The corollary of "you treasure what you measure," is "you don't give a shit about what you stop measuring," which is why Trump's FCC has decided to stop measuring the speed of the broadband it subsidizes with billions in public funds:
theregister.com/2025/07/22/bid…
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pluralistic.net/2025/07/24/geo…
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Biden broadband benchmarks are BS, says Trump FCC
: No more consideration of affordability or 1 Gbps speed goal if Chairman Carr gets his wayBrandon Vigliarolo (The Register)
Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Getting broadband to the American public has been a policy priority since 1996, when the Telecommunications Act established a duty for the FCC to produce annual reports about the progress of America's sclerotic telcoms monopolies in rolling out advanced network services:
congress.gov/104/plaws/publ104…
It's a universal truth that these incumbent communications companies *love* collecting public broadband subsidies, but they *hate* investing in broadband.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
From wireless companies that demand exclusive access to spectrum and then never bother to use it (and howl like enraged baboons whenever anyone proposes taking that fallow spectrum back) to cable and phone companies who demand billions in indirect subsidies (intra- and inter-city rights of way) and direct subsidies (billions in cash) and refuse to upgrade their switching or lines:
arstechnica.com/tech-policy/20…
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Frontier bungles redaction of network audit that it doesn’t want you to see
Jon Brodkin (Ars Technica)Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Despite what telcos would have you believe, running wires from point a to point b (or even from point a to every point b inside of a city or at the end of every lonely road in the county) is not the lost art of a fallen civilization. Figuring out how to pull fiber to every American is just a (very large) logistical task - it's not like we're asking them to embalm a Pharaoh or built a pyramid without any power-tools. This is just cable-pulling, it's not fucking Stonehenge.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
And fiber is *awesome*. Each strand of fiber carries *thousands* of times more data than a copper phone or cable-wire is capable of, and *millions* of times more data than wireless can transmit. But no one pulls just one strand of fiber: fiber is cheap as hell to manufacture, so fiber loops have *many* strands:
pluralistic.net/2021/07/03/bea…
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Pluralistic: 03 Jul 2021 – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
pluralistic.netCory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Fiber is the future. Fiber is future-proof. The telcoms industry *hates* fiber, and Trump's FCC is so totally supine, so utterly captured by the telcoms industry, that it is abandoning fiber, even as it continues to shovel billions into the coffers of these dogshit companies to wire up the rural Americans who voted Trump into office, only to get shafted (again).
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Remember DOGE? Remember Trump's promise to root out "government inefficiency and waste?" Apparently, they skipped the FCC, which previously handed out $45b to incumbent telcos to wire up rural America, only to have every cent of that wasted on copper lines (why they bothered with copper when America has so many idle tin cans and length of binder-twine, I'll never understand):
web.archive.org/web/2021040823…
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Sunk Costs: A Cautionary Tale | Conexon
ConexonCory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Now, Trump's FCC is doing it again, but it's not just the copper barons they're giving handouts to. In its communique killing broadband measurement, the FCC says focusing on broadband speed "risks skewing the market by unnecessarily potentially picking technological winners and losers." What they mean is, if they insist on measuring broadband speeds before handing out rural subsidies, the only companies that will get those subsidies are the ones that provide *fast* broadband.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Won't someone think of the shitty, slow internet providers? Especially the fixed wireless and (especially) satellite internet providers, most notably Starlink, the brainchild of former First Buddy and DOGE Obergruppenführer Elon Musk.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
While a satellite constellation like Starlink has many great use-cases (ships, planes, temporary encampments), these use-cases do not in any way add up to a profitable business, given the extraordinary expense of launching and re-launching a gazillion satellites (to say nothing of the dangers these pose to other users of stable orbits, and the problems they pose for astronomers).
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
The only way to make Starlink profitable is to get *everyone* to use it, and therein lies the problem, because Starlink is cursed with something business professionals call "dogshit unit-economics." Every time you add a new user to Starlink, everyone nearby gets slower internet:
washingtonpost.com/technology/…
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
That's because they're all sharing the same spectrum, within the footprint of the satellite they're connecting to. Starlink can make some marginal improvements by increasing the number of satellites and shrinking their footprints, and by getting licenses to more radio spectrum, but these quickly hit the hardest of limits.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Namely, the financial limitations of increasing the number of satellites per customer, and the natural limits of pumping more radio-energy between satellites and ground stations (beyond a certain point, you start cooking passing birds on the wing).
Musk has a powerful reality-distortion field, but the fact that physics hates satellite broadband cannot be overcome by shitposting, cosmetic surgery, buying elections, or wanting it *really badly*.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
You can only add more satellites and spectrum for so long - eventually, improving the unit-economics of satellite internet requires adding new *universes*.
It's funny that Musk styles himself the "Technoking," because the thing that ushered in the Century of Tech was *amazing* unit-economics (the internet and computers get better and cheaper as they advance), while *everything* Musk loves is cursed with dogshit unit-economics.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Take cars: Musk *hates* public transit ("there’s like a bunch of random strangers, one of who might be a serial killer"):
wired.com/story/elon-musk-awkw…
He insists that if you just add enough self-driving smarts to cars, and possibly dig enough tunnels, you can somehow beat the inexorable dogshit unit-economics of an automotive society, where every driver who shares the road with you makes your car worth *less* as a transportation system. This is nonsense.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
A train, a tram, even a bus, can transport dozens, hundreds or even thousands of people at a time. A bunch of single-occupancy robot-taxis simply occupy too much *space* to be efficient - multiply the number of people by the number of cars by the miles they wish to travel and simply fitting them on the road requires adding so much *more* road that everything gets further apart, meaning more cars, more roads, and more distance. It's a Red Queen's Race that you can't win.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
In other words, geometry hates cars, even more than Elon Musk hates public transit:
pluralistic.net/2022/02/11/bez…
Then there's AI, the dogshittiest of all the dogshit unit economics. While every successful technology has seen fantastic network effects and returns to scale, each generation of AI has been more expensive to train *and* to operate, and every new AI user makes AI *more* expensive:
wheresyoured.at/wheres-the-mon…
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There Is No AI Revolution
Edward Zitron (Ed Zitron's Where's Your Ed At)Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Computer science hates AI, so naturally, Elon Musk *loves* it. This is a guy who can only succeed by triumphing over physics, geometry, and computer science. He is not going to accomplish any of this.
The common thread joining all of Musk's doomed love-affairs is that all the stuff he's obsessed with is useful in limited ways, but don't work at mass scale. As such, much of their potential will require public financing to be realized.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
There's plenty of useful things you can do with AI, but they don't add up to enough to justify the capex that goes into model-training nor the opex that goes into running the energy-hungry, water-thirsty foundation models. There's plenty of useful limited applications for self-driving vehicles, but they're all niches like closed-track airport terminal shuttles or closed-site mining vehicles.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
And, as noted, there's many remote and temporary sites that can benefit from satellite broadband, but they don't justify the titanic expense of operating Starlink.
Even space travel is useful as a scientific enterprise, while space colonization is unbelievably stupid and impractical, and has dogshit unit-economics that put even AI in the shade:
pluralistic.net/2024/01/09/ast…
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Pluralistic: Kelly and Zach Weinersmith’s “A City On Mars” (09 Jan 2024) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
pluralistic.netCory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
It's not that Musk hates public subsidies. Like the telcoms sector, he's addicted to public money. The only reason Tesla is profitable is its gigantic, Obama-era bailout, and the ongoing clean-energy subsidies that Musk and Trump are warring over:
politico.com/news/2025/01/18/m…
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Despite his rhetoric, Musk supports *vast* public expenditures, but only when they are earmarked to his doomed projects so that he can keep trying to make fetch happen, absorbing endless public riches while assuming no public duties.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Musk is no Technoking, but he's a strong contender for Enshittification King: a guy who taps the capital markets and Uncle Sucker for funds he can use to subsidize the initial rollouts of his stupid ideas, in the hopes of becoming so indispensable that he later can squeeze both business customers *and* end users for ever-larger sums to keep the illusion afloat (think of the junk fees he's piled onto Twitter users and publishers).
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
The thing is, we know how to roll out ultra-fast, reliable, future-proof internet. All it takes is for public subsidies to come with public duties, like a duty to preference futuristic, high-capacity fiber over gimmicks like satellite "broadband." This isn't a leftist plot, either.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Just look at this map of community fiber networks, which are most heavily concentrated in red states (because rural communities aren't gonna get fiber from the private sector, and they skew Republican):
communitynetworks.org/content/…
These are among the only Americans who *like* their ISPs, a sector whose dominant players routinely win annual "Worst Company in America" polls.
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Community Network Map | Welcome to Community Networks
Welcome to Community NetworksCory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Republicans are perfectly capable of providing their voters with an efficient, nutritious high-fiber diet, as they do in Utah, where the "Utopia" initiative is blanketing the blood-red state with publicly managed fiber:
pluralistic.net/2024/05/16/sym…
But the Republican base has spent decades on the receiving end of an expensively funded campaign to get them to view fiber as a literal communist plot.
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Pluralistic: Utah’s getting some of America’s best broadband (16 May 2024) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
pluralistic.netCory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
It's wild, because if you're a swivel-eyed loon who's been kicked off of Big Tech for insisting that Obama told the lizard people to hide 5g nanocites in MRNA vaccines, fiber would let you run your own competing free-for-all service from your garage:
pluralistic.net/2021/01/17/tur…
And of course, governments - unlike corporations - are bound by the First Amendment, so publicly funded systems are far more limited in how they may moderate user speech than private sector systems.
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Pluralistic: 17 Jan 2021 – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
pluralistic.netCory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Notwithstanding these 1A strictures, it's not unreasonable to want to have alternatives to publicly run services. I wouldn't want Ken Paxton - or Donald Trump - making moderation decisions for my broadband connection. But public network provision doesn't have to mean that you get your broadband from whatever shitshow is currently occupying your city hall.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Public fiber can also mean "essential facilities sharing" (where competing ISPs can install their own switches in the data-centers where the fiber terminates). It can mean public *conduit* that anyone can lease space in and run fiber through. It can mean a whole infrastructural stack that is available to all comers: public sector ISPs, but also civil society groups, co-ops, tinkerers, universities, and small and large ISPs:
pluralistic.net/2025/06/25/eur…
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Pluralistic: What’s a “public internet?” (25 Jun 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
pluralistic.netCory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
That's the vision that the FCC is running away from, as fast as its little hooves can carry it. Instead of using public funds to provide a public good, they're subsidizing Musk's war on physics and the telco sector's war on maintenance. The country that gave birth to the internet in the 1970s is set to preserve that Nixon-era copper infrastructure thorough the 21st century, even as the rest of the world rockets past us on blazing fast fiber.
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Cory Doctorow
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Sensitive content
Hey, German-speakers! Through a very weird set of circumstances, I ended up owning the rights to the German audiobook of my bestselling 2022 cryptocurrency heist technothriller *Red Team Blues* and now I'm selling DRM-free audio and ebooks, along with the paperback (all in German and English) on a Kickstarter that runs until August 11:
kickstarter.com/projects/docto…
eof/
Wade Roberts
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •Wireless data transmission should only ever be used for nomadic, temporary, and/or sacrificial links.
They’re useful for quick deployment, but are intrinsically brittle and terrible for resiliency _and_ efficiency.
The longer the dependence on them for a given use case, the less defensible arguments in support of them become.
I’m all for the use of satellite delivery of internet services, but only when it’s used in conjunction with a broader roll out of hardwired infrastructure, at which point it can reasonably be relegated to serving as a secondary, backup diverse path.
Cory Doctorow reshared this.
Aaron Sawdey, Ph.D.
in reply to Wade Roberts • • •Andrew Zonenberg
in reply to Aaron Sawdey, Ph.D. • • •@acsawdey @waderoberts Yep.
Keep radio links for mobile deployments where you actually need the flexibility and can tolerate poor performance since the alternative is no connectivity whatsoever.
Using any kind of wireless link for a fixed site is just dumb.
Aaron Sawdey, Ph.D.
in reply to Andrew Zonenberg • • •Jeff Craig
in reply to Wade Roberts • • •Wade Roberts
in reply to Jeff Craig • • •@foxxtrot I’ve seen a server connected to an AP in the same rack.
I speculated it was ‘air gapped’ for security.
-rb
in reply to Wade Roberts • • •@waderoberts where’s the link to purchase the wired mobile phones? 🤣
Sarcasm aside I agree! Just built a house and had it wired with Ethernet to the rooms—so many people asked me why I would do that. 🙄
Daniel Lakeland
in reply to Cory Doctorow • • •I mean, this is also true of residential fiber, and cable and most all internet. Putting a new fiber to my house doesn't give me a new gigabit path to every site on the internet.
Starlink is garbage not because its a shared medium but because its basically a disposable deployment. One of them crashes into the atmosphere every few hours or days. If you dont launch a thousand of them a year you basically dont have service in 2-3 years and they are expensive to launch.