blutoski
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2006
- Messages
- 12,454
Yes there is (might be mobile link).
I think AvalonXQ did ask 'without limiting ISP behavior'
Local loop unbundling is the current regulatory model that I described whereby the regulator decrees that ILECs must permit lease of part of their capital for a tariffed price that may or may not be profitable for the ILEC.
What would be limited would be their right to set what they think is a 'fair' price for the wholesaleing, and also their right to refuse a competitor's request to use their facilities.
A further frustration: this has been in place in Canada for 20 years, and it has not produced meaningful competition. Wholesaled loops are less than 1/10th of a % of the installed voicelines. I'm sure it's similar in the US.
LLU is regulation, and hasn't been very succesful in encouraging competition.
The main competitors to ILECs are cable companies who have their own backbones and local loops, and also cellular networks that are increasingly offering adequate data throughput.
And in any case, that's a phone model. The internet is different because the wholesaling of ports and access to central offices is not the same thing as a duplicate network. The adsl reseller just banana-clips their port onto the ILEC's loop, but the ports themselves are usually hooked into the ILEC's backbone in the first place. ie: if the ILEC is shaping ports, the adsl reseller is shaping ports because they don't have their own network.
Just to drive that home with a contemporary example here in Canada: the major carriers have decided to stop offering unlimited throughput, so that means the adsl resellers will probably have to as well (*), because they're just reselling the carrier's products.
(*) the exception would be a reseller who is willing to pay the carrier per-bit rates, but charge their end customer a flat rate for unlimited - very risky, and I'm unaware of any that are considering it
Incorrect and something of a pro-regulation canard.
I'm not sure what you mean. Duplicate networks would have duplicate costs. The alternative is regulatory management of existing networks. I don't see an option where duplicate networks would have no costs.