Telecoms push back at FCC's digital divide report

Fedscoop: The telecom industry is blasting a draft Federal Communications Commission report that highlights the millions of Americans without Internet connections that meet the agency’s speed benchmarks to count as broadband.

FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler touched off the firestorm by releasing a draft of his 2016 report, stating that 34 million lack Internet access at the minimum broadband benchmark speeds of 25 megabits per second download and 3 Mbps upload. He also pointed to a “urban-rural digital divide,” which has left 39 percent of the rural population with no means to get fixed broadband at all.

Fedscoop: The telecom industry is blasting a draft Federal Communications Commission report that highlights the millions of Americans without Internet connections that meet the agency’s speed benchmarks to count as broadband.
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler touched off the firestorm by releasing a draft of his 2016 report, stating that 34 million lack Internet access at the minimum broadband benchmark speeds of 25 megabits per second download and 3 Mbps upload. He also pointed to a “urban-rural digital divide,” which has left 39 percent of the rural population with no means to get fixed broadband at all.

 

Fedscoop: The telecom industry is blasting a draft Federal Communications Commission report that highlights the millions of Americans without Internet connections that meet the agency’s speed benchmarks to count as broadband.

FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler touched off the firestorm by releasing a draft of his 2016 report, stating that 34 million lack Internet access at the minimum broadband benchmark speeds of 25 megabits per second download and 3 Mbps upload. He also pointed to a “urban-rural digital divide,” which has left 39 percent of the rural population with no means to get fixed broadband at all.

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