Benton Institute for Broadband & Society

Jonathan Sallet on the Need to Reset U.S. Broadband Policy
Benton Senior Fellow Jonathan Sallet called for a new national broadband agenda. Over the past year, Jon has been talking to broadband leaders around the country, asking about who’s currently connected and who’s not. You can read Jon’s findings in Broadband for America’s Future: A Vision for the 2020s. Jon delivered the keynote address at the Broadband Communities conference in Virginia on Wednesday.
Competition Increases Choices and Spurs Lower Prices and Better-Quality Service (Benton Institute for Broadband & Society)
Submitted by benton on Thu, 10/31/2019 - 06:40Affordability and Adoption for Those Who Wish to Have Broadband in Their Homes but Lack the Means or the Skills to Acquire It (Benton Institute for Broadband & Society)
Submitted by benton on Thu, 10/31/2019 - 06:39Community Anchor Institutions Increasingly Serve Their Users Wherever They Are (Benton Institute for Broadband & Society)
Submitted by benton on Thu, 10/31/2019 - 06:39
Is the FCC Asking the Right Questions About Broadband Deployment?
On October 23, the Federal Communications Commission released a Notice of Inquiry (NOI), launching its annual review to determine if broadband is reaching all Americans in a timely fashion. Finding in the negative, the FCC must take immediate action to accelerate broadband deployment by removing barriers to infrastructure investment and by promoting competition in the telecommunications market. Over the next seven weeks, the FCC will collect public input to help guide its analysis.
Mark Zuckerberg and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day on Capitol Hill
Sixty different politicians had five minutes each to grill Zuckerberg about whatever they wanted, and they jumped at the opportunity to try and test him. Congress came across as prepared, serious, and thoughtful. While the hearing was supposed to be about Facebook’s push to create a new digital currency called Libra, about half of the back and forth centered on other topics, from its controversial political ads policy to Facebook’s record on diversity to particular congresspeople’s pet

News (Of Sorts) From the FCC
Two stories from the Federal Communications Commission caught our eye this week. One gained lots of headlines. The second is a bit of inside baseball but could turn out to be big news down the line. Both impact the deployment of broadband and closing the digital divide. FCC commissioners have voted to approve T-Mobile's acquisition of Sprint.

Connecting Communities with High-Performance Broadband
Based on what we’ve learned, we’ve formulated three basic broadband principles for community anchor institution policy.

3500 Days of The National Broadband Plan
In early 2009, Congress directed the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to develop a National Broadband Plan with a functional objective to ensure every American has “access to broadband capability.” Now, with just 165 days left before the National Broadband Plan was to meet the plan’s original stated objectives, I explore some of the key components and objectives of the plan. Ten years is a great deal of time in the telecommunications realm, and it is true that the plan asked a great deal of the FCC from the very start.