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    Home » What Biden’s new $100B plan for broadband means

    What Biden’s new $100B plan for broadband means

    By SHOOTSunday, April 4, 2021Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments1033 Views
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    By Tali Arbel, Technology Writer

    --

    The problems with U.S. broadband networks have been obvious for years. Service costs more than in many other rich nations, it still doesn't reach tens of millions of Americans and the companies that provide it don't face much competition.

    Now the Biden administration is promising to do something about all of those issues as part of its proposed $2.3 trillion infrastructure package. The plan, which would devote $100 billion to get all Americans connected, is more idea than policy and lacks a lot of important detail.

    But it sketches out a striking new vision of activist government measures intended to improve high-speed internet service, following decades in which the government has largely left the job to private companies.

    WHAT IS BIDEN'S PROPOSAL?
    It would spend $100 billion to "future-proof" broadband as part of an eight-year infrastructure plan, calling high-speed connections "the new electricity" that's now a necessity for all Americans. (For history buffs, that's a reference to the Rural Electrification Act — Depression-era legislation that sped the extension of power lines to farms and rural communities.) 

    It could signal a major policy shift toward lowering the high cost of internet service, rather than just handing money to broadband providers for building out networks. "Americans pay too much for internet," the plan bluntly states.

    It pushes for greater competition that could lower prices, by encouraging and supporting networks owned or affiliated with local governments, cooperatives and nonprofit organizations. Currently, roughly 20 states restrict municipal broadband. Prioritizing such networks could give them a leg up when the government doles out money for extending service.

    "The most important thing about what President Biden has done in the proposal is that he's redefined the digital divide," said Larry Irving, a top telecom official in the Clinton administration. "The simple act of recognizing that poverty is a bigger indicator of lack of access than geography is a huge statement."

    It's not clear how the Biden administration plans to bring that about. 

    WHY IS THIS NECESSARY?
    The pandemic has made clear that millions of Americans are not online, a problem that  isn't limited to rural areas but includes cities too. The White House says more than 30 million Americans don't have access to high-speed internet at all, and millions more can't afford it. 

    The divide persists even after the government has spent billions encouraging broadband providers to connect far-flung and often isolated communities. From 2009 through 2017, federal spending on such programs totaled $47.3 billion, according to a government watchdog report. An additional $20 billion is lined up over the next decade for rural broadband, and another $9 billion for high-speed wireless internet called 5G in sparsely populated regions. Billions more flowed to broadband from the three huge relief packages enacted during the pandemic.

    America's rural-internet policy has been an ongoing mistake, said Gigi Sohn, an official in the Obama-era FCC. "A lot of what we have is very slow," she said. The White House now says it wants "future-proof" networks "in unserved and underserved areas," so they don't have to be rebuilt again years later because they're out-of-date. 

    Exactly what those terms means for what gets built and where isn't clear, either, and many Republicans oppose putting federal funds to work in areas that do have internet even if it's slow — what's called "overbuilding." 

    WILL CONGRESS SUPPORT THIS PLAN?
    The $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan has its detractors. Some Democrats are disappointed because they wanted more. On the other hand, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky called it a "Trojan horse" for tax hikes. 

    Internet access is a bipartisan issue, but Republican leaders of the House and Senate Commerce committees called Biden's approach on broadband wasteful.

    Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington, the Republican ranking member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, said Biden's plan would "hurt private investment in our networks without actually closing the digital divide." She called for trimming regulations on building infrastructure to help prompt investment. Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi, the Republican ranking member of Senate Commerce, said the proposal "opens the door for duplication and overbuilding." 

    Congressional Democrats have recently introduced major broadband legislation of their own, including a $94 billion bill  from Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina, the House Majority Whip, who both said they approved of the White House's approach.

    WHAT DOES BIG BROADBAND SAY?
    Republicans' concerns echo those from industry. The cable lobbying group NCTA said the White House "risks taking a serious wrong turn … by suggesting that the government is better suited than private-sector technologists to build and operate the internet." The NCTA also said it was worried about price regulation. The Biden document does not mention price controls.

    Jonathan Spalter, CEO of the lobbying group USTelecom, said that prioritizing investments in government-owned broadband is "exactly the wrong approach" since taxpayers will get the bill if such networks fail. He also claimed that broadband prices are already falling. 

    The Labor Department says pricing for telephone services, which includes internet plans along with phone service, has dropped about 7% over the past decade. Internet service costs, which include things like web hosting, have risen 2%. A think tank with a lot of tech-industry funding, New America, says prices are higher in the U.S. compared with Asia and Europe.

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    Tags:broadbandinfrastructure packagePresident Joe Biden



    After Delay Over Legal Issues, Oscar-Nominated Documentary “Black Box Diaries” Finally Premieres In Japan

    Friday, December 12, 2025

    "Black Box Diaries," a documentary in which Japanese journalist Shiori Ito investigates her own sexual assault case and the barriers she faced in pursuing justice, has been screened widely abroad since its 2024 festival debut and earned an Oscar nomination early this year.

    It finally premiered in Japan on Friday, a long-delayed domestic release that began with a single-theater run.

    In Japan, sexual assault victims are often stigmatized and silenced. But the barrier to the film's release at home was largely the result of a legal dispute over her use of some interviews and footage of witnesses and involved parties without their consent.

    The 102-minute film was screened to a full house on Friday at the T. Joy Prince Shinagawa, a large cinema complex in downtown Tokyo.

    Ito expressed relief that she could finally share her story with an audience in her home country.

    "Until last night, I was afraid if the film is going to come out or not," she told The Associated Press after the screening. "The reason I made this film is because I want to talk about this issue openly in Japan. It's been like my little love letter to Japan, so I'm just so happy that this day came finally."

    Ito, who went public with what she says happened to her in 2015, has become the face of Japan's slow moving #MeToo movement. She is the first Japanese director to be nominated for an Oscar in the category of documentary feature film. The film is based on a 2017 book she wrote, "Black Box."

    What happened in 2015
    As an intern in 2015, Ito was seeking a position at private TBS Television and met one of its senior journalists, Noriyuki Yamaguchi, who became her alleged assailant. She has said in her book and film that she became dizzy... Read More

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