Year-End Review for the Year 2015
According to most sources, America's wireline or wireless broadband speeds are not even in the Top 20 in the world, much less are reasonably priced:
Wired Broadband
Wireless
America was supposed to have a fabulous fiber optic future. Sure, there are some places in America where you can get gigabit speeds (1000 Mbps) over fiber. But as this collection of research indicates, on average, America's broadband is still a digital dirt road.
By the end of 2014, America paid about $400 billion and counting to their local incumbent telecommunications utilities, now known as AT&T, Verizon and Centurylink to replace the aging copper wires with fiber optics.
From the failed National Broadband Plan to the failure of the state commissions to enforce basic commitments, we believe the future of communications in America is going to get worse, not better, unless we take some immediate actions--which I'll be addressing in future articles.
How did this happen? See: The Book of Broken Promises.
America, the Broadband Ugly
Let's go through the numbers that have been compiled by others. I note that there are a host of caveats to all of these statistics as they do not collect their information using the same methodology. And there are also a host of caveats as to what exactly the surveys are examining, whether it is 'peak speed' or 'average speed', for example.
But one thing is clear -- in most surveys, America is NOT in the Top 20 countries in the world in broadband speed or price of service. This is a national embarrassment.
This information was collected December 5, 2015 and we formatted the existing info for this article.
Open Signal Finds that America Is 55th in the World in Wireless LTE Speeds.
ZDNet Pegs America at 41st in "Average Broadband Speed".
The Internet Society Shows America to be 21st in the World in Average Download Speeds, and 29th in Average Wireless Download Speeds.
OCED Claims that America Is 30th in "Fixed Broadband Prices Per Megabit Per Second of Advertised Speed", in 2014.
Akamai has America at 19th in Average Speed and 22nd in Peak Speed.
Coda and Teaser
Please do not say that we need more government subsidies, or that we need to give the companies more financial incentives, or we should build around the incumbents who didn't deliver. We have already paid multiple times to upgrade the utility networks through government subsidies and financial incentives, which is a euphemism to raise rates.
Teaser-- We have uncovered one of the largest financial accounting scandals in American history, and it is one of the reasons America isn't Number 1 or even Number 10. We will be releasing some reports this week from a new series called "Fixing Telecommunications".
I posted this to give us a baseline of how far we have fallen. It is time for a reboot of the regulatory process that allowed this to happen. What are needed are audits, accountability and enforcement, tied to refunds, among other next steps.
According to most sources, America's wireline or wireless broadband speeds are not even in the Top 20 in the world, much less are reasonably priced:
Wired Broadband
- ZDNet -- 41st Average Speed of Fixed Broadband
- Internet Society -- 21st in Fixed Broadband Speeds
- Akamai --19th in Average Speed, 22nd in Peak Speed
- OCED --30th in Fixed Broadband Prices for Mbps
Wireless
- Open Signal -- 55th in Wireless LTE Speed
- Internet Society -- 29th in Wireless 3G+LTE
America was supposed to have a fabulous fiber optic future. Sure, there are some places in America where you can get gigabit speeds (1000 Mbps) over fiber. But as this collection of research indicates, on average, America's broadband is still a digital dirt road.
By the end of 2014, America paid about $400 billion and counting to their local incumbent telecommunications utilities, now known as AT&T, Verizon and Centurylink to replace the aging copper wires with fiber optics.
From the failed National Broadband Plan to the failure of the state commissions to enforce basic commitments, we believe the future of communications in America is going to get worse, not better, unless we take some immediate actions--which I'll be addressing in future articles.
How did this happen? See: The Book of Broken Promises.
America, the Broadband Ugly
Let's go through the numbers that have been compiled by others. I note that there are a host of caveats to all of these statistics as they do not collect their information using the same methodology. And there are also a host of caveats as to what exactly the surveys are examining, whether it is 'peak speed' or 'average speed', for example.
But one thing is clear -- in most surveys, America is NOT in the Top 20 countries in the world in broadband speed or price of service. This is a national embarrassment.
This information was collected December 5, 2015 and we formatted the existing info for this article.
Open Signal Finds that America Is 55th in the World in Wireless LTE Speeds.
ZDNet Pegs America at 41st in "Average Broadband Speed".
The Internet Society Shows America to be 21st in the World in Average Download Speeds, and 29th in Average Wireless Download Speeds.
OCED Claims that America Is 30th in "Fixed Broadband Prices Per Megabit Per Second of Advertised Speed", in 2014.
Akamai has America at 19th in Average Speed and 22nd in Peak Speed.
Coda and Teaser
Please do not say that we need more government subsidies, or that we need to give the companies more financial incentives, or we should build around the incumbents who didn't deliver. We have already paid multiple times to upgrade the utility networks through government subsidies and financial incentives, which is a euphemism to raise rates.
Teaser-- We have uncovered one of the largest financial accounting scandals in American history, and it is one of the reasons America isn't Number 1 or even Number 10. We will be releasing some reports this week from a new series called "Fixing Telecommunications".
I posted this to give us a baseline of how far we have fallen. It is time for a reboot of the regulatory process that allowed this to happen. What are needed are audits, accountability and enforcement, tied to refunds, among other next steps.
-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.