Publicly Owned Broadband Networks: Averting the Looming Broadband Monopoly

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Quietly, virtually unreported on, a new player has emerged in the United States telecommunications sector: publicly owned networks.

Today over 54 cities, big and small, own citywide fiber networks while another 79 own citywide cable networks. Over 3 million people have access to telecommunications networks whose objective is to maximize value to the community in which they are located rather than to distant stockholders and corporate executives. Even as we grow ever more dependent on the Internet for an expanding part of our lives, our choices for gaining access at a reasonable price, for both consumers and producers, are dwindling. Tragically, the Federal Communications Commission has all but abdicated its role in protecting open and competitive access to the Internet. Now more than ever we need to know about the potential of public ownership. To serve that need the Institute for Local Self-Reliance has published an interactive Community Broadband Map that gives the location and basic information for existing city owned cable and fiber networks.


Publicly Owned Broadband Networks: Averting the Looming Broadband Monopoly Are Community Broadband Networks the Answer for the Underserved? (telecompetitor)