.

      And in France at least, many coffee shops had closed down their wifi hotspots, because they really didn't want to be bothered with getting a permit to have a public hotspot (yes, this was the doing of the copyright lobby apparently).

      The net result is that people have less internet access than in the US, not more. It doesn't really matter if you have faster upstream speed, when most of your downstream users can't have access to it on

  • 2002 (Score:5, Interesting)

    by aaarrrgggh ( 9205 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @03:54PM (#48933863)

    2002. They saw what we preached and acted on it. They did it with fiber because of the nature of their governments rather than the utilities.

    10-100Mb wasn't uncommon in Sweden then in the cities, although rural may have taken longer.

  • by ganjadude ( 952775 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @03:54PM (#48933867) Homepage
    a while ago

    how? simple. its much easier to get things done for your country when it is the size of our smaller states

    Its also easier to get things done when you tax your people as high as you do in the EU vs the lower taxes in the US. add in things like different priorities, and corruption. and it starts to make sense. Doesnt make it right or good, but it makes sense
    • Re:when? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by sonicmerlin ( 1505111 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:02PM (#48933955)

      Uh, no. The bigger the country and its GDP the greater the economies of scale. The density issue is stupid as well since we don't have FTTH in all the cities.

    • That may have once been true, but now even relatively sparsely populated countries in Europe (like Iceland) are getting faster speeds.

    • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
      Then we should have it everywhere, as the states are the size of sale. That, and the smaller states are closer to the density and distribution of Europe. So why don't they have it? It comes down to the people. We like our monopolies abusing us. If not, why do we keep voting for politicians that force them down our throat (on both sides of the isle)?
  • In the early Noughties Europe got serious about building-out their telecom to replace the aging post-war system they'd been babying for many years. It also fit well with increasing European Union integration. It also seems to have coincided with the rise of the ubiquitous cell phone, since cell towers require a certain amount of backboke and resilience, and once the fiber goes in for the tower, there's no reason to not use the remaining strands for other networks. Dark fiber is unprofitable fiber.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 29, 2015 @03:57PM (#48933889)

    You see, the internet is all about the cloud these days. Most parts of Europe are cloudier than the U.S., ergo, they get better internet access.

  • Europe has always had better stuff than the US.
    PAL instead of NTSC tv, because they got it after, and it was able to be improved.
    America got internet when Algore invented it, and Europe got it after, when better equipment and infrastructure was available.
    No surprise about that.
  • South Korea has been light years ahead of the U.S. for over a DECADE now. Those guys get some mad crazy speeds on the cheap (mostly used to play Lineage, I gather).

  • March 11, 2000 (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:03PM (#48933973)

    After that [wikipedia.org], things started tanking and telcos took their government hand-outs from the 90s and paid their CEOs' bonuses - and a few of them walked away with billions personally.

    In some cases there was outright fraud.

    It's kind of like living in a Third World country where the billionaire class rigs the system for their benefit, bitches about government interference (all the while lobbying for it to boost their profits) and John .Q. Public falling for the BS and thinking that one day, if he works hard enough, he'll be one of those billionaires with a private jet.

    Or let's put it this way: we have a corrupt economic system in the States and no one wants to change because they have been brainwashed into thinking we have free market capitalism and anything other than our crony capitalistic system is Communism.

    Yes, most Americans are that stupid.

  • My view (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:04PM (#48933985)

    If I were going to guess, I would assume the reason the US has lower speeds in most areas compared to Europe, is probably about competition.
    I work for a large telecoms company in the UK, so this is what I can see is happening here:
    The incumbent telephone provider, BT Openreach, is forced, by regulator policy, to offer access to their network for a fixed cost to the other telecoms resellers, including the other company within BT, BT Retail. On top of this, BT Openreach covers almost all of the UK, so resellers can also offer services all over the UK too, with not much investment needed.
    If I contrast this to what I see in the US: A few cable and telephone providers serve only specific areas, with hardly any competition. No incentive to improve service or reduce cost to consumer, plus regulators seem too scared to act. Also, corporate corruption in the form of lobbying means that people who work in government are just as inclined to help maintain the status quo.
    Europe: Lots of competition and regulation
    US: Lack of competition, basically no regulation

    • Only one correction. Regulators aren't too scared to act. They're paid off not to react. Hell, some of the regulators are/were employees of the companies being regulated. If that's not a conflict of interest, nothing is.

    • by ShaunC ( 203807 )

      The incumbent telephone provider, BT Openreach, is forced, by regulator policy, to offer access to their network for a fixed cost to the other telecoms resellers

      We had that in the US for awhile. I remember when my city was serviced by Time Warner Cable and their RoadRunner internet service. At one point, Time Warner was forced to offer competitors the ability to sell cable modem service. Earthlink and AOL entered the market. As a RoadRunner customer, I could fire up a sniffer and see all the .earthlink.net and .aolbroadband.com ARP traffic flying past; all three vendors were sharing the same coax, and it was working just fine. I don't recall quite what happened, bu

  • My best guess... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by nine-times ( 778537 ) <nine.times@gmail.com> on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:08PM (#48934035) Homepage

    I don't have a lot of facts to cite that I can back this up with, but my general sense is that Europe (and a fair bit of Asia too) have the belief that it's worthwhile to have the government invest in infrastructure. They spend money to improve roads, bridges, railways, airports, telecommunications, electrical generation, and whatever else. In the US, we assume that infrastructure will take care of itself, somehow, mysteriously.

    For a lot of stuff, we just get angry if the government spends money to build/repair a bridge. Railways are considered a massive boondoggle. The Internet is considered an entertainment service. To the extent that we consider the Internet "telecommunications infrastructure", we've decided to improve it by giving massive amounts of money to private monopolies, while not having any actual requirements on those companies to actually build anything with that money. There's a belief, somehow, that Verizon is a good and virtuous company that would love to provide fast internet, if only it could afford to do so, so we just keep giving them money and exclusive deals, and they keep refusing to actually roll out fiber.

    Meanwhile, European countries just rolled out fiber. No outrage from the Tea Party to deal with, no big payouts to Verizon to stifle the project. They were able to do it because they simply had the government pay for it.

    • by OzPeter ( 195038 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:21PM (#48934185)

      For a lot of stuff, we just get angry if the government spends money to build/repair a bridge.

      Yesterday I was listening to a right wing talk show host on the radio who was letting us all know what he thought government should be for, and how the US government was so crap. The first bullet point on his list was "starting wars", the second was "Protecting us from bad guys".

  • A few others have pointed out that the EU has publicly funded broadband roll out and access which is totally true, but ultimately it comes down to who is willing to continually invest in new technologies. If you look at current Fibre to the Home (FTTH) availability, Asian markets like South Korea dominate. Talking to some contacts who work in a big ISP here in the UK, FTTH roll out still seems pretty far in the future - government funded technology roll outs (and government owned telecoms) will always be a
  • The Sad Truth (Score:3, Insightful)

    by SirAudioMan ( 2836381 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:14PM (#48934099)

    Disclaimer: I'm Canadian but have lived in a border town most of my life and watched and followed mostly US media.

    Unfortunately the sad truth in the last 20 years is the US is no longer at the forefront of anything except corporate greed and government corruptness. I'm not saying other countries are any different but the big difference between the US (and Canada to some extent) vs Europe is the citizens. In Europe it seems the citizens don't roll over take it like we do in North America. Someone once told me that in most of the EU, the governments are afraid of the people, while in NA, it's the opposite. Simply put, Europeans won't stand for all the crap that happens over here. This has lasting effects on how services and corporations grow and are governed. When not controlled correctly (aka when lobbying rules) by the government, corporations have a proven track record of screwing the people!

    Any Europeans care to chime in and agree/disagree with me?

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      As another fellow Canuck, I would also agree with this assessment.

      America has maintained for a long time now, this fallacy that they are the 'best' and have the 'brightest', from people to technology. Sadly, this isn't a reflection of reality, and hasn't been for some time.

      Subsidies or not, the ISP's in the US seem to have failed to invest in infrastructure. When the world moved to 4G / LTE, most US carriers refused, or dragged their feet. In comparison, in Canada in the mid-2000's, ISP's invest (and I beli

    • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

      Simply put, Europeans won't stand for all the crap that happens over here.

      Spain, Ireland, and Greece have been taking it far harder, longer, and with less lube than the American citizen. Yeah, great, Greece just voted in a leftier government that has promised to renegotiate the predatory loans forced on them by German banks....but the new government is committed to staying on the Euro, making any real recovery impossible.

  • Users in Europe/UK had to pay per-minute telco charges on top of the cost for the dial-up service (which itself was time-limited). Pretty much everywhere else in Canada and the US had free local-calling, so you only had the extra-fee of the dial-up service (which was usually time limited). One of the services I used (in Canada, early 90's), gave free time on off-peak hours 10pm-8am for ~$25.

    Most of the people I knew from Finland, UK, Norway, were pretty jealous of our unlimited phone service.
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:16PM (#48934121)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • You had me until you said "shut down the government for the third time" because the "government shutdown" was nothing more than a circus act. No essential function of the government actually shut down, altho they did make a huge show out of closing national parks. According to one report, patrons at a hotel in a national park were prohibited from taking pictures outside the hotel during the "shutdown". What a farce.
  • Mid 90's was when modem technology still hadn't caught up to the phone line standards that were deployed far and wide across the US. Sure, you could get a nice solid 14400 or 28800 (if you were living high on the hog) and have lightning-fast IRC sessions. A few years later, you will be connecting at 31200 and bitching that you can't get a 56k handshake in your neck of the woods (as distance to the local CO and quality of lines really started to matter) and a few years after that you would have been bitchin

  • Lack of corruption (Score:5, Informative)

    by DMJC ( 682799 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:33PM (#48934267)
    Basically it's because of the lack of corruption in Europe and the Asian nations that achieved high speed broadband rollouts. The USA is a pretty corrupt place, and it's embedded in the culture from the very bottom of the food chain: Tipping for basic goods and services (where a decent minimum wage should be paid by employers rather than just ripping off customers with tips and surcharges which are still a form of corruption), to the top of the foodchain: Golden parachutes, kick backs, earmarks etc. In an environment that allows corruption to flourish, and where people expect to get something extra for just doing the job they are paid to do. Of course there is going to be gross program mismanagement and failures. The US has up until now not been completely destroyed by the internal corruption because it's been focused elsewhere, fighting WW1/2, rebuilding the world, fighting communism, stealing other countries resources etc. Now that the wars against communism in South America (1980s) have ended. The corruption has settled on he closest target: The American People. Until the USA deals with the gross corruption within it's own borders (yes that includes the two-party system, minimum wage, drug wars, war on terror (military handouts) golden handshakes etc) They will continue to decline as a nation. At the same time that America has been declining there has been a serious move in most of the world to stamp out corruption. Sure it hasn't been 100% effective, but it's more than the USA has done and it's why we're seeing other countries pull ahead. Basically when your politics aren't being bogged down with bullshit issues from corrupt people. You get things done. This is why Germany is doing so well, they have strong laws against corruption and they are the manufacturing heart of Europe. Sure countries like Greece and Italy have stuffed up (mainly due to high levels of corruption) But the Nordic/Germanic countries are pulling the whole of Europe with them.
    • WTF? Of all the anti-US drivel on slashdot, this is some of the stupidest. Tipping is custom, not corruption. It isn't for the right to get access to government service, it's something done in private businesses.

      Two party system is wonderful. Take a look at the recent election Greece, where the far left party forms a nonsensical coalition of the far-left and far right. Or in England, where party that received the most support is kept out of power by a similar coalition.

      And the economy of Europe is bein

      • The bombast is strong with this one!

        Or in England, where party that received the most support is kept out of power by a similar coalition.

        How on earth does that make no sense? The coalition combined got much more support than Labour. Therefore it makes much more sense for them to share power than to hand it all to Labour.

        It has the highest rate of worker productivity, the economy is growing, it has the largest manufacturing economy in the world by a large margin,

        It also has higher rates of poverty and long

  • by Krishnoid ( 984597 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @04:49PM (#48934373) Journal

    I'll reiterate how grateful I am that cell phone charging -- and as a side effect, data transfer -- have been standardized, thanks to the EU mandating the Micro-USB connector and voltage standard. It's made life easier for pretty much everybody worldwide who owns a cell phone. Maybe it's because countries that culturally emphasize improving the quality of life, have their services change in ways that improve the quality of life.

    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      Ever tried to plug an iPhone into a PC?

      Lightning USB connectors only, and you have to install iTunes to do anything like sensible data transfer.

  • by jcupitt65 ( 68879 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @05:25PM (#48934709)

    Pre-2000, the US had "open access", meaning that cable owners had to sell use of their infrastructure. This made it relatively easy for startup ISPs to enter the market: every time you sign up a customer, you just need to buy time on the extra bit of cable you need to serve that person. Almost every country in the world uses this regulatory model.

    Under intense pressure from lobbyists the US changed to a closed model in 2000. Now cable owners are also ISPs and have exclusive rights to the bits of wire they own. There are only a few ISPs, it's very, very expensive for anyone else to enter the market, and they can charge what they like, not only to customers, but upstream as well, as we're now seeing.

    tl;dr: this is a failure of regulation.

    Lessig talking about this:

    http://blip.tv/lessig/america-s-broadband-policy-3505079 [blip.tv]

    • by TheSync ( 5291 )

      Regardless of who owned the local loop or who sold service on it, US local loop lengths are longer than most other countries (regardless of population density).

      I believe the long local loops relates to a massive central office "centralization" in the US when digital switching came along. Why exactly this centralization did not happen in Europe (and Australia) is not clear to me, it might have involved timing of DSS deployment versus the timing of DSL practicality.

      The result is that the US has fewer COs, an

  • by gabereiser ( 1662967 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @05:37PM (#48934829)
    And that is back in 1998-2002, Cable companies here in the USA (as well as smaller ISP's) started merging. They said it would make for better infrastructure but in fact what it did was stifle innovation. Now we have 3 major cable companies, all with their own territories, with bills in place that make it illegal for anyone else to lay cable or fiber. They can cap our data and our speeds and it's totally within the law to do so. The government doesn't care because the FCC is made up of ex-cable execs who only have the cable interests at heart. I know because I used to work for a cable company in the south east who only existed because of a law that forbid TWC from operating there. But the cable company was utilizing all of TWC's resources and networks to deliver their "brand". Europe on the other hand, dictated by government ownership of utilities saw a need to better internet, so they invested in more fiber lines and more cables to bring faster internet to their clients. Here in the US, we are still using DOCSIS crap that was pioneered in the 90's. They have no interest in expanding because expanding their lines costs money, and they'd rather squeeze it out of american's at 4mbps connections for $60/mo with a $10/mo overage fee per 1gb of data.
  • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Thursday January 29, 2015 @05:38PM (#48934839) Homepage

    For us here in Norway PSTN/ISDN was our bad time, when the one monopolist could charge pretty much everything they wanted. When we got DSL, the market was deregulated and lots of offers showed up. In the US, far more people get Internet via cable, which obviously has far more reason to protect their traditional business. As for recent fiber roll-outs it's really the power companies that got the ball rolling there, eyeing an opportunity to break into a new market by running fiber optics as well as power lines. Obviously the incumbents couldn't sit around and watch that and it became a race to lay down fiber first, since it's rarely profitable to come second. So it's a very nice three-way race to roll it out, though the prices are fairly steep.

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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