May 2, 2013

The Star-Ledger: Putting up a fight with the internet racket

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(Original Post)

By Star-Ledger Guest Columnist
on May 02, 2013 at 7:16 AM

By Timothy Karr

Is your internet bill too high? You can thank the phone and cable companies for that.

Today, high-speed broadband services offered by these national carriers cost more than $500 a year and even more when customers are forced to bundle internet access with cable or phone packages. These rates put access out of reach for millions.

And the Americans who can afford this essential service can choose from only one or two kinds of providers: either a big phone or cable company.

Market dominance suits the phone and cable giants. As the real cost of hooking up your home declines, they keep hiking their rates. Naturally, this arrangement lets operators record obscene profit margins.

Craig Moffett, an industry analyst for Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., noted that the margin for Comcast’s broadband service is about 80 percent. In other words, Comcast charges customers $45 for something that costs the company $9 to supply.

This is a racket.

And AT&T, Comcast, Verizon and other industry titans are fighting tooth and nail to protect it. They’ve mobilized hundreds of lobbyists and legislators to paint any alternative — including locally owned networks — as an affront to American free enterprise.

Towns and cities across the country have smart ideas about how to deliver affordable and locally owned internet access to their residents, including creating their own networks. But in many states, those ideas can’t take root before companies such as AT&T, Comcast, Time Warner Cable and Verizon stomp them out.

Their weapon of choice is state-level legislation that restricts cities and towns from offering homegrown internet access at reasonable rates. Thanks to this cable-and-phone lobbying onslaught, 19 states have already passed laws that hamper or ban municipal broadband networks.

But that hasn’t stopped municipal broadband efforts from sprouting up elsewhere. It’s easy to understand the appeal. Community internet creates market competition for communications services, improves schools, enhances public safety and social services, and encourages entrepreneurs to keep their businesses local. These networks are increasingly cheaper to build, bringing technology — and economic opportunities — to communities that are routinely passed over by the large commercial providers.

Even so, internet incumbents don’t like the hint of competition. The industry’s latest fight to stop community internet took place recently in Georgia, where phone and cable lobbyists lined up to support a bill that would have prohibited towns and cities from creating local networks.

The good news is that this lousy bill didn’t make it to the Georgia governor’s desk. The bad news? The private-enterprise argument is a still being repeated by many state legislators opposing municipal networks across the country.

They’re claiming that phone and cable companies are champions of capitalism that are doing business without taxpayer assistance. They also imply that municipal networks are part of a conspiracy to nationalize broadband access.

But their rhetoric doesn’t stack up to reality. Phone and cable companies have been on federal welfare since their inception. A 2011 Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy study shows AT&T, Comcast and Verizon collected nearly $29 billion in tax subsidies from 2008 through 2010. The FCC’s 2012 report on Universal Service Fund subsidies shows more than $2.5 billion in federal payments to AT&T and Verizon.

These companies wouldn’t be recording such soaring profit margins if there were truly a free market. They’re playing a reckless political game to protect their de facto internet monopolies and derail local efforts that are often better placed to serve the people.

Timothy Karr is the senior strategy director for Free Press (freepress.net), a national nonpartisan nonprofit dedicated to reforming the media. This article was distributed via OtherWords. For more like this one, visit otherwords.org.



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