about this blog
- Elizabeth MacDonald is the stocks editor for Fox Business Network. She is recognized as one of the top prize-winning business journalists in the country, and has received 14 awards, including the top prize in business journalism, the Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished Business Journalism, and the Newswomen's Club of New York Front Page Award for Excellence in Investigative Journalism.
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earle
I lived in Boston ,and when the "big dig" was winding down the "Mass (Route 90)Turnpike" was approached by the cable compnies to work out a deal to run their "Fibre Optic Cable's" the entire(using their land,and laying the cable just outside the boundaries of the highway) legnth of the Turnpike,from Boston,Ma.to Albany N.Y.. The payment fee's were (contractural 50 yr.lease,could be a longer term ?)paid to the Mass. Turnpike annually. It was a win-win for the Mass.Turnpike Authority,and the private industry! This is/has been happening for years using our new highways,along with the build-out of the broadband infrastructure. Although, I'm not sure if the government is getting their bang for the buck for these freeloaders piggybacking on our state,and federal highways. Thanks E'Mac,as usual you certainly do your homework(:
FreedomAtStake
What a joke! We don't need to have the Gov't waiste money on rural broadband service. Are we forgetting who are most of the people who live in the rural areas (i.e., farmers, ranchers, hibernators, etc.). These people are too busy with their day-to-day operations (working for a living), that they aren't going to waste their time "googling" every day. This is a typical example of what is wrong in America right now. We are spending money we don't have for things we don't need to create jobs that aren't sustainable in an effort to ensure votes for Washington politicians. When will Americans wake up?
Mary Wilson
I live on a road that already has cable tv provided by Time Warner, but they will not provide broadband. I have spoken with Time Warner(cable company) and Verizon(phone company),they told me that there will be no broadband added, their reason is that it is to expensive. If the goverenment would pay broadband competitors for UNSERVED rural areas then there could be hope. I have dialup service and I am unable to do the most on the internet, including running my business. I also want to mention there are two schools,a number of homes and other small businesses on on this same road. Mary Wilson Circleville, OH
Carla,Ballwin,MO
A good background article is Peter Stenberg's "Communications and the Internet in Rural America" dated July,2002 (USDA's website). It's interesting how he points out telephone service was debated as a luxury or necessity in its infancy. Access to the internet (fast and affordable) for ALL is a worthwhile endeavor for the government and private sector. Rural access to broadband was implemented in the Clinton years, and accelerated in the Bush admin. Independent spirit, kindness, and love of the land - I love rural America! Anything to help the people and rural communities is OK with me!
JJB
Very interesting perspective. Hope to hear what untangles in Vegas.
moving
What a joke. You have wireless data through satellite and cell phone providers all across the US. The FCC and other government agencies control the allocation of wireless spectrum and the number of cable companies in a given market. You want to have broad band all over the place allow real free market competition for wireless, cable, and phone service. Most places in the word pay 10-20% what we pay for high speed wireless and get faster service. We don't need government to step in and spend money we need government to get out of the way and allow real competition not just one, two, or three protected companies in each market offering the exact same services with slightly different names.
Joe
Miss MacDonald, I apologize for going off topic here but I would like your opinion on Goldman Sachs and their recent comments regarding the future price of oil. Given the strong arm and manipulative tactics used by Mr.Obama's crowd to advance their own agenda (Chrysler, GM); how imaprtial and independent can any Goldman Sachs pronouncement on commodites be when they have received $10,000,000,000 of TARP money and Mr. Obama's stated goal is to raise the price of oil in order to push his own green agenda?
Frederick Ledbetter
Noone that has any brains is going to pay 50 dollars or more a month for broadband unless they are part of the aristocracy. I guess the Broadband internet service providers think everyone in the country is related in some way to the Rockerfellers or the Vanderbilts or Bill Gates. Wasn't having more people buying something in mass or wholesale supposed to bring down the cost of providing TV satellite dish service and broadband internet service as time went on. If it used to cost 50 dollars 5 years ago for broadband internet service with a satellite dish shouldn't the price have come down to 5 dollars or ten dollars a month for the broadband service and the TV satellite dish service. Are all the Congressmen and Senators taking bribes from the big corporations to keep the prices up even beyond most avearage peoples means or should the money slipped under the table to our eloustrious elected officials be considered campaign contributions? Harr!! Harr!! As broadband becomes older and older the price should drop because someone is allways working on the next faster conveyance of information for TV and internet users whether they be civilian or military or military government.
Josiah Woodward
Currently on-line shopping is killing rural USA retail business. Shoppers avoid sales tax at the expense of rual USA. There is a way to corrent the problem. Require that businesses collect sales tax. Entering the zip code could easily bring up the appropriate sales tax rate for all of the country. The collection fee in my state is 1/2 of 1%. Credit card companies would collect taxes for this fee and submit one monthly payment (electronically) to each state to distribute to the appropriate enties. California would have more state taxes so that rural USA would not need to bail them out, etc.
bill mcniff
I live in rural Georgia, Nelson 30151. I moved there three years ago. One requirement was broadband internet access because my wife works from home and is on the PC all day long. In Nelson we have the choice of three services. (They also offer TV etc.) One is via satellite, one is via cable and the third is via copper cable telephone. So why in the world does obama need to spend billions on broadband, unless he wants to control the media too? Broadband is already in place.
mike
What a potential minefield laid by those hoping to line their own pockets!... Totally FWIW, dial-up is very doable -- just ask the millions still using it. The high bandwidth figures quoted are fine if you're downloading content like PPV, but no HS student researching a paper is going to come close to needing "768 Kilobits per second" -- the lowest figure given. IMHO those figures come from folks planning on making a bunch of money on subscription / PPV content. And if you increase the off/on ramps, what about the backbone bandwidth to support it?... The popular habit of downloading video has already started to stress that. Another potential stumbling block, will the millions of Americans with broadband today [the estimates given for % are Vastly underestimated] agree to subsidize those without, AND continue to pay higher rates starting at ~$40/mo? Will these new customers be willing to pay that roughly $40? Finally, watch out for so-called piracy restricting measures to sneak in, as content owners are now pushing for disconnection of service for anyone the ISP feels uses an abnormal amount of the bandwidth they paid for, perhaps as in France even requiring the bill to still be paid. Carriers like ATT have been trying to implement this sort of thing, but have been thwarted by public outcry... a couple of sentences in a gargantuan bill could accomplish it.