On 3/29/23 04:28, Sebastian Moeller via Starlink wrote:
Hi Bob,


On Mar 28, 2023, at 19:47, rjmcmahon <[email protected]> wrote:

Interesting. I'm skeptical that our cities in the U.S. can get this (structural 
separation) right.
There really isn't that much to get wrong, you built the access network and terminate the 
per household fibers in arge enough "exchanges" there you offer ISPs to lighten 
up the fibers on the premise that customers can use any ISP they want (that is present in 
the exchange)... and on ISP change will just be patched differently in the exchange.
While I think that local "government" also could successfully run internet 
access services, I see no reason why they should do so (unless there is no competition).
The goal here is to move the "natural monopoly" of the access network out of the hand of 
the "market" (as markets simply fail as optimizing resource allocation instruments under 
mono- and oligopoly conditions, on either side).

We see  the same issue in Canada: some provinces and cities happily
manage the delivery of services over cables hung from province-owned
poles (eg, TCP/IP in New Brunswick).  Other provinces did less well, and
we have "telephone poles" and "hydro poles" on the same street (in
Toronto, Ontario)

There is no real difference between New Brunswick, Ontario or, for that
matter, Minnesota. If a province or city has operated natural monopolies
like the last mile for water and sewer, it can operate the last mile for
any other monopoly.

--dave

--
David Collier-Brown,         | Always do right. This will gratify
System Programmer and Author | some people and astonish the rest
[email protected] |              -- Mark Twain


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