A Tale of Two Cities
August 29th, 2007 by caaronIt was the best of times, it was the worst of times.
And when it comes to broadband, Tokyo is a long way from Little Rock.
The Japanese enjoy broadband speeds that are up to 30 times faster than what’s available here at a far lower cost. This faster, cheaper, universal broadband access – according to an excellent article in today’s Washington Post – “is pushing open doors to Internet innovation that are likely to remain closed for years to come in much of the United States.”
To the Japanese, our “high-speed” Internet service doesn’t look much different from dial-up:
The speed advantage allows the Japanese to watch broadcast-quality, full-screen television over the Internet, an experience that mocks the grainy, wallet-size images Americans endure.
Ultra-high-speed applications are being rolled out for low-cost, high-definition teleconferencing, for telemedicine — which allows urban doctors to diagnose diseases from a distance — and for advanced telecommuting to help Japan meet its goal of doubling the number of people who work from home by 2010.
Open Secrets
What’s the secret of Japan’s success? Open access.
Less than a decade ago, DSL service in Japan was slower and pricier than in the United States. So the Japanese government mandated open access policies that forced the telephone monopoly to share its wires at wholesale rates with new competitors. The result: a broadband explosion.
Not only did DSL get faster and cheaper in Japan, but the new competition actually forced the creaky old phone monopoly to innovate. As the Post explains:
Competition in Japan gave a kick in the pants to Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp. (NTT), once a government-controlled enterprise and still Japan’s largest phone company. With the help of government subsidies and tax breaks, NTT launched a nationwide build-out of fiber-optic lines to homes, making the lower-capacity copper wires obsolete.
“Obviously, without the competition, we would not have done all this at this pace,” said Hideki Ohmichi, NTT’s senior manager for public relations.
Made in America
If this quaint idea of “competition” seems familiar, that’s because America invented “open access” policies in the first place. And open access worked for decades to bring lower prices and more choices in long-distance phone service and dial-up Internet access.
The Japanese first adopted open access because they were worried about falling behind us. But under pressure from our own phone and cable monopolists, the Bush administration abandoned open access – and the fundamental protections for Net Neutrality along with it.
Now they’re standing idly by as America drops further and further behind the rest of the world in every measure of broadband progress.
But instead of recognizing their mounting failures and charting a new course (or really, just getting back on the old one), our policymakers prefer to shoot the messenger.
Left Behind
Which bring us to Little Rock.
On Tuesday, Arkansas Sen. Mark Pryor hosted a public hearing on high-speed Internet access. Rural groups, educators and librarians turned out to decry the lack of broadband service and high-tech opportunities in their communities.
“We have not successfully transitioned into the information age, and I would contend a lot of that is because we’re not delivering broadband to our people,” testified Rex Nelson of the Delta Regional Authority, according to a story in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. “Having access to broadband in even the most rural areas of our country is as important as getting that electricity to them and air conditioning to them back in the 1940s and the 1950s.”
Also on hand were FCC Commissioners Michael Copps and Jonathan Adelstein — two notable exceptions to the usual inside-the-Beltway blindness on broadband issues. They bemoaned America’s digital decline.
“While some have protested the international broadband penetration rankings,” Adelstein said, alluding to some of his colleagues at the Commission, “the fact is the U.S. has dropped year-after-year. This downward trend and the lack of broadband value illustrate the sobering point that when it comes to giving our citizens affordable access to state-of the-art communications, the U.S. has fallen behind its global competitors.”
Copps called the lack of a national broadband policy “tantamount to playing Russian roulette with our future.”
“Each and every citizen of this great country should have access to the wonders of communications,” Copps said. “I’m not talking about doing all these people some kind of feel-good, do-gooder favor by including them. I’m talking about doing America a favor. I’m talking about making certain our citizens can compete here at home and around the world with those who are already using broadband in all aspects of their lives.”
Bringing the benefits of broadband to all Americans would seem like a no-brainer for any politician. But if the reaction thus far from the White House and the majority at the FCC is any indication, you’d think Copps and Adelstein were speaking in Japanese.




August 29th, 2007 at 10:20 pm
[…] actually forced the creaky old phone monopoly to innovate. As the Post explains: —> http://www.savetheinternet.com/blog/2007/08/29/a-tale-of-two-cities/ […]
August 30th, 2007 at 4:27 pm
[…] reference to [and a hat tip to Save The Internet] a Washington Post article by Blaine Harden “Japan’s Warp-Speed Ride To Internet […]
August 31st, 2007 at 10:19 am
[…] A world with cheap, high-speed broadband that’s sparking all kinds of innovation…. but you’ll have to go to Japan first. […]
August 31st, 2007 at 5:38 pm
I don’t know where people get their information about computer use and the Internet(s) in Japan. While the Japanese may have a few gadgets and uses that we don’t here in the U.S., Japan is not nearly as connected as the U.S., PC and laptop use for work is still lower than it is here, and my guess is that a lot of bandwidth is being eaten up by cell phone text messaging and e-mail, which is probably worse there than here. I mean do we really need to watch movies on a PC or laptop? Isn’t that the same kind of thing we grouse about on airplanes
Unless a child has a computer at home, they won’t be using one much as most school age kids in the U.S. as they are still rare in elementary and secondary schools, and not much more common at the university level.
Thousands of small and medium sized companies still aren’t all that computerized, and rural and even suburban access to the web, particularly broadband, is spotty at best (DSL is still the most common “high speed” access). The Westin Hotel in Nagoya, for example, still has dial-up in its “business center.” Wi-Fi is unheard of outside of the major urban areas, yet I can connect this way in my suburban Seattle neighborhood.
This isn’t to say that we’re getting screwed here in the U.S. But people have been singing the praises of Japanese connectivity for ten years now, and it’s just so overblown.
August 31st, 2007 at 6:37 pm
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September 6th, 2007 at 9:32 pm
I was reading Bruce Kushnick’s latest post and found out about the FCC’s Latest Coverup. Seems to be par for the course for this bunch.
September 6th, 2007 at 10:31 pm
[…] that your internet connection would be paid for twice. This doesn’t take into account that broadband connections in the USA cost more than they do in other countries considering what we get for […]
September 6th, 2007 at 11:53 pm
[…] Original post by Justice Department opposed to Net Neutrality at RunawayJim.org […]
November 13th, 2007 at 8:00 pm
[…] folks at the Save the Internet blog explained why, noting that “less than a decade ago, DSL service in Japan was slower and pricier than in the […]