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Australia

How Australia Bungled Its $36 Billion High-Speed Internet Rollout (nytimes.com) 149

Not very pleased with your internet speeds? Think about the people Down Under. Australia's "bungled" National Broadband Network (NBN) has been used as a "cautionary tale" for other countries to take note of. Despite the massive amount of money being pumped into the NBN, the New York Times reports, the internet speeds still lagged behind the US, most of western Europe, Japan and South Korea -- even Kenya. The article highlights that Australia was the first country where a national plan to cover every house or business was considered and this ambitious plan was hampered by changes in government and a slow rollout (Editor's note: the link could be paywalled; alternative source), partly because of negotiations with Telstra about the fibre installation. From the report: Australia, a wealthy nation with a widely envied quality of life, lags in one essential area of modern life: its internet speed. Eight years after the country began an unprecedented broadband modernization effort that will cost at least 49 billion Australian dollars, or $36 billion, its average internet speed lags that of the United States, most of Western Europe, Japan and South Korea. In the most recent ranking of internet speeds by Akamai, a networking company, Australia came in at an embarrassing No. 51, trailing developing economies like Thailand and Kenya. For many here, slow broadband connections are a source of frustration and an inspiration for gallows humor. One parody video ponders what would happen if an American with a passion for Instagram and streaming "Scandal" were to switch places with an Australian resigned to taking bathroom breaks as her shows buffer. The article shares this anecdote: "Hundreds of thousands of people from around the world have downloaded Hand of Fate, an action video game made by a studio in Brisbane, Defiant Development. But when Defiant worked with an audio designer in Melbourne, more than 1,000 miles away, Mr. Jaffit knew it would be quicker to send a hard drive by road than to upload the files, which could take several days."

Comment Re:Not a problem (Score 1) 544

Sorry but that example doesn't seem relevant. The reason MPAA ratings cause movies to "self-sensor" is because they are out to make money, and want to target a demographic (or as large of a demographic as possible). Which tells you there are a lot of people that like to limit what they watch by the categories the MPAA uses. Wikipedia is going to be less-susceptible to that because there isn't money to be made targeting a demographic.

Comment Re:Innovate or become obsolete. That's where it's (Score 1) 515

Is this even the real problem? I see this as the ultimate goal of the cable companies. They offered unlimited bandwidth in the beginning to get people to sign up and limiting how much any other company or municipality wanted to invest in infrastructure, and now that there is so little competition they can start charging more for less and less service. If there was a healthy amount of competition it wouldn't matter if one or the other offered tiered pricing. And on Slashdot non-US commenters have been telling us the right model *is* tiered pricing for years- for mobile and wired internet. If I had any faith in the FCC or competition I don't think tiered pricing would be a bad thing.

Comment Re:I hope they get raked over the coals for this (Score 1) 235

You're talking specifically about text books, right? I think there are other market forces at work with text books. For instance, students are required by the school/professor to buy a specific edition of a specific book. That right there eliminates text books from the discussion here doesn't? The suit is about allowing a book seller to buy books at a wholesale price, and then sell them for whatever margin they choose above that. Apple wanted to keep their 30% cut like the app store, and talked the publishers into changing the system to let the publishers set the consumer price, while the seller gets a specific cut of that price. This eliminates an advantage that one seller has over another, because they can't choose to sell at a lower price to draw customers. Where the problem with textbooks is that the publisher merely has to pressure the state/school/professor to require a new edition for a class. Where you end up buying the book after that deal is made doesn't affect the price that much.

Comment Would this even reduce crime? (Score 1) 463

Credit card numbers are stolen and sold all the time now. Wouldn't criminal organizations just put more focus on stealing physical objects or numbers that are not tied to them? I would assume that they have some success in using these stolen cards without getting caught or else it wouldn't be such a common target and hot commodity. So we'd trade a system where the average joe (plus criminals) can remain anonymous, for one where criminals will remain anonymous and the average Joe will be sent purchase history related ads.

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