States will receive at least $100 million

  • dipbeneaththelasers@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Jesus christ that is bleak. Any idea what the public reasoning was for allowing Century to block your local utility, or if they even fucking attempted a public reason?

    • Flaky_Fish69@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Most city councils and state legislators are more or less owned by ISPs. there probably wasn’t ever really a public reason given- just a lobby group saying 'you should vote this way, now enjoy your dinner.", and there was never any public comment because, who the hell has time to watch what their legislators are actually doing?

    • WHARRGARBL@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I’m pretty sure no reason was made public - I’ve never found any information in archives. I was stonewalled by the public utilities company for almost a year before they finally admitted, privately, that I’d never be connected due to the Century Link stranglehold. I did find an article from 2019 detailing the inadequate infrastructure that CL was refusing to upgrade, so maybe they can’t handle the load and won’t invest in a captive area? It’d probably mess up someone’s bonus.

      • Montagge@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I had something similar with CenturyLink. They were the only provider where I lived at the time, and they charged $60/month for 500kbps down. When Comcast started to run cable up my road CenturyLink went bonkers and sued until Comcast just stopped.

        Now I pay Ziply $35/months for 8Mbps down, and while that’s still sad it feels lightning fast after CenturyLink.