Although not technically private, this is where we see ourselves getting to if a good competitive environment fosters from the construction of the infrastructure. Again, we can't abandon our citizens to a one provider monopoly, but if a true competitive environment arose we would be quite content to sell last mile at a set price to anyone that wanted to provide services across that last mile and use those funds to maintain and upgrade said infrastructure as required going forward.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Owen DeLong" <o...@delong.com> To: "Jason Baugher" <ja...@thebaughers.com> Cc: "NANOG" <nanog@nanog.org> Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2013 3:49:38 PM Subject: Re: Muni network ownership and the Fourth On Jan 30, 2013, at 6:33 AM, Jason Baugher <ja...@thebaughers.com> wrote: > There is much talk of how many fibers can fit in a duct, can be brought > into a colo space, etc... I haven't seen much mention of how much space the > termination in the colo would take, such as splice trays, bulkheads, etc... > Someone earlier mentioned being able to have millions of fibers coming > through a vault, which is true assuming they are just passing through the > vault. When you need to break into one of those 864-fiber cables, the room > for splice cases suddenly becomes a problem. > > The other thing I find interesting about this entire thread is the > assumption by most that a government entity would do a good job as a > layer-1 or -2 provider and would be more efficient than a private company. > Governments, including municipalities, are notorious for corruption, fraud, > waste - you name it. Even when government bids out projects to the private > sector these problems are seen. I now this is a popular refrain, but in reality, it's not all that accurate. I have no problem with allowing L1/L2 to be done by private enterprise, so long as said private enterprises are required to abide by the following rules: 1. They are not allowed to sell L3+ services. 2. They are not allowed to own any portion of any L3+ service provider. 3. They must sell their L1/L2 services to any L3+ service provider on equal terms. Owen