A Volunteer Army Is Deploying Dirt Cheap Broadband In NYC
A few years ago during one of our Greenhouse forums, activist Terique Boyce wrote about how an all-volunteer army had been spending their days deploying free broadband to NYC residents. It's the latest example of frustrated communities building their own infrastructure after decades of being ripped off and underserved by powerful, local broadband monopolies.
NYC Mesh is a sort of guerilla activist project that installs wireless mesh networking antennas and routers on the top of buildings to deliver affordable (sometimes free) broadband."
CNET has done a good profile piece on the project, which charges users a $50 fee for the installation and a pay-what-you-can monthly donation to keep the network operating. DIY'ers can install the service for free. Subscribers are encouraged to share their connections with other locals. The organization says it never disconnects users for non-payment.
These aren't the kind of next-gen fiber connections you want to run a business off of, but they do provide essential access to marginalized neighborhoods that can't afford broadband from their regional monopoly (in NYC that's usually Charter/Spectrum or Verizon):
NYC Mesh is not an internet service provider, but a grassroots, volunteer-run community network. Its aim is to create an affordable, open and reliable network that's accessible to all New Yorkers for both daily and emergency internet use. Santana says the group's members want to help people determine their own digital future and bring back the internet to what it used to be."
Around a thousand U.S. communities have built some flavor of community-owned and operated broadband network, whether it's something like NYC Mesh, fiber deployed by the city-owned utility, a local cooperative, or a direct municipal broadband build. As always, these communities wouldn't be deploying their own networks if not for market failure at the hands of regional monopolies.
ISPs are always trying to maximize profits. We are just trying to connect our members for the lowest cost possible," says Brian Hall, one of the lead volunteers and founders of NYC Mesh.
Federal policymakers talk a lot about the digital divide," yet routinely fail to address the core reason for it: we turned broadband into a luxury good dominated by a handful of extremely political powerful regional monopolies, hellbent on nickel-and-diming customers trapped by a lack of competition. We didn't block mergers, we didn't hold them accountable, and we somehow act surprised at the result.
Instead of directly tackling monopoly power (in fact the folks at the FCC under both parties routinely can't even admit there's a problem in public facing statements), we enjoy throwing billions in taxpayer subsidies at said monopolies in the hopes that this time, our bad luck" will finally change.
Meanwhile, a growing list of communities countrywide have grown tired of waiting for competent federal broadband policy, and continue to take matters into their own hands. Often with zero messaging or policy support from federal regulators purportedly dedicated to bridging the digital divide."