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lwn | 3 months ago
The service is solid, there’s no upselling or throttling, and hosting things from home just works. I bring this up because when we talk about “open”, “fair” and “monopolies” the model of a local, non-profit ISP backed by the municipality could offer a real alternative. It doesn’t directly solve the peering issues, but it shifts the balance of power (and cost) somewhat.
thelaxiankey|3 months ago
jimbokun|3 months ago
j-bos|3 months ago
tldr: one town in the US did it and it became an economic miracle, big telcos noticed and have set up lobbying and advertising infra to ensure it never happens.
port11|3 months ago
My home country's formerly public energy provider has a weird share structure: a Chinese company and BlackRock add up to a fourth of the stock. No foreign investor should really be buying up stock in critical infrastructure.
This will always upset me.
ProllyInfamous|3 months ago
Of course our lobbied state congress critters passed a law to restrict this, so EPB can only offer internet to a limited geographic area (under the auspices of network monitoring of power delivery) — wouldn't want their Comcast-bros to have any competition! Certain apartment complexes are exempted, which prevents you from using EPB.
Wish more jurisdictions were even allowed to do this; wish politicians weren't such whores.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EPB
LaurensBER|3 months ago
I'm glad this non-profit ISP exists but on a national level I would prefer (strong) net neutrality laws. Probably not an issue in NL but in less developed countries neutrality isn't guaranteed.
linohh|3 months ago
rcbdev|3 months ago
Telecommunications law in Europe is a very interesting thing.
redserk|3 months ago
If the internet is out, it's going to be just as visible and probably will yield as many complaints as losing power, sewer, and water.
oersted|3 months ago
In some sense a democracy is also a market and can lead to efficient allocation of resources, particularly common resources for common good.
This is why public utilities tend to work so well in practice. People, especially in the US, don't seem to realise that such services are also subject to strong market forces, just a different kind of market.
Voters care a lot about good public services, and they also care a lot about not getting taxed much. This can lead to very efficient outcomes in well functioning democracies, often more efficient than those that come out of private enterprise, when it comes to services that most of the population needs.
wat10000|3 months ago
radeeyate|3 months ago
ulfw|3 months ago
emeril|3 months ago
we're also really good at feeding our poor and disabled too