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    Captive Audience

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    Short description: 2013 book by Susan P. Crawford
    Captive Audience
    AuthorSusan P. Crawford
    GenreNon-fiction
    PublisherYale University Press
    Publication date
    2013
    Pages360 pp.
    ISBN978-0300153132

    Captive Audience: The Telecom Industry and Monopoly Power in the New Gilded Age[1] is an American non-fiction book by the legal expert Susan P. Crawford.[2]

    Summary

    It describes high-speed internet access in the United States as essential (like electricity) but currently too slow and too expensive. To enable widespread quality of life and to ensure national competitiveness "most Americans should have access to reasonably priced 1-Gb symmetric fiber-to-the-home networks."[2] Crawford explains why the United States should revise national policy to increase competition in a market currently dominated by Comcast, Verizon Communications, AT&T, and Time Warner Cable.[3] Meanwhile, towns and cities should consider setting up local networks after the example of pioneers such as Lafayette, Louisiana's LUSFiber and Chattanooga, Tennessee's EPB.

    See also

    • Institute for Local Self-Reliance
    • Comcast NBC merger
    • Criticism of Comcast
    • Federal Communications Commission
    • National Broadband Plan (United States)
    • Municipal broadband
    • Cities with Municipal Wireless Networks

    References

    1. JSTOR
    2. 2.0 2.1 Susan P. Crawford (2013), Captive Audience, New Haven: Yale University Press 
    3. Paul Krugman (February 16, 2014), "Barons of Broadband", New York Times, https://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/17/opinion/krugman-barons-of-broadband.html, retrieved February 17, 2014 

    Further reading



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