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Verizon Businesses Networking The Internet

Verizon About To End Construction of Its Fiber Network 201

WheezyJoe writes: If you've been holding out hope that FiOS would rescue you from your local cable monopoly, it's probably time to give up. Making good on their statements five years ago, Verizon announced this week it is nearing "the end" of its fiber construction and is reducing wireline capital expenditures while spending more on wireless.

The expense of replacing old copper lines with fiber has allegedly led Verizon to stop building in new regions and to complete wiring up the areas where it had already begun. The fiber network was profitable, but nowhere near as profitable as their wireless network. So, if Verizon hasn't started in your neighborhood by now, they never will, and you'd best ignore all those ads for FiOS.
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Verizon About To End Construction of Its Fiber Network

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 23, 2015 @05:31PM (#48888339)

    The free market strikes again!

    • by ogdenk ( 712300 ) on Friday January 23, 2015 @05:34PM (#48888381)

      Yup, FiOS isn't as profitable because users won't tolerate overage charges or massive throttling on wired connections but they'll bend over when it comes to wireless. Even though their wireless connections are NOWHERE near as good as wired connections.

      Yet in even some of the poorest countries you can get 20Mbit connections with no cap for less money than you pay in the US.

      • by jandrese ( 485 ) <kensama@vt.edu> on Friday January 23, 2015 @05:37PM (#48888423) Homepage Journal
        That is in fact exactly what the article says. While the profit margin on FiOS is apparently 4.4%, the wireless side had a 23.5% profit margin. While those numbers are heavily encrusted with bullshit, they do show the relative value of the technologies to Verizon.
        • by dj245 ( 732906 ) on Friday January 23, 2015 @05:56PM (#48888621) Homepage

          That is in fact exactly what the article says. While the profit margin on FiOS is apparently 4.4%, the wireless side had a 23.5% profit margin. While those numbers are heavily encrusted with bullshit, they do show the relative value of the technologies to Verizon.

          This will bite them in the ass eventually, if not sooner. Verizon refuses to be price and feature [theverge.com] compeditive on wireless. They are coming under pressure [bloomberg.com] from increased wireless competition. The duopoly between Verizon and AT&T isn't such a duopoly anymore- there are lots of wireless players.

          I have heard very few complaints from people about the fiber service aside from "it isn't available in my area". It is a lot easier to maintain a monopoly on fiber lines compared to wireless.

          • by Archangel Michael ( 180766 ) on Friday January 23, 2015 @06:53PM (#48889129) Journal

            There is VZ and ATT, and then there is Sprint and T-Mo.

            I've had all four in my area, and VZ by far has the best coverage. It isn't even close. I curently have T-Mo and the speed is much better, but coverage much worse than ATT and VZ. I'll give up a bit of coverage for better speeds.

            As for Fiber vs Cable vs Wireless, Fiber will win on raw speed every time. The issue is the cost for last mile, and always will be. Which is why I recommend that Municipalities start looking at building out their own infrastructure and offering CONTENT/INTERNET providers the opportunity to compete for the last mile customers.

            Right now, there is no competition, only franchise agreements that limit competition.

            • Right now, there is no competition, only franchise agreements that limit competition.

              It's not the few percent franchise fee that limits competition, it's the knowledge that a second franchisee for the same function would be splitting the available market and nobody would make a profit without raising prices -- and reducing the overall market.

              While there may be a few people in an area who would actually start buying services from the new competitor because they aren't the existing company, they aren't enough to cover the fixed costs of running a second cable company in that area. If one ca

              • That is the lamest excuse I have ever heard. I guess Adam Smith was wrong, competition is not good.

                • I guess Adam Smith was wrong, competition is not good.

                  Competition is great. For the customer. For awhile. Not so good for the businesses that are competing. Perhaps you've heard of the term "dumping"? That's when a "competitor" can afford to sell below cost just to drive his competition out of business. Great for the customer, until the competition goes away and prices go back up.

                  We used to have a great small local magazine shop in this town. Borders moved in. They had books and magazines and a coffee shop and ... all in one place. The local shop was driven

                  • Competition is great. For the customer. For awhile. Not so good for the businesses that are competing. Perhaps you've heard of the term "dumping"? That's when a "competitor" can afford to sell below cost just to drive his competition out of business. Great for the customer, until the competition goes away and prices go back up.

                    We used to have a great small local magazine shop in this town. Borders moved in. They had books and magazines and a coffee shop and ... all in one place. The local shop was drive

                  • We used to have a great small local magazine shop in this town. Borders moved in. They had books and magazines and a coffee shop and ... all in one place. The local shop was driven out of business. Bad for them. Then Borders lost the competition with B&N (and Amazon) and they have now gone away. It's an hour drive to the closest full-service shop. This competition turned out just great for the local shop, Borders, and the customers in this town, didn't it?

                    (Shrug) The same thing would have happened to t

          • by jandrese ( 485 )
            FiOS is expensive, but then so is cable and at least you get what you pay for with FiOS. If Google fiber or Muni Fiber came to my area I would almost certainly switch, but as it is I feel lucky to at least get good service if I'm going to be paying out the ass.
      • by mc6809e ( 214243 )

        Yet in even some of the poorest countries you can get 20Mbit connections with no cap for less money than you pay in the US.

        Citation, please, because Akamai's [akamai.com] State of the Internet mostly disagrees with you. [akamai.com]

        • by Shinobi ( 19308 )

          Not that Akamai's State of the Internet is worth a damn anyway, with the throttled shit we have to deal with in the nordic countries. Seriously, Akamai is crap here. Steam, Limelight Networks etc etc, I can max out my 100/100 connection. If it's Akamai, it slows down to like 20Mbit/s.

      • by Austerity Empowers ( 669817 ) on Friday January 23, 2015 @06:30PM (#48888951)

        No you misread. FiOS isn't AS profitable, it's profitable. Someone without a conflict of interest, willing to compete with wireless, could set up a business and make money, give good service, employ people and return value to an investor. Verizon won't, they see it as a cannibalizing their wireless market.

        This is an example of all that is wrong with telecom.

        • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
          Which is funny, because Verizon's own CEO said that FiOS increased revenue as people were more likely to purchase more services with FiOS, plus support costs are cheaper, plus lower long-term upgrade costs.
        • by wbr1 ( 2538558 )
          Someone could. Someone could get past the legal and financial barriers. Secure capital to build an infrastructure, and keep their investors from bailing when the incumbents apply legal and other challenges.
    • Why lay fiber at all when you can gouge wireless?

      Why do it? Because they received fucking Federal tax money to do it, that's why.

      But instead, they illegally plowed their Federal money into wireless infrastructure.

      This has been an issue for a long time now. Consult EFF about it.

    • by arth1 ( 260657 )

      The free market strikes again!

      Let's not forget the billions in tax breaks and incentives that the telcos got in return for a promise to make sure everyone got broadband, no matter where they lived.

      But will they be punished? Well, look at campaign contributions and make up your own mind.

    • by brxndxn ( 461473 )
      There is no free market when Verizon is granted an anti-competitive monopoly on property-owners' easements and given tax breaks for infrastructure that equal more than Verizon pays for infrastructure. Verizon needs to be held accountable for their failure to live up to taxpayer promises. They are hardly a private company.
    • The free market strikes again!

      What free market? By local government decree, Verizon is the only company allowed to offer POTS (plain old telephone service) in the areas it covers. If the local governments would embrace the free market and allow anyone with a credible proposal and business plan to lay down fiber in public easements and offer service (instead of just the anointed monopoly phone, cable, and electric company), Verizon's incentive to not upgrade its copper wires to fiber would evaporate overn

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 23, 2015 @05:45PM (#48888503)

    They're going to say they've stopped, wait for local municipalities to take care of it themselves, then pop back up and say, "Actually, we want to provide service in this area anyway - you need to give up your infrastructure to us cause FREE MARKET!"

  • by FellowConspirator ( 882908 ) on Friday January 23, 2015 @05:51PM (#48888567)

    We paid for the fiber with surcharges in our phone bills in the 80's through the 00's -- we just never got the fiber, and the companies pocketed the cash. Money's good, if you can get it.

    • by Kohath ( 38547 )

      Let's get the government to rescue us from the bad deal the government made. We can trust the government to help us to when dealing with Verizon, can't we [opensecrets.org]?

      • No... (Score:4, Insightful)

        by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday January 23, 2015 @08:00PM (#48889667)
        lets get the Gov't to enforce the law. It's our Government. I never said we trusted it. I don't trust fire, but I use it to cook my food.
        • by silfen ( 3720385 )

          lets get the Gov't to enforce the law. It's our Government.

          The government is enforcing the law, otherwise there would be lawsuits. What you simply don't want to face is that laws that were written under the pretense of giving you free stuff, and that dopes like you supported because you wanted free stuff, in reality ended up really giving free money to Verizon.

          That is the predictable outcome every time a politician promises to give you better infrastructure, lower cost service, etc.: you end up overpaying s

  • by Slashdot Parent ( 995749 ) on Friday January 23, 2015 @05:52PM (#48888569)

    I tried out Fios for a while, but I have to say, I wasn't that impressed. The service went out from time to time, and YouTube and Netflix wouldn't play worth a damn. Also, they really trick you with their advertisements of low prices. Sure, the prices look good, but then you can't use your own hardware and you have to rent their proprietary hardware, which adds considerably to your service cost. And then you find out that those good prices were only intro prices and then they jack up your rates sky high.

    I cancelled Verizon and went with the local cable company, if that tells you anything about Fios!

    • by YrWrstNtmr ( 564987 ) on Friday January 23, 2015 @06:00PM (#48888659)
      My FiOS experience has been exactly the opposite. 3 installs between 2 houses. Starting with 15/5, then 25/10, 25/25, and now 50/50...absolutely rock solid. Currently, on the advertised 50/50, I'm seeing 56/67.

      "rent their hardware"? No...the router was included. Not a great router, but there was no extra line item on the bill for 'rental'.
      • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
        You're getting 56/67 on your 50/50 because FiOS TV services share bandwidth with your Internet. For whatever reason, FiOS can't break these services over separate VLANs or can't keep bandwidth separate between VLANS, whatever they're doing. You can even find people, as of 2015, having issues when hammering their Internet, their DVR or TV functions start having pixelation issues. My ISP gives me 50/50, and I get exactly 50/50, well, something like 49.8 in practice. IPTV comes over a separate VLAN, which has
    • These issues have been corrected as far as I can tell. VZ was pressuring Netflix, which has been corrected by Netflix buying a VZ connection. This should be corrected by legislation, but it seems no one in the FCC actually has the balls. I am not sure what was wrong with YouTube, but that also has been corrected.

    • How long ago were you using FiOS? I wonder if they were using the Freescale MSC7120 chip for the residential side, or if they still are in many places. I had the "privilege" of working on that chip, and it was a complete disaster. Most of the code written to support that chip at the driver level was there for the sole purpose of detecting when a hardware bug locked the chip up, and resetting it. A book could be written about what a management fuck-up the creation of that chip was.

      I lived for a couple ye

      • by Shados ( 741919 )

        For a while (2-3 years ago) most (not all!) of FiOS customers, especially on the east coast, had terrible (TERRIBLE) experience on most popular streaming services. Worse than Comcast + Netflix. As in Youtube would barely play 360p videos.

        You could see it on that youtube statistic pages that showed the average streaming speed per ISP. FiOS was abysmal.

        From what I understand, its been fixed by now, but it it was so bad I had to switch back to Comcast when I realize everyone with FiOS in my region had that iss

        • Hmm, it'd be interesting to see what the problem was. Was it the horrible MSC7120 chip in the ONU, or something on the OLT side? Did they go around and replace a lot of ONUs (the boxes on the residential side) at some point?

    • by Raxxon ( 6291 )

      I can't back that.

      3 moves. 3 installs. 3rd install was to a house that already had FIOS (moved in with a friend, he's already got FIOS, I wanted my own link) and never had an issue. I use my own router (Routerboard running Mikrotik) and don't have any issues. Speed has actually been slightly better than what they're claiming to provide (when they "matched upload to download" I tested out having more UP than DOWN) and with the exception of their hardware upgrades for their "Quantum" speeds, no noted outages.

  • I feel sorry for all of you south of the border. Verizon was, without exception, the worst telco I ever dealt with as far as internet goes. When Canada was rolling out DSL and cable like crazy, Verizon in Delaware was offering up 28.8 dial-up. No options. No choices. That's all you could get. You couldn't even use a 56K modem because they used the high compression voice codecs on their lines, and you couldn't get a data line. You couldn't even get ISDN if you were willing to pay for it. :(

    • by jbolden ( 176878 )

      Deleware is depends a great deal where exactly and when exactly. I wouldn't judge the USA telco by Delaware it is an exception in many ways because of its proximity to major cities, government cheapness and the rural aspects.

    • by dryeo ( 100693 )

      Are you sure it was high compression voice codecs? In my experience you can't get any connection over high compression. What does limit your speed to 28.8 is multiplexing more channels over the limited number of wires. I know as I'm in Canada, perhaps 60 km out of Vancouver and if I'm lucky i can connect at 28.8 with no other choices and it costs $40 + $40 for a phone line.

  • by See Attached ( 1269764 ) on Friday January 23, 2015 @06:07PM (#48888737)
    Verizon is off the hook? Who is going to answer for that? Well rip me off! http://www.huffingtonpost.com/... [huffingtonpost.com] Verizon has been getting breaks since this was first signed in early nineties. HP advises 4,000 -> 5,000 (excess charges and tax breaks) per houshold paid to Vz? This rolls up to the Board of public Utilities for letting them off the hook. Time for a BridgeGate scandal check here. We have a very anti-competitive environment, where each carrier must have a handshake-certified regional monopoly in many towns. Comcast, Optimum, and Verizon seem to have cut the state into mico-monopolies, while the rest of the world is passing us by. Are our taxes too low? Nope!
  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Friday January 23, 2015 @06:11PM (#48888787) Journal
    Not only they won't build it, they will not let you municipality build it either.

    Long back Google had a April Fool posting about toilet net. That idea is fundamentally sound. The municipality can run fiber optic cables in storm water drains. It won't cost as much as it is costing Verizon to dig up and bury the cable. But you won't get it. They have the state law makers in their pockets.

  • There's technically FiOS in my city already, but that doesn't mean I've actually been able to get it either in my current building or the building I lived in before that, nor do I know anyone who has it, so it was already clear they didn't give one crap about doing anything with FiOS other than advertising the crap out of it. Which I seriously don't get - where's the profit in spending a jillion dollars on something that everyone would be happy to pay you for, but you aren't letting them?

    I mean, yes, Verizo

  • I'm guessing they know something about the new net neutrality rules being drafted and that wireless is either being excluded or will have loopholes. Especially given that the head of the FCC used to be a lobbyist for them.

  • ... I have a prepaid unlimited plan that I pay about 25 dollars a month for which is about half what most people seem to be paying.

    I've seen that you can pay as little as 80 dollars a year for 2000 minutes. Many people don't spend a lot of time on the cell phone and 2000 minutes for a whole year is lots.

    If you talk even less then that, tmobile has a plan for 3 dollars a month but you only get 30 minutes a month.

    Personally, this is where the whole thing needs to go. Bill me for what I use.

    Unlimited plans are

    • Unlimited plans are for the psychological benefits of not having to pay attention to use. Personally I'm pay-as-you-go because I can only afford a few dollars a month, but that makes it a lot more stressful for me when someone keeps wrong-number-texting me and won't believe it costing me 10 cents a text, or when I have to decide whether it's worth starting a conversation that could cost a bit. People will pay extra to not have to worry, and that's legitimate and understandable.

      • I don't even think so. If you're on a really tight budget then you are going to run a very lean plan. But even a plan with thousands of minutes a month are less then these unlimited plans. And sure, some people talk on them a lot but others just don't.

        I spend very little time on the telephone. My conversations are typically over in about 30 seconds. Not because I'm rushing things but because the message was communicated. And who even needs that when text messages are frequently better anyway?

        The real killer

  • Then you can stop overcharging for STBs and allow us to purchase them outright then!

  • since they'll be removing the $5/mo surcharges for building out FiOS right?
  • i have fios. it is coax cable on the street. then on the post near my house it is split into fiber. the fiber goes to my place into a very big box, with two Verizon emblazoned power supplies! and become cable again to a cable modem...

    the only explanation i have for this insanity is that if they advertised it as cable, i, who only pay for internet, would be allowed by law to have access to basic cable channels unencrypted. so they do this turnduckey of cables just to avoid it, and force me to pay $20/mo for

    • by Shados ( 741919 )

      Its not "cable in your house to a cable modem". Its using MoCA, and the router is a moca -> ethernet bridge (my terminology is probably off). Sure, its just semantic, but its just the easiest way for most people to have effectively an ethernet wired house, since its pretty damn unlikely you have fibers running in your walls. Since you don't share that coax with your neighbors, its fast enough.

      And as someone else pointed out, whats telling you its coax cable on the street? You opened one up, removed its c

  • Why roll out fiber to the curb when 5G will deal with high speed internet.

  • Open up those unserved (or even served) areas to municipal fiber, google fiber, Comcrap, AT&T, or Bob's Bait Shop and Networking.

  • I live in a rental apartment in a small town in Sweden. The building owner installed fiber to every apartment and I now have a choice of 8 ISPs. I can get 1 Gbps symmetrical for $80 a month. I currently pay $28 a month for 100/10 Mbps. This is the basically the norm here in Sweden, unless you live in rural areas. But even single-family homes miles from the nearest neighbour sometimes get fiber, because electrical utilities pull fiber when replacing old electrical grids. And then you have a choice which ISP

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