Despite public, political, and business interest in greater broadband deployment, not every American has high-speed internet access yet (let alone a choice of provider for really fast, high-capacity service). So who's really to blame for strangling broadband competition?
While popular arguments focus on supposed "monopolists" such as big cable companies, it's government that's really to blame. Companies can make life harder for their competitors, but strangling the competition takes government.
Broadband policy discussions usually revolve around the U.S. government's Federal Communications Commission (FCC), yet it's really our local governments and public utilities that impose the most significant barriers to entry.
Deploying broadband infrastructure isn't as simple as merely laying wires underground: that's the easy part. The hard part — and the reason it often doesn't happen — is the pre-deployment barriers, which local governments and public utilities make unnecessarily expensive and difficult.
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