• @[email protected]
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    167 months ago

    As an IT technician, all I am thinking is “well, just use a cable instead”.

    Unfortunately I can’t see the article, it won’t load for me, but based on the comments, it seems to US ISPs that are needlessly messing up.

    Here in Sweden I have read stories about how farmers have set up their own ISPs for their communities, or failing that hired an ISP to provide a connection while they dug and pulled fiber to their own home. Do you know if this has happened in the US?

    • @[email protected]
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      97 months ago

      In many cases, regulations make replacing many utilities, like internet and power, prohibitively expensive.

      It’s one of the few regulations conservatives (usually) enjoy.

    • @Brkdncr
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      77 months ago

      In rural US getting a cable dropped could cost more than a new car.

      regulations allow a cable provider to underserve areas that have cellular access to the internet, even if it’s slow and expensive.

      Starlink is sometimes the only option for folks and it’s $120/mo. This is a high expense for many families.

      • @[email protected]
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        47 months ago

        The IT tech joke is that it’s not “Wi-Fi access”, it’s “internet access”. Wi-Fi is a tool to link devices together wirelessly on short distances, the internet is for long distances. It’s annoying to see that the press conflates the two.

        You still need a cable connection (or sg like Starlink) to your house and router to have internet access through your Wi-Fi at home.

        • @SupraMario
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          47 months ago

          This is what happens when idiots write articles with 0 understanding of what they’re writing about…all while having literally humans entire knowledge base at the same machine they’re publishing their documents on.

      • @[email protected]
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        37 months ago

        What if the farmer did the work themselves, here it is quite common to have some earthwork equipment if you are a farmer, so that should reduce the cost a bit

        • @Brkdncr
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          87 months ago

          Rural does not mean farmers.

          It’s not an issue where they have a drop at the end of your property and you just need to trench it to your home. They don’t have service anywhere close to you. A farmer wouldn’t be able to navigate the permits to dig up a bunch of land owned by people and local government or strong wires across.

            • @Viking_Hippie
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              17 months ago

              I didn’t consider that not everyone is a farmer

              …is that you, dad?

            • @Brkdncr
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              17 months ago

              You’re missing the point. No one should need to go to any extra lengths or cost to get internet access.

              • Monkey With A Shell
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                17 months ago

                Not missing just saying it wouldn’t be the first time people in the wilds took things into their own hands to fix a problem.

                Also though, ‘somebody’ has to take the extra lengths and costs, a company, tax pool, individuals, etc. Unless they’re hiding some crazy mutated spiders that spin Ethernet cables out their rear someone has to put up the time and cash for the infrastructure.

    • /home/pineapplelover
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      27 months ago

      I haven’t heard of anybody setting up a private ISP. Afaik our internet space is pretty much owned by ISPs with big pockets