Google: Hate Competition? Come Compete On Our Fiber Network
from the keep-your-enemies-closer dept
Back in February Google announced that the company would be deploying 1 Gbps fiber to the home connections for a lucky community or two. Google's plan is to create a playground to test next-generation ad delivery and to explore fiber deployment options. The announcement has been nothing short of a PR miracle for Google -- the resulting clamor created by the thousands of cities eager to be the target market has kept the Google brand consistently present in the media every single day since and all without a single byte being delivered. The network itself will operate under an open access model, with Google inviting ISPs to come in and compete, and this week Google's Minnie Ingersoll extended an invitation to Comcast and AT&T to participate:
"We (sic) definitely inviting the Comcasts, the AT&T service providers to work with us on our network, and to provide their service offering on top of our pipe -- we're definitely planning on doing that. Our general attitude has been that there's plenty of room for innovation right now in the broadband space, and it's great what the cable companies are doing, upgrading to DOCSIS 3.0, but no one company has a monopoly on innovation. We're looking for other service providers to be able to come in and offer their service on top of our network so that residents have a choice when they open up their accounts. They get the connection from us, and then they have a choice as to who they subscribe to."
While that's sweet of Google, it's unclear that the nation's wealthiest carriers will want to come over and play today. These are companies who spend millions of dollars each year lobbying to eliminate competition of any kind -- and probably aren't keen to participate in a trial designed (in part) to highlight how competition keeps prices low, keeps service quality high -- and organically limits network neutrality violations. The nation's wealthiest carriers already disliked Google for the company's positions on everything from network neutrality to white space broadband. They, of course, see (correctly) that products like Google Voice pose a serious disruptive threat to traditional cash cows, and these carriers spend a lot of time smearing Google by using outsourced policy wonks.
These same carriers will probably feel even less cooperative after being subjected to several months of national coverage with one central theme: they aren't providing the broadband speeds or prices people want. Keep in mind too that part of this network's purpose will be to collect a mountain of data -- the kind of data these carriers don't like to share (congestion, bandwidth delivery costs, etc.) all of which will be useful to Google in their political battles against these same operators. While Google has repeatedly stated they aren't interested in being an ISP or in expanding this project beyond 50,000 to 500,000 users -- this new network (whenever it actually gets built) might be a more suitable playground for smaller ISPs; smaller ISPs eager to show what open access and competition can really do for a community in an environment free of the influence of the usual assortment of monopoly/duopoly carriers.
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Filed Under: broadband, fiber, google voice
Companies: at&t, comcast, google
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Drooling Over 1 Gbps Fiber
Seriously Comcast (I think I was getting ~ 15 Mbps down / 2.5 Mbps up when I left) was ok, but when FiOS became available (Currently 25 Mbps down / 20 Mbps up & without the Node Sharing issues) I was all over it. I run a server in my home so upload speed makes a big difference to me. Google has not given an expected down/up ratio yet but given that fiber if capable of running at 1:1 without problems it could be 1 Gbps both ways, W00T! I can hardly imagine the 40-50 TIMES speed increase that would give me let alone for a lowly DSL Customer, it would be an increase of a whole order of magnitude!
I just hope the experiment succeeds in driving more competition in the broadband space, everyone would benefit. Oh and Google if you are listening The West Portland Metro Area, Oregon is waiting.
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Spin Me Right Round
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Re: Drooling Over 1 Gbps Fiber
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I'm moving there!
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The FCC's plan wasn't this bold.
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Of course, I wish them lots of success with this. The slow-moving very greedy monopolists will be in for a rude awakening.
Success should help sway more legislators against (patent) monopolies.
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Dear Google
HELP US GOOGLE!
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CRAP - THIS WAS MY IDEA
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You really had me going until that one...
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Re: Re: Drooling Over 1 Gbps Fiber
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Re: CRAP - THIS WAS MY IDEA
So broadband access will be down most nights, littered with lost packets, and customer service that would put Google's Nexus One roll out into Top Tier status.
I hate Comcast, but I trust them to run a network more than a bunch of bureaucrats who barely show enough understanding of the Internet to send an e-mail, let alone construct a competent network IT staff.
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Re: Re: CRAP - THIS WAS MY IDEA
So, you're telling me that where you live, commerce grinds to a halt daily because the government is somehow allowing thousands of vehicles to mysteriously disappear from the roads?
It's funny, 'cause... here I thought the road and highway system was enabling the transport of billions of dollars of goods, service, and manpower daily.
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The Google I worry about is the Google ten years from now, stocked less with younger idealists and more with established executive veterans heeding the call of myopic investors. I feel like that's when the trouble starts...
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Re: Re: Re: Drooling Over 1 Gbps Fiber
I'm in the same boat, cheaper to get TV+phone+cable even though I don't use the TV at all.
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Re: Drooling Over 1 Gbps Fiber
I also have FiOS today and for bandwidth-intensive tasks I find that my broadband link is rarely the bottleneck. For example, I don't think you'll notice ANY improvement with Hulu.
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Reminds me of guys that purchase more bandwidth just to run speedtests all day and feel good about themselves. lol
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Getting on Google's network wouldn't be competition!
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Re: Getting on Google's network wouldn't be competition!
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Re: Getting on Google's network wouldn't be competition!
Japan, Uk and France and other European countries would disagree.
In japan you get a list as long of service providers as my leg and I'm not a dwarf!
In France because all the physical infra-structure is shared FREE the ISP still manages to offer TV, VoIP, 100Mb/s for 29.99 euros?
Besides ISP's can differentiate themselves using better routers then their competitors(bet you thought people wouldn't know about that) on the Google racks.
I want to believe you are speaking out of ignorance, otherwise you are something else and I can't quite come up with good things to say about that type of something.
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Quantum encryption doesn't happen on DOCSIS 0.3 unless someone came up with a phisics breakthrough I'm not aware of.
:)
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YAY...not
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A co-op model
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Re: Getting on Google's network wouldn't be competition!
Having better infrastructure, especially in the last mile, is key to success. Why do you think FiOS is doing so well everywhere it's deployed? Why do you think that WISPs like me continue to thrive, especially in areas (not all of them rural!) where the phone lines are too poor to carry broadband? I may choose to rent the middle mile (which is closer to being just generic transport), but I'm going to build my own last mile.
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because we can't use BlueRay quality streaming? Remove all media compression that degrade quality and see how much bandwidth you need. Assume 3 devices streaming at the same time at the same house. Blueray is 54-72mbps per stream. 216mbps for higher quality movies of 3 streams.
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I hope my community is selected. I'd be happy to help test next-generation ad-blocking technology.
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Security banking can only be deployed on fiber right now unless someone created something better than quantum encryption.
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Google's network will be different because it will drive down prices substantially, and force the isps to begin actually competing.
Fios on the other hand is directly owned and operated by Verizon, meaning no competition and ridiculous $60/month prices.
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Google's network will be different because it will drive down prices substantially, and force the isps to begin actually competing.
Fios on the other hand is directly owned and operated by Verizon, meaning no competition and ridiculous $60/month prices.
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But what is your throttled bandwidth in reality?
If you are not running one of these three firmware packages on a supported hardware firewall/router, you do NOT know your true download/upload bandwidth! The three that will show you this in real time, 24 X 7 X 365 are: DD-WRT, OpenWRT and Tomato.
My Cable company promises 16,000 (16Mbpsr) / 2,000 (2Mbps) but my DD-WRT supported (and enabled router) shows reality, the truth: Sustained I only receive 384Kbps/101Kbps. That is all I EVER received sustained, period. Sure I see 1Mbps, 2Mbps, even 3Mbps 1 second spikes...but never upstream, only downstream.
I have even seen a "speed test" show as much as 25,000 Kbps downstream (but never more then 2,000Kbps upstream); however as soon as the Speed Test finishes, you see the actual (throttled/limited/restricted) bandwidth which is never above a sustained 384Kbps / 101Kbps. Never.
So if I was not running the DD-Wrt software I simply would NOT have a clue that I was being ripped off. As EVERY cable customer is. 100% of Cable providers throttle back their service. Period.
And I pay the highest monthly amount in my area, the cable company's highest tier of service with which they "promise" streaming content will work.
Sorry but it does not.
The key to streaming content, I am guessing, is upstream bandwidth. I would hypothesis that if they provided the FCC definition upstream (768Kbps) that streaming content would not sputter when played. Of course the cable company has absolutely no intention of ever giving its customers more, only less.
Thus its no surprise that more then 500,000 subscribers have left Cable Companies every quarter through 2009.
Every American must realize how anti-american the current telcos and cable companies position on bandwidth and service is and has been since the early 1990s.
Its costing American's jobs, opportunities and more.
Its Ironic that those same Anti American companies have received in excess of $200 Billion (direct money, additional fees and taxes) since the 1990s to provide American's Fiber.
Where's the Fiber?
If your elected officials are being paid to prevent your family from having Fiber To The Home (FTTH) access to the Internet, then its your fault! Fix it before your kids future and their kids future is ruined further.
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Why they do it ?
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I live in the senior housing building
we have aol dial up and it stinks!!!
we are too old to be waiting so long for each screen don't you think?
Help!
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Re: YAY...not
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Re: Dear Google
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Re: Re: CRAP - THIS WAS MY IDEA
Key points: city-owned keeps costs down; competition in ISPs keeps costs down; process is transparent
-C
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