Why Switzerland has 25 Gbit internet and America doesn't

(sschueller.github.io)

458 points | by sschueller 14 hours ago

78 comments

  • ttul 14 hours ago
    In my small island community, I participated in a municipal committee whose mandate was to bring proper broadband to the island. Although two telecom duopolies already served the community, one of them had undersea fiber but zero fiber to the home (DSL remains the only option), whereas the other used a 670 Mbps wireless microwave link for backhaul and delivery via coaxial cable. And pricing? Insanely expensive for either terrible option.

    Our little committee investigated all manner of options, including bringing municipal fiber across alongside a new undersea electricity cable that the power company was installing anyway. I spoke to the manager of that project and he said there was no real barrier to adding a few strands of fiber, since the undersea high voltage line already had space for it (for the power company’s own signaling).

    Sadly, the municipality didn’t have any capital to invest a penny into that fiber, so one day, one of the municipal counselors just called up a friend who worked for a fiber laying company and asked them for a favor: put out a press release saying that they were “investigating” laying an undersea fiber to power a municipal fiber network on the little island.

    A few weeks later, the cable monopoly engaged a cable ship and began laying their own fiber. Competition works, folks. Even if you have to fake it.

    • toofy 6 hours ago
      this is a great example of where the government should step in and say “welp, you took too long, we’re now funding municiple fiber and we’ll give it to everyone cheap. sorry.”

      i truly do believe competition can often drivr things forward but we have countless examples where executives get comfortable and decide their best course of action for profits is to do little to nothing.

      if a community has been screaming for fiber internet for years and the service companies cry “oh it’s just too expensive” when we know that isn’t true, then the people who pay the taxes should say “ok, apparently you’re not up to the job, you and/or your business model is clearly a failure, we’ll do it and provide it cheaper than you would have anyway.”

      maybe this would force the competition we know can often work. if they can’t figure out a way to do it without subsidies, then we’ll do it ourselves. you can call it “spooky government” all you want, but that’s just another term for “us”

      something to the effect of: ok, this thing has become integral to society. ceos, you have 5 years to compete and prove that you’re up to the task by delivering A, B, and C for $N. can’t do it? not up to it? no worries, thanks for trying.

      • fragmede 1 hour ago
        That's nice in theory, but look at how much money has gone to Verizon in the name of rural broadband, and how much they (haven't) delivered. And the consequences.
        • deaux 5 minutes ago
          What does giving money to Verizon have to do with municipal (i.e. operated by the municipality) broadband?
      • zeroCalories 1 hour ago
        If it was easy to do with a lot of margin it would have been done by someone else in the private sector. In fact, they tricked these companies into making investments that weren't worthwhile for them. Sounds like the kind of people the deserve the shitty internet they have.
        • delusional 29 minutes ago
          This is a fundamental problem of value creation and value extraction. Just because the ISP's can't extract the value of adding the additional fiber capacity doesn't mean it doesn't confer that value to the customers. We live in an age of value extraction, what's colloquially known as "enshittification", that can't go on forever. Somebody has to create the value that is being extracted.

          It's the old Marx quote: "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need".

      • miki123211 1 hour ago
        If people truly want something and it can be done profitably, just start a company and do it yourselves.

        If you need subsidies, that means the people who don't want that think are paying for it, just so people who do want it can have it cheaper.

        With subsidies, the cost is still there, it's just hidden in some tax or other.

        • sirtaj 1 hour ago
          This line of thinking comes up so often, but ignores second order effects. I don't need schools because I have no children, but I will certainly depend on well educated children entering the workforce.

          Or, more facetiously, I don't need a subsidised fire service because no building I visit is currently on fire.

          • vasco 1 hour ago
            Yes but you cannot make up more than about 10-15 examples everyone will agree with, seeing as those are subsidized in practically every country on earth, and then apply the thinking the guy above you gives for everything else.

            In my opinion internet access is as fundamental a right now as water access so I think it should be subsidized to a fair degree.

            But not for example if it is to supply only a small island of rich people just because they happen to want to live there and force the rest of the state to supply them. There's nuance to these things and we can't just outright subsidized everything and we can't market economy everything either

            • sirtaj 1 hour ago
              I agree with you. The internet is now important enough that it's required for almost everything past basic sustenance. Governments worldwide are moving services to the internet, so it's not even optional any more.
    • laurencerowe 1 hour ago
      I wish there was a way to achieve that same outcome in my internet backwater of San Francisco.

      Nearby blocks have symmetrical GB fibre from Sonic but we only have shity 30MB up from Comcast.

      • direwolf20 1 hour ago
        Sounds like you do know a way: Buy a spool of fiber and lay one from your house to the nearby block. Make it public knowledge that you're doing this and sharing internet with your neighbours (even if you're not). The incumbent will quickly upgrade your area.
      • fragmede 1 hour ago
        What speed can you get from Monkeybrains?
    • Hikikomori 10 hours ago
      Local municipality power companies put fiber in the ground whenever they put power. The result is fiber almost everywhere at very low cost. Even along rail and major roads.
    • zx8080 7 hours ago
      Either side of the spectre lies enshittification:

      - more competition comes with margin squeezing and cheapest source for service or goods

      - less competition brings the monopoly, the dream of any capitalist (owner, not user).

      Either way comes enshittification, and there's no middle balance, it drifts towards one of the sides always.

      • lava_pidgeon 47 minutes ago
        This German supermarket system has strong compettion , low margins but it is cheap and reliably good quality what most German wish.

        So I disagree.

      • WalterBright 6 hours ago
        During the Soviet Union years, tourists to it knew that the thing to do was pack blue jeans in their luggage, which were highly desirable under communism. Wearing blue jeans in the USSR was a mark of status.
      • jimbooonooo 7 hours ago
        we still had luxury goods without monopolies, so I think I'll take more competition please.
    • joe_the_user 12 hours ago
      It seems incorrect to call this competition.

      I'm glad you got your broadband but what happened sounds much more like American politics than ordinary market processes. And in this political environment, corporations can engage in a variety of other tactics than placating a squeaky wheel - they can outlaw competition, buy off officials, pay for shrill media hit pieces and so-forth.

      • HauntingPin 10 hours ago
        It's clearly competition. The incumbent company saw a potential competitor and acted upon it. That's literally what happens when there's competition. It doesn't matter that the competitor didn't actually exist if the incumbent behaved as if it did exist.

        I'm never sure what the point of comments like this is. "It seems incorrect". But it isn't. You just don't want to admit that competition is good and necessary.

        • joe_the_user 9 hours ago
          OK, I should have said "economic competition" though I imagined that it was implied.

          If you just say "competition", you can point at the efforts of ten people to gain a seat on the politbureau as a clear case of this.

        • postsantum 9 hours ago
          No, it's called market manipulation. OP's action caused spending at the expense of the companies. Not going to "won't someone think of the shareholders", but calling competition is misleading
    • bestouff 13 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • HauntingPin 10 hours ago
        [flagged]
        • bigbadfeline 8 hours ago
          > What exactly did they prove?

          They proved that the Free Market doesn't automatically provide functional competition, if you think about it, the Western-style free market is very keen on creating and maintaining monopolies, even cheating isn't going to help you here.

          > The company laid down fibre because of what they saw as a potential competitor (municipal fibre).

          The OP is about free market failures, not about competition. As another example, many people have pointed out that there is much more competition in China than in the US. Hope, this is enough for you to understand the difference.

          • eru 6 hours ago
            Free markets don't automatically do anything. There's nothing automatic. It's about giving individual people the opportunity to take action.
            • wahnfrieden 3 hours ago
              Free markets tend toward monopoly which restricts individual people’s opportunities for action. In this example, there was a cable monopoly mentioned. The only way to coerce it (not even to defeat it in some way) was through baseless deception, not free market competitive action. The monopoly remained.
              • otherme123 2 hours ago
                > Free markets tend toward monopoly

                Not true and oversimplification. Some markets tend toward monopolies, but you rarely will get one unless enforced/protected by a state. If you navigate through history, you will find almost exclusively monopolies on salt extraction, coal mining oligopolies (with the help of worker unions), silk... Curiously, the Standard Oil was accused of being a monopoly, and the proof was they were offering lower prices than anyone thanks to their scale, destroying the competence. The reward for offering low prices was disolving the company (notice that they never reached the hypothetical price hike stage).

                It is also common practice for the state to declare something "public utility" or "natural monopoly", on things like snail mail distribution, telephone or TV, that were clearly not a natural monopoly and could be offered by free market. Here fall a lot of ISPs, that get a "public utility" status and only then can abuse that monopolistic position with the help of the state.

                A lot of free market sectors tend to atomization: think hair or nail saloons, masonry, plumbers, carpenters... if you know someone in the sector, it seems that as soon as they get a size over 5 or 6 people, two of them always decide to split and go by themselves.

                • miki123211 1 hour ago
                  You're right on most of these, but wrong on telephony. That actually was a natural monopoly.

                  It's exactly how OP describes it. It's unproductive for multiple companies to maintain disconnected, parallel telephone infrastructures. The most productive use of resources is to lay more wires to more houses, not to lay more wires to places which have already been wired up for telephone service by somebody else. That creates a monopoly, and the government should step in.

                  With modern tech, you can mandate local-loop unbundling and fix some of this, but that wasn't possible with 1970s (and earlier) phone infrastructure.

                  • otherme123 2 minutes ago
                    We use "natural monopoly" too freely and too quickly, almost as a free card to actually implement monopolies that last for decades. Anecdo-time: in my small city there is a small "natural" monopoly in public bus service: the municipality offers a monopoly on which buses can operate in the city, that lasts for 25 years or so. I lived through a renewal that was a bit rocky, the bus company went on a strike, and as a result there was a vacuum of monopoly for six months. That resulted in a flood of other companies, big and tiny (as in 1 bus only, serving 1 very demanded route), doing the routes. They were as cheap as it gets, offering month cards outrageously cheaper than previous public-natural-monopoly. It was so cheap, and the offer was so high that cars seemed to vanish from the city center, that was so full of buses that you didn't even check the timetable: you just waited for the next for 5 minutes.

                    Eventually the municipality renewed the previous contract with the same previous company, a contract that forbids other companies from entering the city center, and we went back to the worse service we were used to. Of course they were a lot of narratives: they were trying to capture the market, drive competence away and then hike the prices; they were bounded to bankrupcy at such prices; that many buses were damaging the roads, and others. But the reality was that for a brief time we had the best bus service in the modern world.

                    As for telephone wires, we went through some years, between copper-IDSN and fiber (the DSL bridge) that a lot of companies found a way to make it profitable to put new copper cable parallel to what it already existed. The only thing the municipality did was to make it mandatory that the first to install it must use a wider-than-needed conduct (a solution much less disruptive than giving a natural monopoly, latest shown by new small companies born everywhere), so if a company wanted to add more cable later could use the same tubing. Predictions about company A blocking their tubing showed false, as other companies could retaliate in other places. No second tubing was allowed until the first tube was full, this was the only state intervention in the issue. The same tubes have now the optic fiber.

                    I am not fully anti-state, but there are undeniable overreaching everywhere, and a lot of zealots of intervention that are itching to issue mandates and interfere with everything, and then fix what fails with more interventions.

          • remarkEon 4 hours ago
            Markets are just a tool. This tool functions on information. OP explained how information (in this case, the rumor of a competitor laying fiber) caused action within the market.

            Hmm. Seems the tool is working as expected.

          • peyton 8 hours ago
            The OP is about telecom. I took a look and learned [1]:

            > The telecommunications industry in China is dominated by three state-run businesses: China Telecom, China Unicom and China Mobile.

            A little slippery to bring China into the telecom free market discussion and contrast it with “Western-style” while failing to mention the structure of its telecom industry.

            [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telecommunications_industry_in...

            • bigbadfeline 7 hours ago
              > The OP is about telecom. I took a look and learned [1]:

              Untrue - in the context of the OP, telecom is just an example. Look at the title.

              > The telecommunications industry in China is dominated by three state-run businesses: China Telecom, China Unicom and China Mobile.

              "More competition" doesn't mean "no monopolization". Communications are political everywhere, I'd be surprised if they were a subject of less control in China than in the US. However, even on Amazon and even with tariffs, there's more competition between Chinese sellers than between sellers of other origins.

          • kortilla 8 hours ago
            Western free market doesn’t create monopolies. Where did you get that idea?

            The only place monopolies tend to emerge is heavily regulated areas that allow for regulatory capture (laying fiber is a great example of this).

            • cogman10 6 hours ago
              > The only place monopolies tend to emerge is heavily regulated areas that allow for regulatory capture (laying fiber is a great example of this).

              No, actually laying fiber is a great example of the problem with a free market.

              It's not regulations that make it hard to put down fiber, it's property rights. Without some sort of regulation or government action (such as eminent domain) it's impossible to build out modern infrastructure. There will always be some person with property right in the way of a cable line. You can beg and plead with them to let you bury a line (including pointing out that it's very temporary disruption of soil) and they can still just say no.

              It isn't unusual for a phone company that's looking at a difficult land owner to say "ok, screw it, we'll just have to take a 90 mile detour because the guy that owns that 500 yard strip won't let us bury here". Imagine how much harder that is if the land owner is related to or owns stock in a competitor company.

              We have been able to lay as much fiber as we have in the US because there's a bunch of regulations around right of way that ultimately grants burying rights near public roads to utilities companies like ISPs. Without those, it'd be almost impossible.

              • kortilla 4 hours ago
                Property rights are regulation. You’re just vehemently agreeing with me. Markets filled with laws that make entry difficult are subject to monopolies.
                • danaris 2 hours ago
                  If property rights are regulation, then so is anything that allows you to ignore them.

                  Once you get down to the level of property rights, the only alternative left is total might-makes-right anarchy.

                  Property rights are some of the earliest and most basic things protected by governments—indeed, to a large extent they precede governments, being protected with force by the people who wish to assert them.

                  Wipe out all regulations, all laws, all property rights, and try to run fiber across someone's property without their permission, and they're likely to come out with a shotgun and start shooting everyone digging. Follow the steps logically from that point, and you'll fairly quickly start reinventing governments and regulations.

            • pdpi 4 hours ago
              The "only" place monopolies tend to emerge in is any market with a significant barrier to entry. Regulatory regime can be one such barrier, but e.g. up-front capital costs and network effects are other barriers to entry that can and will lead to monopolies.
            • bigbadfeline 7 hours ago
              > Western free market doesn’t create monopolies.

              To quote myself: "the Western-style free market is very keen on creating and maintaining monopolies"

              Guess who's the highly influential investor, with strong connection to the WH who said the following:

              "Competition is for losers".

              This sums up pretty well what the free market is keen on.

              • kortilla 4 hours ago
                A participant is not the market. Competitors very famously hate competition.
              • what 6 hours ago
                > to quote myself

                Okay, totally meaningless, it didn’t prove anything.

              • bigstrat2003 7 hours ago
                It is well known that individual businessmen often want to reduce competition, because it's best for them. That is why the government's important role in the free market is to promote competition. But just because the market is imperfect and can be captured without the government making sure that people play fair, does not mean that the free market is "a lie" as TFA claims. It means that it's imperfect, as are all human endeavors.
            • greedo 7 hours ago
              Or in places where network effects make it impossible to compete.
        • NewsaHackO 6 hours ago
          So this shows competition works, but I thought the original post was about the free market. When the two companies were asked to fill a need for the people, they refused, and the people were not otherwise about to independently provide the service based on their own funds. I feel as though if the only way of getting companies to do something without organic competition is to use underhanded methods (such as lying about another competitor), then the free market has some places for improvement, no?
          • xbmcuser 6 hours ago
            Competition works up to a certain point its best for short term returns and not for long term as the time and capital investment increases the chances of monopolies forming increases. This is the reason why I think most public infrastructure should be invested in and owned by the government. Let companies compete on building, running and maintaining it.
        • xboxnolifes 10 hours ago
          > ...one day, one of the municipal counselors just called up a friend who worked for a fiber laying company and asked them for a favor: put out a press release saying that they were “investigating” laying an undersea fiber to power a municipal fiber network on the little island.

          They called in a favor that put pressure on the company from public expectations.

          • HauntingPin 10 hours ago
            Yes. What do you think happens in a competitive marketplace? Sony heard about Nintendo partnering up with Philips for the SNES CD expansion, so Sony made their own console. That's literally competition.

            The details of how the "public pressure" came to be don't matter, because the monopoly didn't know about that. All they knew was there was a potential competitor, so they behaved according to that information. That's how it works.

            • karlgkk 10 hours ago
              Frankly, I think you're trying to poke holes in a straightforward concept. And now you've dug your heels in and you're trying to justify it. But... let's ignore opinions and interpretations...

              > Sony heard about Nintendo partnering up with Philips for the SNES CD expansion, so Sony made their own console

              This is completely inaccurate in every way possible. You even have the order of events backwards (Nintendo and Sony partnered first). There is in no way in which even the most charitable interpretation of this statement could bear out. Just about the only correct part is that you have some (but not all!) of the relevant parties involved.

              If you're wrong about such a well documented, cut and dry matter of historical record, then what else are you wrong about? :)

              • drfloyd51 9 hours ago
                That isn’t actually refuting his original argument. Just proving his example false.

                Then you beg the question with a bit of a straw man fallacy thrown in.

            • hrimfaxi 9 hours ago
              I don't understand this line of thinking. The spreading of a false rumor is an example of a competitive marketplace? If this took place in a different domain wouldn't it be fraud? That it was in the public benefit seems orthogonal.
              • kulahan 7 hours ago
                Yes, if a simple unsubstantiated rumor is enough to get your competitors to spend potentially millions of dollars to fight you, that's a competition. Literally what else could it be?

                It can be two things, anyways. You can utilize fraud to manage your competitors expectations. CEOs lie constantly about the state their products are in, in order to drum up more sales.

                It has absolutely zero requirement to be beneficial to the public in order to be a competitive marketplace. They're also competing to make as much profit as possible, which has effectively zero benefit for the public.

                • WalterBright 7 hours ago
                  > They're also competing to make as much profit as possible, which has effectively zero benefit for the public.

                  The end result is plenty of cheap stuff for people to buy. It's why free markets have full supermarkets and socialist markets have long lines.

                  Take the free market in software, for example. My entire software stack on my linux box cost me $0.

                  • nnevod 3 hours ago
                    Plenty of cheap stuff is a consequence of companies interested in people's money and, yes, presence of at least nominal competition between providers (i.e. they can be essentially a cartel, mirrioring each other exactly, but each still wants to step into other's money supply and retain its own). Choice for customer is present but also equally nominal.

                    In deficit economy, economic agents aren't really interested in people's money, and competition is between consumers - who'll bid higher and offer something of real interest to provider. So providers hoard stuff and there are long lines.

                    Benefit for public is not a boolean, it's a spectrum. Lots of cheap poor stuff readily availible is better than having to compete for stuff, but less good than having choice between cheap poor stuff and more expensive better stuff, for example. For the latter, you need non-nominal competition and providers having to compete whithin the market, not outside of it, and also each individual provider having infinitesimal effect on whole market.

                  • kulahan 5 hours ago
                    "Companies optimize to make as much money as possible, which is why there is cheap stuff" does not logically follow. I get what you're saying, but it's not related to the concept of companies trying to make as much profit as possible. Some will simply chase higher profit margins.
                    • WalterBright 4 hours ago
                      > Some will simply chase higher profit margins

                      That's constrained by the Law of Supply and Demand.

                      > "Companies optimize to make as much money as possible, which is why there is cheap stuff" does not logically follow.

                      Standard Oil gained great profits by reducing the price of kerosene by 70%.

                      • nnevod 3 hours ago
                        >That's constrained by the Law of Supply and Demand.

                        Law of supply and demand works in the really free market, when providers are essentially infinitesimal and are not able to exert their will upon consumers. If a single provider is capable of significantly affecting the prices and supply of the whole market, it can bend law of supply and demand.

                        >Standard Oil gained great profits by reducing the price of kerosene by 70%. They (I suppose, don't know for sure) had plenty of margin for that, and as price-demand relation is not linear, increase of volume was larger than margin reduction. That is often not the case, and race to (quality) bottom and shrinkflation happens.

                        • WalterBright 2 hours ago
                          Standard Oil made more money by lowering the price. They had margin to do that by being very good at lowering costs.

                          > race to (quality) bottom

                          When people aren't willing to pay for quality, there's no point in increasing the costs for more quality.

                    • carefree-bob 2 hours ago
                      The math doesn't support this. There is great confusion about this point. Imagine, for example, that there are people that want to buy one unit of a product made by a monopoly that is a greedy corporation trying to maximize profits. And to keep things simple, make everything discreet in dollars.

                      10 people are willing to pay $2

                      5 people are willing to pay $3

                      1 person is willing to pay $4

                      and no one is able or willing to pay more than $4

                      So this would be the demand curve.

                      Now, let's do the supply curve. Keep it simple and assume a constant cost of production equal to $1 per unit.

                      The question is, if you are a greedy corporation, then how much should you charge to maximize your profits?

                      You should charge $2.

                      At that price, you will make $10 selling to the poors, $5 selling to the middle, and $1 selling to the rich. $16 bucks in profit for the greedy corporation.

                      If you charged $3, you would make $10 in profit selling to the middle, and $2 in profit selling to the rich, for only $12 in profit.

                      12 < 16. The greedy monopoly prefers $16 in profit to $12 in profit. That's why it lowers prices.

                      If you charged $4, you would make only $3 in profit.

                      3 < 16

                      In other words, it is profit maximization + law of demand + law of one price that drives down prices in the face of a demand curve.

                      People get this all wrong, they think that it requires perfect competition or some set of unobtainable market assumptions to make stuff affordable, it does not. It's just the law of demand (charge more and you get fewer customers) plus the law of one price (everyone pays the same amount).

                      This is why things like government subsidies to the poor to help them buy stuff actually drives prices up. It's why businesses wage an eternal war to be able to price discriminate. Health care, for example, would be much more affordable if hospitals had to post their prices and could not charge different rates to different people based on what they could squeeze from their insurance or based on how much money they had. It's why programs to help the poor by giving them more cash to buy stuff end up making things unaffordable for everyone else. It's why section 8 rental subsidies drive up rents. It's why during the covid subsidies, the new car price index went up from 147 to 188, but after the imposition of tariffs, it didn't change at all. So much of the world is explained just by some simple math, the law of one price, and the law of demand.

                      Because the companies are already charging the most to maximize their profits. They are not charities. Whenever a business says "if I have to pay this extra tax, it will just drive up prices", then ask them "Are you a charity? If you could charge more, then why aren't you charging more now? If you can't charge more now, why do you think you will be able to charge more tomorrow?"

                      Now, I'm not saying that there is no relationship between costs and prices, and that everything is set purely by demand and the law of one price. To get supply in there, you need more assumptions about the type of competition and the cost curve. But in general, supply only enters into the picture in that if you raise a firm's costs, then some firms go out of business because they can't pay the higher costs, and for the firms that are left, there is less competition, and it is this reduced competition that allows (some) of the increase costs to be passed on to consumers.

                      Always remember -- firms are already charging the most they can possibly charge in order to maximize total profits. That's the normal state of affairs, and it is what drives prices lower. Whether you are modeling a monopoly, or monopolistic competition, or an oligopoly, or perfect competition, it does not matter. They always charge the most they can possibly charge, and the law of demand, working with the law of one price, drives prices down.

              • irishcoffee 8 hours ago
                It is not fraud to claim that one is considering doing something, and publishing that information.

                Imagine how that would actually play out if you were right. (You’re not)

                • hrimfaxi 6 hours ago
                  But in the case of the grand parent the company had no intention of following through and did it seemingly at the request of the friend.

                  > one day, one of the municipal counselors just called up a friend who worked for a fiber laying company and asked them for a favor: put out a press release saying that they were “investigating” laying an undersea fiber to power a municipal fiber network on the little island.

        • MajorTakeaway 9 hours ago
          Sometimes commenters all over the internet write like this because they just got incredibly jealous after reading the parent post. I've been thinking more and more about how most posts are jealous or depressed outtakes against the world, system, or other person. This fundamental human behavior won't change, and is as reflexive as a monopolistic company reacting to a press release, proving the parent correct despite their scathing response of the child.

          It's worth noting that 4chan and Reddit also live here because both sites are insufferable.

      • littlestymaar 11 hours ago
        [flagged]
        • youainti 9 hours ago
          This is a perfect example of competition in microeconomics. If you've only been exposed to an introductory economics, you've missed out on a lot.

          This type of situation sounds like an amalgamation of a few exam questions from my first year of an econ PhD. "Cheap talk in a Bertrand market with entry costs and capacity constraints" or something. No I haven't worked it out but my intuition is that it would predict exactly what was observed: the threat of a new entrant with enough capacity risks loosing your entire business so you invest to expand your capacity to prevent that entry.

          • littlestymaar 59 minutes ago
            The problem isn't that econ PhDs don't have classes giving more nuanced views of the world, but the fact that people spend so much time with “introductory economics” that even Nobel prices will make nonsensical arguments based on those flawed concepts.

            It seems that spending several years working with models assuming that the earth is flat isn't being well compensated by one class on “imperfect flatness”.

            (I've contemplated doing an econ PhD myself before changing course, and I've been exposed to much more than econ 101).

        • matheusmoreira 9 hours ago
          > with the notable exception of people with lots of capital to wipe the competition out of the market then do a rug pull after the fact

          They used to be called robber barons.

          • WalterBright 6 hours ago
            Ironically, during the anti-trust trial of Standard Oil, Rockefeller's market share kept slipping. His competitors figured out how to compete with him.

            As for Rockefeller being a "robber", the rise of Standard Oil resulted in the price of kerosene dropping 70%.

        • raw_anon_1111 7 hours ago
          This is provably not true. You can look at computers (besides Apple), cell phones (besides Apple), TVs, any commodity item, etc
          • littlestymaar 1 hour ago
            Interestingly enough, all the examples you cited are being produced by Asian brands, where the various governments have specific policies designed to make companies actually engage in such a competition in order to take over the world markets.

            Now do banking, retail, real estate, insurance, healthcare, software, or any business where Asian governments are not actively subsidizing a race to the bottom competition and you'll see it how it works.

        • hn_throwaway_99 10 hours ago
          As Peter Theil literally said, "Competition is for losers."
      • hahahacorn 4 hours ago
        [flagged]
        • jayd16 4 hours ago
          I don't know. I feel like "price fixing until maybe there was a hint of competition" is pretty far from frictionless sphere, supply and demand economics.

          Competition was possible but was not working. A fake news brief is the supposed solution. That's not really competition actually lowering prices. That's the price fixing regime blinking for an unsubstantiated reason.

          It would be a different story if the friend's fiber laying company actually saw an opportunity and pursued it, but they didn't.

        • bestouff 2 hours ago
          [flagged]
      • wat10000 8 hours ago
        In other words, competition works, and lack of competition leaves you vulnerable.
  • vbernat 3 hours ago
    France has 90% FTTH coverage in 2025, with 60% of households over 1 Gbps. One of the incumbents, Free (my employer), deployed P2P fibers in very dense areas but is switching to P2MP for economic reasons (and because this was not a competitive advantage). It's unclear to me if Switzerland plans to achieve this coverage with P2P. What looks great in Switzerland is not that each household has four dedicated fibers to the CO, but that Swisscom has responsibility for these fibers. In France, we have competition between operators for both services and infrastructure. In very dense areas, each building can have its own infrastructure operator (with an obligation to share); in less dense areas, this is by district (with an obligation to share); and in rural areas, this is a subsidized network (with an obligation to share). The downside is that there are "mutualisation points" where each ISP can go to plug or unplug subscribers, and they become a mess (https://img.lemde.fr/2020/06/04/300/0/900/600/1440/960/60/0/...).

    BTW, I am also disturbed by AI-generated images. The ones with the three workers laying cables look highly unrealistic and made me pause for a couple of minutes, wondering if they lay cables that way in Germany. The ones about how households are connected to CO look like you get multiple 720-fiber cables to the same household.

    • jdeibele 2 hours ago
      I took the image to be showing how inefficient it was to run that much fiber three times instead of just once. It’s unlikely that they’d do it at the same time but it seems very difficult to show buried fiber and a backhoe ripping up the street.
      • vbernat 1 hour ago
        In reality, this does not happen that way. If a path already exists, you can pay to use the same duct (unless it's full) to install your own fibers. At least, it works this way in France.
        • lachiflippi 1 hour ago
          It absolutely does happen that way in Germany. We had Fiber Company A rip up the entire city a year ago, and Fiber Company B ripped up the streets again just a few weeks ago.

          ETA from my ISP to actually get any of those lines into my apartment is still 2028.

    • madaxe_again 1 hour ago
      I’m curious as to how those numbers skew rural vs urban, as my experience in France couldn’t be further from fibre - have had a house there for decades, and we went straight from dialup to starlink, as there still isn’t even DSL available there. Fibre… don’t make me laugh.

      It’s not like we’re super rural, either - small village, about 8km from two middling towns. The cell network isn’t much better - it’s 5g in the towns, and 2G or nothing as soon as you’re a few km out of them.

      There is a fibre trunk running down the main road, 1.5km from the village, but when we enquired France telecom quoted about €250,000 to extend the fibre up to us. We passed.

      Edit: same kinda deal with free.fr. If I check availability by address, it fails, as while the commune exists, the village does not, never mind the roads within it. If I enter the land line number, it says it is a mobile number and refuses to proceed.

      So: your figures say 90%, but I suspect that’s a theoretical number rather than a real one.

      Maybe it’s 90% of the 60% of addresses which got included in the statistics.

      Edit edit: Ah hah, yes. I’ve looked at arcep’s methodology. That 90% is inventoried premises (homes & businesses) which:

      - could be connected to FTTH, theoretically.

      - exist in the arcep database

      - are within several km of a live fibre

      My home would be counted as “connected” by their methodology, even though there’s a quarter million euro bill to pay to make it so, and several km of fibre to run.

      So - the stat is self-aggrandising bullshit, sorry.

  • thelastgallon 7 hours ago
    Most states in America ban municipal fiber. They saw EPB (Chattanooga) and said, no, we must make sure that doesn't ever happen again. That is how 'free' market is done in US, all the rules are to make sure the richest people become richer.
  • alex_suzuki 4 hours ago
    Swiss here. Just a minor clarification on the article: fibre is not available everywhere in Switzerland. Actually the rollout has been quite slow, and chances are that if you live in a rural or suburban area (like me) or in an older building then you might not have fibre, and are limited to (fairly decent) copper.
    • fainpul 24 minutes ago
      Indeed rural areas are not as well covered [1], but in cities it doesn't matter if you live in an old building. As long as your street has fiber (most do by now), when you switch to a fiber connection from your ISP, contractors will connect it to your house (even if you only rent an appartment) and install an optical outlet in your appartment, all for free.

      [1] https://map.geo.admin.ch/#/map?lang=en&center=2634455.81,119...

    • malthaus 27 minutes ago
      i'm swiss and also own property in central berlin. while i was having insanely fast internet in all the places i lived in switzerland since the year 2000 (first cable, then fiber), german telekom has still not been able to connect my flat to fiber, even though the street facing building side is and i'm stuck with semi fast but fully overpriced dsl, which on top is spotty because someone decided to install cheap copper - while cable internet is not an option because 2 cable providers fight over who owns the access to the building.

      whatever the roll-out in switzerland is, it's heaps better than in germany and most other places.

    • nextstep 1 hour ago
      Can confirm this guy is Swiss

      Has arguably the best infrastructure and system in the world and will still find issue with it. A real Swiss hardly knows the horror show that is the rest of the non-Switzerland world.

      yeah, fiber rollout is slow outside of the cities. It’s still better than 95% of the developed world. All perspective.

      • panick21_ 22 minutes ago
        People endlessly complain that the SBB is 'always' late.
        • kuboble 1 minute ago
          Like if you have a semi-important meeting in Zurich at 9am It's perfectly fine to take a train which arrives in Zurich at 8:53.

          And in an unlikely scenario that the train is late, everyone will agree that it's a valid circumstance.

  • cowmix 1 hour ago
    My favorite example is here in the Phoenix metro area. We had DSL and cable internet pretty early compared to the rest of the country (mid/late 90s), but then things stagnated.

    Then in 2014, Google Fiber announced they were expanding here and, all of a sudden, the local telco and cable companies (Centurylink and Cox) started rolling out fiber all over the place -- like pretty much overnight. Then Google backed off, and the incumbents slowed their roll too.

    It was a on-the-nose reminder that these companies can move fast when they think a real competitor might show up.

  • p4bl0 1 hour ago
    My sister lives in Switzerland, in a remote place in the mountain from a small town. Even over wifi the bandwidth at her place is so fast it made my BitTorrent client crash repeatedly. The solution was to disconnect my system by deactivating the wifi, relaunch my BitTorrent software, set a rate limit to the download speed at 30MB/s, and then reactivate wifi.
    • seba_dos1 19 minutes ago
      30MB/s is not a lot. Which client was that? KTorrent can easily deal with more than three times that, which is what I get here in Poland on a plan that's not even the fastest one available.
  • mft_ 10 hours ago
    I have a gentle rule, which is when discussing (geo)politics with friends, we should try not to use Switzerland as an example. It's just too good, too rational, too sensible, too well run, in myriad ways that other countries should be able to emulate, but consistently and constantly don't.
    • ceejayoz 10 hours ago
      I have a gentle rule, which is "if you can do it in one place, it is probably possible to do it in a second". The Swiss are not a separate species.
      • ordu 7 minutes ago
        Lately I come to believe that success stories are not necessarily transferable. They can require some traits of the system that are not available. USA is made for corporations, so you just cant replicate internet access from Switzerland in USA. Corporations will fight you to death in courts and they will win. They are not going to lose their monopoly. To change that you need to change USA in a massive ways, I can't imagine how it can be done.
      • tjwebbnorfolk 9 hours ago
        There are a lot of things you can do in a rich, tiny, homogenous country that you can't do in a enormous, diverse country.

        If my house were a country, I'd be in the top 0.1% of household internet speeds compared to other countries. Obviously everyone should be just like me!

        • Moldoteck 2 hours ago
          It's so homogeneous that there are 4 national languages, one of which is german with tons of loval dialects. It's so homogeneous that each canton has own sub regulations. It's so homogeneous that in it's biggest city, Zurich, 34% of people are foreigners and 45% born outside of Switzerland.

          But we can look at the opposite part of spectrum - Moldova, poorest country in Europe - 85% of infra is covered by fibre, >90% of population has option to get 1GBit fiber

          There are always reasons why something can't be done, just like solving frequent school shooting problem in US

          • Sesse__ 1 hour ago
            > 34% of people are foreigners

            I remember moving there, hearing talks about how international Zurich was, and then realizing most of those foreigners were German. :-) It's diverse on paper (and probably to the Swiss), but it's not like it's a cosmopolitan melting pot.

        • Broken_Hippo 28 minutes ago
          The US being different is no excuse - this is really just a shortsighted retelling of American Exceptionalism.

          Intelligent folks look at a system and figure out ways they can adapt it to their own situation. You can take systems they use for rural areas and figure out ways to do it on your own. The US is enormous, but most folks live in cities. States are tiny portions of the US, and some of those states would likely mirror Switzerland in diversity, density, and size.

          It wouldn't matter if the country had a population density similar to the US and was similar in many ways. It'd still need adaptation because of the differences in culture, laws, and so on.

        • ceejayoz 9 hours ago
          > There are a lot of things you can do in a rich, tiny, homogenous country that you can't do in a enormous, diverse country.

          The US is a large collection of a whole bunch of rich (by global standards), tiny, fairly homogenous areas. We manage roads and schools at state, county, and local levels; we could do municipal broadband.

        • StrauXX 49 minutes ago
          Switzerland is one of the least homogenous countries in Europe! Four languages, relatively weak federal government with strong local (canton) governments. Most state services are handled on a localized (canton) level.
        • hibikir 8 hours ago
          The difficulties of American internet speeds have little to do with the total size of the country, but how far individual families are from each other. Spain is roughly the size of Texas, and Spain has a higher population, but you need a lot less fiber to each home, because metro areas are so much denser, and therefore it's so much easier to lay the fiber.

          As usual, blame the suburbs, which make all kinds of infrastructure quite a bit more expensive per capita.

          • ceejayoz 8 hours ago
            But the US has long lagged behind in even dense areas. It's more than just the distribution.
            • cvwright 6 hours ago
              Right. It’s things like Baltimore (when I lived there) requiring that high speed internet had to roll out in poor areas first, before it could go into the rich neighborhoods.

              But this was the early 2000s and the internet was still “new”. Only the richer areas cared and were willing to pay the price. Letting them have first (or even equal!) access would have made it easier to fund the rollout in low income areas.

          • awakeasleep 8 hours ago
            Huge swaths of our densest metro areas, in our largest cities, do not have any fiber option, just one cable provider.
        • toofy 7 hours ago
          > There are a lot of things you can do in a rich, tiny, homogenous country that you can't do in an enormous, diverse country.

          US states are little islands entirely capable of doing things like building infrastructure. There is no excuse for our states and their lack of movement, certainly not “the entire country is just tooooo big. whoa is us.” nonsense.

          • djoldman 7 hours ago
            Yes, that's true for population.

            But all except 9 US states are larger in geographic area and only 5 have a higher population density.

            Those are pretty salient statistics when you're talking about infrastructure that links houses.

            • kalleboo 6 hours ago
              Does New York have great home fiber infrastructure?
        • khalic 3 hours ago
          Homogenous? Tell me you don’t know anything about Switzerland without telling me…
        • bugglebeetle 8 hours ago
          >homogenous country

          Tell me you know nothing about Switzerland without telling me you know nothing about Switzerland. Try asking a German Swiss what they think about a French Swiss or either about the Romansch.

          • dotancohen 2 hours ago
            I wonder if there is some sort of metric for classifying how similar cultures are to one another. Are e.g. German Swiss more dissimilar to French Swiss, than are Florida rednecks dissimilar to Compton gangsters?
            • khalic 2 hours ago
              I’m not even talking about the languages, we have 20% immigrants in the population, and an even larger part has foreign roots.

              We also don’t have weapons in every household, if we’re talking myths

              • dotancohen 18 minutes ago

                  > I’m not even talking about the languages, we have 20% immigrants in the population, and an even larger part has foreign roots.
                
                Both LA and Miami speak Spanish, no?

                  > We also don’t have weapons in every household, if we’re talking myths
                
                Only the Republicans have weapons in every household?

                I'm joking, I realise that you are Swiss, but until I looked at the username I wasn't sure which side of the comparison you were referring to. Goes to show that even the nations' stereotypes are not dissimilar!

              • denysvitali 39 minutes ago
                > We also don’t have weapons in every household, if we’re talking myths

                It all depends if you did your military service (which implies that you're swiss) and if you didn't decide to drop out of it or deemed as unfit. I don't think it's a myth really, it just happens to be that a lot of people don't do their military service and thus don't have to keep a weapon at home

            • bugglebeetle 2 hours ago
              If you ever heard them talk about each other, you would definitely assume as much.
        • wat10000 8 hours ago
          Rich is a key attribute here. Tiny, not really. The key is dense. That makes terrestrial connections cheaper. A country with the population of the US and the richness and density of Switzerland would be just as capable of building out high speed internet connections. It would have ~38x the population of Switzerland, cost ~38x more to wire, and have ~38x the resources with which to do it.

          Incidentally, the northeast of the US has a similar or greater population density as Switzerland and is pretty rich. That area, at least, should be as capable of this sort of thing. Doing it for, say, everybody in Alaska would be a bit tougher.

          I don't know what diversity has to do with anything here. As far as I've seen, people from all sorts of different places and cultures seem to like high speed internet about equally well.

          • Aspos 6 hours ago
            Infrastructure is laughable in northeast. And no, we do not have competition here in NJ. Yay "free market"
      • mft_ 10 hours ago
        So one would think.

        And yet, living in Switzerland after the UK involved one after another discovery of how well-ordered and -run a country could be. And then moving to Germany was like stepping back even further behind my memories of the UK.

        I'm sure you could find examples of countries that do specific things as well as Switzerland; but I'm not aware of many places that do almost everything so excellently. (Maybe Japan, in many respects, but I lack sufficient direct experience to adequately judge.)

        • ceejayoz 10 hours ago
          I don't doubt there are differences.

          I doubt they're insurmountable. Again, because the Swiss aren't some genetically superior subspecies. Culture can be changed.

          I see Americans talk about how impossible universal healthcare is as if the rest of the developed world hasn't largely figured it out.

          • mike_hearn 9 minutes ago
            Switzerland uses a system similar to the original plan for Obamacare, where individuals are mandated to buy insurance, so if Switzerland is what you mean by "universal healthcare" then it's not only not impossible, but the USA already has a more voluntary take on the exact same concept.
          • somedude895 37 minutes ago
            > Culture can be changed.

            Over the course of a hundred or so years maybe. Culture is hard work.

          • whereistejas 9 hours ago
            Nothing is insurmountable; however each one of us must play within the practical constraints of our local geographies (political, social, financial and physical). The parent comment probably means that Switzerland is in a positive on all axes unlike the rest of the world.
            • lll-o-lll 7 hours ago
              It’s politics. Boil most things down and the technical is inconsequential when compared to the politics.

              Look at the political system of Switzerland and you will see a radically different setup.

              And I think that’s the horse. The rest is cart. Yes they are rich but why? Yes they are relatively stable socially but why? Decentralised Canton government structure + direct democracy (referendums all the time for things that matter). That, I think, is why all the rest.

              • mft_ 6 hours ago
                I think there's more to it than that.

                From a philosophical perspective, I love the cantonal/direct democracy model. But it's supported by a strong culture of awareness of current affairs, and involvement in the political process. (Of course, these two aspects are likely strongly synergistic.)

                However, I'm not sure this unique political structure explains the trains running on time, the sensible choices made about the internet structure (per the article), the top-of-the-world healthcare system, the Swiss cheese science institute, or many other aspects of the broader country. It may partly explain the routinely excellent government bureaucracy (say that with a straight face anywhere else!), the convenient and reliable local public transport options, and the local police being well-resourced to the point of apparent boredom.

                • Moldoteck 2 hours ago
                  Awareness doesn't happen automatically either. During referendums ppl also get flyers explaining the subject, positive and negative things about it

                  Ppl also recently voted for eid which should reduce bureaucratic hurdles

                  Imo in many cases public transport problems in other areas are heavily related to corruption

              • Vinnl 7 hours ago
                Heh, you were walking right up to my viewpoint and then turned away. A parliamentary democracy with proportional representation has way more influence IMO, and you'll find another couple of relatively well-run countries that work like that.
          • yowayb 8 hours ago
            For me, this is the point of the article. People fought and the best decision was the result. And I suspect there's a fundamental cultural difference that makes the fight much less fair in America.
          • strictnein 7 hours ago
            Been an American my entire life. 45+ years. I've never heard a single person say that universal healthcare is "impossible".
            • array_key_first 6 hours ago
              I'm an American and I've heard it often, usually with a bunch of strange excuses. We're too big, we're too diverse, there's too many states, and on. None of those actually make very much sense, but I've heard it all for why universal healthcare could never work in the US.
            • ceejayoz 7 hours ago
              https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-says-not...

              > President Donald Trump on Wednesday said it’s “not possible” for the federal government to fund Medicare, Medicaid and child care costs, arguing that it should be up to the states to “take care” of those programs while the federal government focuses on military spending.

              • strictnein 7 hours ago
                I guess I'm pretty confused on what your point is here?

                Universal Healthcare would be a new program in the US that would see a drastic tax increase, in that our healthcare spending currently going to insurance companies would instead go to a new federal agency. The amount of money companies and citizens spend on it may or may not also increase, but your quote has basically nothing to do with that.

                • ceejayoz 7 hours ago
                  That’s sleight of hand. “Ooooh! A tax increase! Scary!”

                  If I can pay $100 in tax to save $200 in premiums and copays, that’s a win. The US is an extreme outlier in healthcare spend.

            • bdangubic 6 hours ago
              We must live on opposite sides of US cause I’ve never heard anyone say that it is possible (except few politicans who thought it may be a good way to win an election but also knew that it was not possible and gave up once they got elected)
        • exidy 5 hours ago
          > I'm not aware of many places that do almost everything so excellently

          Probably Singapore, which is sometimes described as the Switzerland of Asia anyway. 10 Gb symmetric fibre is broadly available at around SGD $50/month (about 35 EUR).

          • aix1 5 hours ago
            This is not to say that it isn't well run, but I think it would be fair to mention that Singapore is one of the most densely populated countries on Earth (#3 overall; #1 among countries with population >1 million.)

            Separately, I am not totally sure just how widely deployed FTTH is in Switzerland. Here in Zürich it's everywhere, but zooming in on some rural place on init7's map tells quite a different story (perhaps not surprisingly).

            https://ftth.init7.net

    • raw_anon_1111 9 hours ago
      Well and a little bit of research, tells me it’s far from universal across Switzerland. This article is so provable false in many of its premises it’s worthless - see my other comment.
    • bombcar 7 hours ago
      Switzerland and Japan should be excluded in most discussions - what they can do has little bearing on “the real world” ;)
      • dmix 5 hours ago
        And Iceland.
    • throwaway27448 10 hours ago
      It's also too tiny to be representative of most of humanity
      • ceejayoz 9 hours ago
        Switzerland has a population larger than all but ~11 US states.
        • mgfist 7 hours ago
          It's got 9m people. The US has 30x the people and 250x the space. It's not comparable.
          • ceejayoz 7 hours ago
            So why do we struggle to get the infrastructure to work in dense urban areas still? Or even just “not Wyoming”?

            Switzerland and California have the same population density. Why can’t CA build high speed rail?

            • jancsika 4 hours ago
              > Switzerland and California have the same population density. Why can’t CA build high speed rail?

              Go find the last major Swiss route that was built, and compare its land acquisition difficulties to what happened with the California project. I'll rankly speculate that difference will be the meat of your answer.

              • panick21_ 13 minutes ago
                Building infrastructure is a skill, a skill you have to constantly work on. If you do it enough and not once then you can learn to get good at it. There is a difference between a long term consistent execution of a infrastructure plan and a 'lets build high speed rail'.

                I don't think rules and regulation in California are actually worse then in Switzerland.

            • lava_pidgeon 6 hours ago
              Just for the information Switzerland neither does ;)
              • lmm 3 hours ago
                Switzerland has a few sections of barely-high-speed rail such as the Lötschberg Base Tunnel.
              • ceejayoz 6 hours ago
                CA’s high speed rail isn’t high speed by European standards and it looks on the way to cancelation or significant curtailment. We can’t even manage what y’all would consider slow rail.
                • lava_pidgeon 6 hours ago
                  I don't know but Swiss isn't the only train system that works but also Spain, Italy, France. Poland has a growing better train system . The swiss system has it's advantages but it is also very expensive.

                  It might also worth it to check them out

                  • Moldoteck 2 hours ago
                    The advantage of swiss system is fast transfers. Hsr would likely break this system (no point in arriving faster if your connection gets longer by 10-15min
                    • lava_pidgeon 49 minutes ago
                      That's a very National focussed perspective and thus definitely a disadvantage of the Swiss train system ;)
                    • panick21_ 10 minutes ago
                      I'm Swiss and I disagree, and so do many experts. First of all, arriving earlier is always good, because many people who get off on that stop still arrive earlier. Also, people who connect to a different mode of transit, such as Trams or S-Bahns very likely can catch an earlier connection.

                      In addition, if we built proper high speed lines, would could increase the frequency so much that it doesn't actually matter anymore.

                      So it doesn't actually break the system, it improves it.

                      Join us in advocating for this vision: https://swissrailvolution.ch/#goals

                  • ceejayoz 6 hours ago
                    I’ve ridden on several.

                    “Others do it even better and cheaper” makes the US failure to build and maintain infrastructure like this even sadder.

        • tjwebbnorfolk 9 hours ago
          you going for the cherry-picked-but-functionally-meaningless statistic of the week award?
          • ceejayoz 9 hours ago
            I'm going for the "Switzerland isn't a little village of 50 people, we can learn lessons from them just fine" award.

            Every large country breaks things up into small chunks. No one says Vermont can't handle a school system just because it's small.

        • throwaway27448 9 hours ago
          What is this supposed to imply? us states are also a poor representation of humanity. This matters a great deal: switzerland is notoriously ethnically homogenous and unable to get along with anyone. Life on easy mode!
          • ceejayoz 9 hours ago
            It implies that Switzerland is by no means so tiny their lessons learned can't apply to other multi-million human sized regions.

            Switzerland gets along with others just fine, to the point where Italy and France used to handle their air defense on the weekends (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethiopian_Airlines_Flight_702).

            > The Swiss Air Force did not respond because the incident occurred outside normal office hours; a Swiss Air Force spokesman stated: "Switzerland cannot intervene because its airbases are closed at night and on the weekend. It's a question of budget and staffing." Switzerland relies on neighboring countries to police its airspace outside of regular business hours; the French and Italian Air Forces have permission to escort suspicious flights into Swiss airspace, but do not have authority to shoot down an aircraft over Switzerland.

            • throwaway27448 9 hours ago
              Try 500 mil and you'll see china is the only interesting sample.

              If the swiss were able to get along with others, they wouldn't have such a reputation as racist nazis

              • ceejayoz 9 hours ago
                China is, as the EU (450M), US (340M), and Switzerland are, broken into smaller subunits for local and regional government.
              • ginko 9 hours ago
                There's only two countries with over 500 million people and they're complete freak outliers.
          • input_sh 1 hour ago
            My god, Switzerland is literally the least ethnically homogenous country on the continent (if we ignore tiny nations like Luxembourg, Lichtenstein and Malta), with a third of its population being foreign-born, which is percentage-wise double that of the US.
          • Liftyee 8 hours ago
            "unable to get along with anyone" is an interesting claim given that the last armed conflict in Switzerland was in 1847 (Sonderbund War).
          • khalic 3 hours ago
            Ethnically homogeneous, you guys really just spew nonsense without doing _any_research? Swiss here, you’re very, very wrong
      • ninalanyon 1 hour ago
        Plenty big enough to be an example to be examined and perhaps emulated though.
    • michaelsshaw 7 hours ago
      Lets just exclude the best example, as everyone knows, we should never try to be the best. Being the best is dumb, liberal and possibly communist. Settling for 105th, that's freedom and democracy baby.
    • churchill 10 hours ago
      [dead]
  • dmix 11 hours ago
    In Canada our internet became much faster for cheaper with better customer support when the government allowed competition from smaller players. Telecom also got better when they allowed a foreign competitor to compete against the government mandated oligopoly. But the market is still heavily regulated in a way that benefits the existing monopolies.
    • skeeter2020 9 hours ago
      I think Canada is a great example of how not to do it, despite some price decreases in recent years. We seem to have (near) the worst of all worlds: huge geography, little competition, and government regulation that props up the oligopoly without driving prices down like Europe. Mobile data is even worse.
      • xethos 7 hours ago
        I'm running out my contract with TekSavvy (~$80 CAD for gigabit) before switching to Novus (~$60 CAD for 2.5), and my partner and I just switched to Fido (~$30 CAD for 80gig and international calls/SMS).

        Considering the geography and all the per-capita math (and pain), I don't think we're doing too bad as a country any more.

        • gnabgib 4 hours ago
          That last one is a phone plan.. not exactly apples to apples (it's good, but an 80GB/mo cap is rarely enough for home.. and nothing like a 2.5gbps internet plan).
    • tredre3 4 hours ago
      > In Canada our internet became much faster for cheaper with better customer support when the government allowed competition from smaller players.

      What the CRTC did was force the big players who own all the infrastructure to allow resellers to resell their services, and have to pay no more than cost to the big guy.

      Those "smaller players" have a marginal involvement in the entire network aspect. They usually host ISP emails and sometimes DNS. Some of them do provide better customer service than the upstream big guy. At least until they need upstream help to resolve your issue, then it takes forever.

      The other type of small players, who install their own infrastructure in smaller municipalities, were not impacted by this change. Some provinces (SK, QC) do give generous grants to those small players to install fibers. But AFAIK there is no federal involvement specifically to help them.

  • harrall 10 hours ago
    This article gets ahead of itself.

    The issue isn’t the splitting. There is no fiber to even split in most places. A lot of places in America had their “network” infra built 50-100 years ago on copper and no one wants to pay to basically rebuild all of it.

    I happen to live in an area where there are still above ground utilities.

    We got >5 gig fiber fast. We have 700Mbps 5G. I literally watched them string the fiber on the poles.

    It’s still not shared, but it’s fast because it’s new. Shared would be preferred, but you need destroy + “new” first, and most people are fine with what copper gives them. Shared may even be cheaper but most people don’t think we need to rebuild anything.

    • martinald 7 hours ago
      I'ts almost certainly shared. 99% of FTTH is (X)G(S)-PON which shares the fibre over a few properties. Usually something like 32 max.

      The Swiss use point to point fibre (there are a few small pockets of this elsewhere). But in reality it is very hard to saturate. XGSPON has 10G/10G shared between the node. GPON has 2.4gbit down/1.2gbit up shared across the node.

      In reality point to point is not really a benefit in 99.99% of scenarios, residential internet use cannot saturate 10G/10G for long, even with many 'heavy' internet users (most users can't really get more than >1gig internally over WiFi to start with).

      And if it is a problem there is now 50G-PON which can run side by side, so you just add more bandwidth that way.

      • mike_hearn 2 minutes ago
        Yep, exactly! I live in Switzerland. The article is ridiculous and misleading. Switzerland doesn't have 25 Gbit internet, quite obviously. It has a state-owned telco that advertises 10 Gbit to people without making it obvious to the buyer that they won't be able to use anything above 1Gbit without special equipment they are near-guaranteed to not have (unless they're literally a high speed networking hobbyist IT pro). I noticed this years ago and thought it was an extremely sharp and therefore unSwiss practice, that in a more free market with better regulation and a more feral press would have already attracted a rap on the knuckles from the truth-in-advertising people. But Swisscom is government owned so they get away with it.

        Unfortunately because ISPs don't educate people on this and regular consumers just compare numbers, Swisscom doing this has dragged fully private ISPs into offering it too, so the entire market is just engaged in systemic consumer fraud now.

      • Hikikomori 11 minutes ago
        Sweden doesn't use much PON either. If a countries fiber build out started before gpon was released or got popular you likely continue a lot with point to point. There's a small drawback, TDM/A for the uplink, introduces some jitter but guessing it's not as bad as cable.
      • bombcar 7 hours ago
        Residential 2.5gb equipment is just starting to appear as a “default” and 10gb is still pretty rare, though accessible if you want it.

        I don’t even have 25gb and I’ve a home lab!

        • ido 2 hours ago
          I had 600mbps down/200 up (I could have upgraded to 1GB) and I downgraded to 175 down/50 up (to switch to a more reliable provider) and didn’t notice any difference (family of 4).
    • eqvinox 5 hours ago
      > A lot of places in America had their “network” infra built 50-100 years ago on copper

      That's no different to Switzerland so far…

      > and no one wants to pay to basically rebuild all of it.

      …but the Swiss seem to have decided it's worth the investment.

      > I happen to live in an area where there are still above ground utilities.

      If anything, that can make things cheaper. You don't need to bury everything, and in some places (e.g. earthquake prone Japan) it's really counterproductive. But even if it isn't, it's certainly more expensive.

      Sent from a 25G internet connection. My laptop only has 10G via TB though.

  • bob1029 1 hour ago
    I'm in a fairly rural part of Texas (the middle of some woods) and I've got symmetric 5gbps fiber. The last house I lived in had 3 competing FTTH providers when I left. I don't think the story is what it used to be anymore. I don't know of a single suburban development in the state that doesn't have fiber today.

    The small ISPs have done an incredible job in some cases. One of the providers had 100% perfect uptime for 2 years, including riding through a catastrophic windstorm that took out the local power grid for ~5 days. I still had internet coming into my house while the water and electricity were gone.

    I think the very limited power requirements of fiber vs copper is a huge part of what makes this work well in rural deployments. You can power your last 5-10 miles from one box with a battery for days. The fiber itself is also ridiculously cheap. No one wants to steal this crap. It's worthless. I enjoyed seeing the "Fiber optic cable, no scrap value" signs being posted for a while. We don't need them anymore though. The local meth enthusiast community is now fully educated regarding these materials.

    With everything about fiber being so cheap, the last remaining problem is simply getting it from A to B. It's amazing how far sideways you can go in a day with one man on a ditch witch. You put 3-4 crews out there for a week and it's gonna get done. I've seen them go from nothing to installed customer terminals in 30 days. Sure, they break every utility at least once getting it installed, but it happens so fast the overall briefness of the disruption is worth it.

    I'm watching some Comcast regional sales people absolutely lose their marbles after a really bad DOCSIS provider acquisition in my area. The door to door sales campaign has become completely unhinged. The copper infrastructure is on death's doorstep now. Fiber is going to bury all of this crap in a few more years.

  • yard2010 20 minutes ago
    > This is what happens when you let natural monopolies operate without oversight. They don’t compete on price or quality. They extract rent.

    Sounds like racketeering with extra steps..

  • chrismcb 12 hours ago
    Because it isn't a free market in the USA. And those that regulate it don't seem to care. Or maybe it is those that have been granted a monopoly do everything they can to retain said monopoly. Things would be different if we actually had a free market
    • schubidubiduba 10 hours ago
      Some markets just inherently turn non-free very quickly when left unsupervised. Especially infrastructure markets.
      • simoncion 9 hours ago
        Most markets inherently turn non-free when left unsupervised. That's the insight that folks like Keynes came to (as does any honest, informed observer with two or more functioning brain cells). That's why anti-trust and competition-preserving regulators and laws are essential. Without them, a very few powerful players form [0] cartels and/or tri/du/monopolies and enrich themselves vastly out of proportion with the value that they provide to their customers.

        [0] ...often legally protected...

        • intalentive 9 hours ago
          There won’t be anti-trust as long as elections can be bought and there’s a revolving door between regulators and industry. We need a firewall to separate capital and state.
          • jatora 9 hours ago
            Yep. But everyone's realized this ship has sailed in the US right? Regulatory capture is complete.
        • nothinkjustai 7 hours ago
          No they don’t. What happens is that people want to manipulate the market for a variety of reasons, so they do that, and then really really smart people come along later and try to claim that those manipulators weren’t actually the problem but the solution! It is completely backwards, like reversing cause and effect. It’s like blaming a person for standing in the path of a bullet instead of the one firing the gun.

          Want a free market? Stop messing with it.

          • simoncion 7 hours ago
            > No they don’t.

            Yes, they do. Price competition and R&D are expensive activities. Businesses seek to maximize profit, as they're not charities or governmental entities. Neutralizing competition (whether by eliminating it or colluding with it) and entering into private agreements with suppliers and vendors to box out any potential upstarts increases profit. Another fine way for a monopoly or cartel to increase profit is to make their product cheaper to produce by adulterating it with inferior ingredients, but mislead customers about the fact of the quality loss, the reason for the quality loss, or both.

            The natural stable state of a profit-seeking business is the establishment of a monopoly or cartel. You get the most profit when there is neither a need to compete on price nor a need to expend resources on improving one's product.

            • nothinkjustai 6 hours ago
              That isn’t really true though, monopolies are not sustainable. Pretty much the only way to create a long lived monopoly is to collude with the government (also a monopoly btw).
    • hibikir 8 hours ago
      And even with a free market, there's areas where making up the investment would be difficult, because the amount of effort divided by the number of likely subscribers, still wouldn't pencil out for 20+ years. A lot of Americans live in suburbs that are just low density enough that updating the infra to get fiber anywhere near the house is expensive, and then you might have quite a bit of fiber specific to that one subscriber. The difference in how much infrastructure you need vs a city is substantial.
    • chaostheory 9 hours ago
      Yes, the duopolies are due to regulatory capture in the US.

      A lot of ISPs need permitting that they will never get in order to enter a new market/location.

    • littlestymaar 11 hours ago
      Free market enthusiasts' reasoning is literary the same as Communists': when their grand theory fails to deliver its grandiose promises, it's nver because their believes where nonsensical, but because “it isn't real Communism/free market”.
      • emtel 10 hours ago
        Communist regimes, especially the USSR, had nearly unlimited power to impose exactly the policies that supposedly would help.

        Open societies, in contrast, must balance many competing interests and voting factions, meaning that free market supporters have limited power to enact their preferred policies, meaning they rarely can be implemented in a “pure” form.

        • intalentive 9 hours ago
          That’s a nice story. In reality the “open society” is open to takeover by international finance capital. It’s like running a server with “admin”:”password” SSH credentials — a security vulnerability that cedes control to outsiders. Imagine China and Iran allowing Larry Ellison to own their media, or allowing Larry Fink to control a big chunk of their markets, or allowing George Soros to manipulate their currency and operate NGOs within their borders. That would be plainly idiotic and suicidal.

          “Open society!” coos the fox to the henhouse. LOL, no thanks!

      • 0x3f 9 hours ago
        Seems pretty reasonable to me. Is your contention that we _have_ achieved some pure form of free markets or Communism?
      • thesmtsolver2 8 hours ago
        Totally, tons of govt. regulation and interference is what defines a free market. /s
  • cycomanic 3 hours ago
    I would argue that the Scandinavian countries are a much better example to use than Switzerland. In contrast to Switzerland Sweden leads the world in fibre access build out (while being geographically much larger). While I haven't seen 25 G internet 10G is relatively common and 1G is the default (at around 40-50 euro per month). The model has is quite similar to Switzerland though, open access fibre infrastructure with competition over providing the data, either using equipment of the main provider or using their own equipment.
  • tickerticker 13 hours ago
    I wish this kind of perspective (international comparison) could be applied to several areas of the USA economy: tax compliance, campaign finance, and banking regulation. Good work, OP.

    In Charlotte NC, I have 3 choices of internet providers, two of them fiber.

    As you are doing with this post, "broaden the base." The vast majority of voters do not understand the issues here. That is your biggest obstacle.

    My POV would call this regulatory failure vs free market lie. That way, the enemy is a smaller target.

    Path to progress is to get a friendly state (WY, RI, TX) to pass the legislation. Then shop that around among activists in other states.

    If people knew they were only getting 1/25 of a shared product, that would get political hackles up.

    Thanks for taking the time to think this through and make your argument.

  • oceanplexian 9 hours ago
    We already have this in Utah with Utopia with 53% coverage across the state (A state 5 times the size of Switzerland) so kind of weird the post is acting like Europe is special or something.

    And there are lots of ISPs to choose from, several with 10Gbps symmetrical. Because it's dark fiber that you can literally purchase (I was quoted about $3k to purchase the fiber to the CO), there's nothing stopping you from putting 25Gbps optics on both ends if you are super determined.

    • sbrother 5 hours ago
      Ooo, does everywhere in Sugarhouse have access to this now? We've been up in Park City relying on wireless point-to-point but are about to move back down to the valley and that is very exciting.
  • brailsafe 1 hour ago
    It's nice to hear about examples where the incombent duopoly telcos finally get off their ass as soon as there's the threat of someone else coming in and installing fiber. Sadly, in my hometown, the competition must not be so intense, since Bell and Shaw/Rogers literally just lie about having it, by renaming their service to "Fibe" Internet or literally "Shaw Fibre+ Gig Internet" when Bell's coverage area amounts to only brand new builds or neighborhoods, and Shaw (now Rogers) doesn't have a real fiber network at all, it's just marginally faster download ceilings with 15mbps uploads.
  • kev009 1 hour ago
    I'm on a 100mbit fixed wireless connection after moving out of the city where I used to have a GPON connection. The only thing I really miss is the extremely low latency of GPON plus being in a datacenter city.

    Progress is good, and physical connections are well worth the investment due to how long the stuff will last. But I honestly think VDSL2 and cable are still good enough for most people. The typical family and youth are probably on 5G as much as wifi these days.

  • agateau 33 minutes ago
    I wonder if the spare fiber connections could be use to mesh houses together, in a kind-of decentralized way?
  • ExpertAdvisor01 9 hours ago
    Very misleading article. There is only one provider init7 and coverage is definitely not good in rural areas. Here is an map : https://ftth.init7.net/
  • wespiser_2018 5 hours ago
    The comparison feels off because it treats Switzerland and the United States as interchangeable test cases for “free market vs. not,” when they operate under completely different constraints.

    Switzerland is a small, highly cohesive country with strong local governance, high trust, and tightly scoped systems. The U.S. is a continental-scale federation with massive regional variation, different institutional layers, and far more heterogeneous populations.

    At that scale, you’re not comparing “policy choices,” you’re comparing system complexity. Many policies that work in Switzerland don’t fail in the U.S. because they’re bad, they fail because they don’t scale cleanly across 330M people and 50 semi-autonomous states.

    So using Switzerland as a counterexample to critique U.S. market dynamics isn’t really isolating “free markets” as a variable, it’s bundling in size, governance structure, and social cohesion, then attributing the difference to ideology. I know Switzerland is great, I've been there, but it feels like a bit of an unfair dunk and very much "punching down".

    • Hikikomori 5 minutes ago
      Many states prohibit municipalities to do fiber. Regulatory capture and monopolies are your problem.

      Sweden managed to build out fiber almost everywhere and are much more like some of your states.

  • longislandguido 8 hours ago
    Because Switzerland is the size of Maryland. Imagine pouring all federal resources into one cramped state.

    I thought spamming your own blog was not allowed here.

    • Havoc 7 hours ago
      >Imagine pouring all federal resources into one cramped state.

      Bit silly to compare the size of countries but not scaling resources correspondingly.

    • kube-system 7 hours ago
      Switzerland and the US have almost identical government expenditure per capita. Maryland still doesn't have 25 Gbps home internet.
      • strictnein 7 hours ago
        That's kind of their point. A lot of those government expenditures go to things that citizens of Maryland may not want or benefit from.
        • kube-system 7 hours ago
          More federal spending goes to Maryland per capita than the US average per capita.

          This isn't an an issue of people in Maryland not getting money -- they get robust federal spending and have a robust state budget of their own. This is simply: Americans getting what they vote for, which is notoriously not public infrastructure.

  • AlecSchueler 1 hour ago
    It's because Europe can't innovate right?
  • comrade1234 10 hours ago
    I'm in Zurich and I have 1Gb. My provider is offering higher for no additional cost - I'd have to put in a new modem/fiber-to-Ethernet adapter. However my home network is cat-5e and my switch is also 1Gb so I don't bother - it's pointless.
    • dmoy 7 hours ago
      I get 1G (in the US) and am in a similar boat - I could pay for 8G, and my house is even wired for 10G. But..... all my network equipment is 1G, we rarely saturate it, and I don't want to shell out like a thousand dollars to replace my router, three managed switches, and three AP.

      Actually $1k might not even do it all, but I could probably get the switches and router for just under $1k and leave the WiFi at 1G.

      I suspect my 1G costs a bit more than yours though

    • strictnein 7 hours ago
      Unless your house is gigantic, cat-5e can handle 2.5Gbps just fine.
    • toast0 5 hours ago
      I run 10G on cat-5e, so don't let that be a blocker. Your switch and your devices and your router not doing more than 1G would still be an issue though.

      Of course, my internet is only 1g/1g unless I want to pay to upgrade the munifiber's equipment, and they use good telecom grade equipment, so I don't.

  • ivraatiems 3 hours ago
    It's absolutely true that ISPs in the US are horrifically anti-competitive, and also that they should be treated as utility carriers, like electricity companies, not as "optional" services.

    But that said, it took more than forty years to electrify the entire United States[0]. "The internet", as we think of it, hasn't even existed for 35 years yet. (Yes, I know there were networks before that that the current system arose from, but that's hair-splitting. I don't think the kind of Internet the average person might even consider using existed before, generously, ~1995-1996.) Yet, 95% of US adults use the Internet, implying a penetration at least as high[1].

    The median Internet speed in the US is around 250mbps down and is in the top 10 in the world[3].

    The problem is that access and speeds are not evenly distributed, not that we can't get 22gbps symmetric down/up. We don't need to give people in cities faster Internet; truly, you do not need that speed to do day-to-day tasks. You don't even need the 1gbps down/150mbps up that I have. What we need to do is make sure people in rural areas can access at least the median speed.

    That said, I think we could give it another 15-20 years and see where our country with around 36 times the population and 238 times the landmass is at in terms of speeds.

    [0] https://www.christenseninstitute.org/blog/how-the-history-of... [1] https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/fact-sheet/internet-bro... [2] https://tachus.com/internet-speeds-usa-vs-the-rest-of-the-wo...

  • lava_pidgeon 6 hours ago
    While on surface scratch level this might be a good entry analysis it lacks deeper comparisons to other great networks nations Like Romania or South Korea. Is it cheaper there? What about coverage? Uptimes? Why is the service "better"? Why is it by the way a free market "lie"? ( For me a lie means a wrong information by purpose)
  • ukd1 7 hours ago
    I get 10g symmetric in Austin for $150/m. I had Cox before, and it was $180ish for 1g down and ~50mb up. Things are improving!
    • piperswe 4 hours ago
      What provider has 10G? Highest I've seen is 5. Genuine question - I'll keep them in mind next time I move across town!
    • dmix 5 hours ago
      You can get 8gb fibre for around $65/usd a month in Toronto.
  • ma2kx 14 hours ago
    Init7 has on its blog another amazing write up https://blog.init7.net/en/die-glasfaserstreit-geschichte/
    • jauntywundrkind 12 hours ago
      Congress passed the Telecommunications Act of 1996 in the US which demanded network unbundling, splitting up the fiber/connections versus the internet service, demanding wholesale rate access to infrastructure. It was good.

      Then the courts decided, meh, we just don't like it. We are going to tell the FCC otherwise. It all went away. The incumbent local carriers have now had monopoly power over huge swarths of the infrastructure. No access to dark fiber. https://www.dwt.com/insights/2004/03/federal-court-eviscerat... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Telecom_Associat...

      Verizon also sued, and said, sure, there's laws for unbundling. But, we really don't like them. We aren't going to deploy fiber if we have to share. And the court once again said, oh, yeah, well, that's fine, we'll grant that: we'll strike down congress's law because "innovation" sounds better. https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/cadc/1...

      It's just so so so much corruption, so much meddling from the court to undo everything good congress worked so hard to make happen, that was such an essential baseline to allow competition. I remain very very angry about this all. This was such a sad decade of losing so much goodness, such competition. These damn cartels! The courts that keep giving them everything they want! Bah!!

      I think it was a other case,

  • dlenski 5 hours ago
    I don't understand the desire (fetish?) for high speed home Internet connections at home.

    I have 25 Mbps up. 10 Mbps down. Have had it for years. It's fine.

    It's fine when both my wife and I are working from home and doing calls. It's fine for software development. It's fine for email and web browsing, and everything other than downloading maddeningly large files, 99% of which shouldn't be that large anyway. It's fine for watching streaming shows. Maybe if our kids turn out to be YouTube addicts when they're older we'll upgrade; maybe we won't for that reason.

    What are people doing with their higher-speed Internet connections that makes it valuable to have such fast ones??!

    • Aurornis 5 hours ago
      Pulling or pushing Docker images, downloading LLM models, installing AAA games from Steam. There are so many use cases that you won't see if you're just doing email and web browsing with a little bit of video streaming.

      It's also helpful for off-site backup. I believe off-site backup is very important, and having gigabit upload is very helpful for this.

      > I don't understand the desire (fetish?)

      If you don't need it then you should be happy with what you've got, but calling other people's uses a "fetish" is unnecessary. And weird.

      • carefree-bob 4 hours ago
        I agree that calling it a fetish is weird, but I also have a hard time believing ordinary people are pulling and pushing docker images all the time.

        The reality is that the reason these high speed internet political initiatives fail is that for most people internet access is a solved problem, and there isn't the critical mass of people to push through legislation.

        Which is not to say that for a minority, it's not a solved problem, but the desires of those in a minority situation don't get prioritized in the democratic process.

      • shepherdjerred 4 hours ago
        Gigabit is incredible if you are a dev
      • ronsor 5 hours ago
        It's Stockholm syndrome from what I can tell.
    • imoverclocked 4 hours ago
      The total bandwidth up/down is only part of the story.

      I was on a cell modem until very recently. Just the latency difference between gigabit fiber and anything else is noticeable for me. When a website loads a ton of stuff in a single page, some of that is serialized and requests are back to back instead of parallelized. The longer the serial chain, the higher you multiply your round trip time. This is especially so with auth providers that take you away and back to a site (or similar for online purchases via external sites (eg: PayPal etc.)) All of that time adds up.

      So, my home connection is now down to 11.9 ms to google.com, my wifi adds another 5ms. I did "start timeline recording" and hit the google homepage. It just took 900ms to load the front page in Safari. On a good day with my cell hotspot, my latency is 35 at idle and goes way up (sometimes in seconds) when pushing bandwidth.

      Video calls with 1000ms and higher latency are ... difficult. Especially when everyone else is in the sub 100ms range.

      • Banditoz 1 hour ago
        Yep, latency's also big if you play competitive multiplayer games. With DOCSIS you get ~11ms +- 3ms added to every packet no matter what because it's shoehorned existing cable infrastructure. Fiber is much better in this regard.

        Ping to my public IP's gateway address:

          30 packets transmitted, 30 received, 0% packet loss, time 29031ms
          rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 1.449/1.915/2.212/0.166 ms
    • candeira 4 hours ago
      I've been consulting a long time, and my home is my office.

      Besides the uses other people have suggested, here are some uses I would have for a fast symmetrical connection:

      - Backing up data to my home/office NAS while away.

      - Remoting to my workstation desktop from any location, for any reason.

      - Using my home as a Tailscale exit node for clients for whom it's already a hassle to allowlist my home office's IP, so I can work from anywhere.

      - Switching my nixos configuration using the caches in my home office where my custom derivations are built.

      I have 90Mbps down and 20Mbps up. All of the above is workable but it would be great, amazing if it were faster.

      The remote places I would do this from:

      - the doctors' waiting room because we have teenagers

      - the bleachers of the pool for the diving lessons because we have teenagers

      - the in-laws spare bedroom where we're visiting for an extended time during school holidays but not work holidays because we have teenagers.

      Some of us have different needs, under choices that we make that are optimal for other aspects of our life but not for having a slower asymmetric connection at home.

    • Kodiack 5 hours ago
      I use my home connection for VPN access remotely. I back up snapshots of data every day. I like to be able to download games and Linux ISOs practically on demand. I work from home and often enough faster speeds can avoid several minutes of additional waiting in a day.

      This connection is shared as well. My partner relies heavily on cloud syncing. We both like to stream 4K HDR video. I like being able to get devices updated and ready to use with minimal time spent waiting for downloads.

      I also live in NZ, where multi-gigabit fibre connections are often cheaper than what Americans have to pay for a fraction of the bandwidth. It’s not a notable financial burden or anything, and it’s not like we have data caps to worry about. It’s very much a situation where the use cases naturally find themselves once the option is there.

      Also, 25/10 Mbps is painfully slow for a shared home connection in the modern day. There’s videos on YouTube that can push a higher bitrate than that. The absolute slowest plan that my ISP even offers is 100/20 Mbps for about $35 USD per month, while the most common/baseline plan for most households in NZ is 500/100 Mbps after the fibre carriers continued to increase speeds at the lowest tiers.

    • timschmidt 5 hours ago
      I have gigabit synchronous fiber at home thanks to a group of local tech folk who built out the network. The biggest change for me is that I rely more on my NAS at home over a Wireguard tunnel for things I would have used the cloud or a hosting service for before.

      Going to work? No worries about forgetting a USB stick or portable SSD. I can always just fire up Wireguard and grab it from home.

      Sharing Jellyfin access with family and friends has also been fun.

    • ksec 4 hours ago
      >I have 25 Mbps up. 10 Mbps down. Have had it for years. It's fine.

      Do you mean the other way around, 25Mbps Down and 10 Mbps up?

      It is nice to have, especially when it doesn't cost much. That is why I am perfectly OK with PON rather than dedicated fibre. You only need the 1 or 10Gbps speed for may be a 10 min window per month.

      I do think 25Mbps on a house hold bases is quite low. On a 5Mbps Video file I want the first 10 second buffer, 50Mbps done instantly. While I am loading multiple page in the background. Multiply that with a few more user in family. It is perfectly useable a you said, if you dont mind waiting.

      Otherwise I think 50 - 100Mbps per person is generally the point we see law of diminishing returns.

    • defrost 5 hours ago
      Working from home on raw and cooked SKA data and visualisations being remote served by supercomputing centres, team co-editing of multiple raw RED cinema camera channels.

      Essentially any job that involves massive fat data streams that ends up having a real time collabrative hybrid remote team.

    • denkmoon 5 hours ago
      I don't want to wait 6hrs to download a game patch that's 40gb or whatever because that's sadly the norm. With 1gbit I can do anything and it doesn't induce latency or cause connection quality issues with anything else because no one thing can come close to saturating it really, with a few exceptions (Steam being the main one). I can also seed at high speed to private trackers. It'd be an effort to max out a 25gbit connection at home that's for sure.
    • virgildotcodes 5 hours ago
      Past 200Mbps down I typically see very little real benefit.

      That said, I do find myself downloading packages and watching 4K video all day long. 25Mbps is noticeably slower the majority of the time. You can get by, of course, the same way you can compile an Xcode project on a 2019 Intel Mac (I still think MacOS 26 supports Intel?) but it's a significantly nicer experience on more recent M series machines.

      Who likes to sit around waiting on downloads/compilation?

      Now I'm realizing you said 25Mbps up, 10Mbps down. Wow, assuming this isn't a mistake, 10Mbps is slow enough to make even normal web browsing start to chug IME.

    • ozgrakkurt 5 hours ago
      - Downloading local LLM models

      - Downloading games, movies etc.

      - Updating software.

      - Doing remote data backups or restoring from them.

      - Browsing the internet. Fiber still makes a noticeable difference especially in badly optimized websites.

      • tibbon 5 hours ago
        Maybe I've just got deep scars from the 90's, where I'd wait 15-25 minutes sometimes to download a single mp3.

        I have a FIOS connection here at home, and it seems entirely sufficient. Even AAA steam games, I hit 'download' and go grab a snack in the kitchen and it's done. My server does incremental backups to s3 every night, but its not like i'm sitting there watching it.

        I download a new large model maybe once every other week. It takes a few seconds, maybe minutes. I don't really notice either way? 25x faster doesn't seem like it would make any difference.

    • neonstatic 5 hours ago
      An example from someone who has lived at a condo in Asia. Around 8 PM the internet becomes unusable. Everyone's back home and they want to watch their favorite series. If you need to work at that time, e.g. if you work US hours, you are screwed.

      P.S. I experienced this at different condos in different countries in South East Asia.

      • CyberDildonics 5 hours ago
        Are you sure that isn't wifi interference?
        • eqvinox 5 hours ago
          Most places in Asia, this is due to massive oversubscription. No relation at all to wireless spectrum.
    • gdubs 5 hours ago
      Uploading 15 minute videos to YouTube, downloading hundreds of gigabytes of 3D assets, updating large applications, streaming movies for a 4k projector, frequently downloading beta OS updates, etc, etc, etc.
    • rubiquity 5 hours ago
      The optionality of consuming services from places other than internet titans for one would be nice.
    • LeoPanthera 4 hours ago
      640k ought to be enough for anybody?
  • mirekrusin 2 hours ago
    There should be more of shared infrastructure / government / law patterns, something like wikipedia but for running countries.

    People all over the world seem to be fighting same little battles and falling into same traps all the time.

    There are many known gems that present structure in ecosystems with correct incentives that do work, they should be known/discoverable and they should be consulted when making decisions.

  • ssivark 1 hour ago
    Is the cost of laying fiber (via a public utility) to each household counted as part of the monthly internet bill, or is that funded separately? (eg. as part of property taxes)
  • limagnolia 4 hours ago
    1) Switzerland is tiny compared to the US. 2) FTTH is only available to about 60% of the population right now. It is not clear what percentage of those homes have access to 25 Gbit service.

    While I think the model of having the government own the Fiber lines and selling access to providers has a lot of potential, it would be very expensive to build this out to even 60% of the US.

  • oriettaxx 54 minutes ago
    italy, a house in the so called 'rich' nord est, where 'Lega' party has been ruling for decades:

    * no fiber in the neightbour I am * internet on mobile: 10M when lucky * all houses have no city water pipe

    I'm glad they started to collect blak water (a month ago)

    • Hikikomori 2 minutes ago
      Currently in Palermo old town. Got fiber and get 200+ mbit over wifi. Even 5g when I go out.
  • shell0x 6 hours ago
    Regardless if it's Switzerland, Germany or the USA. Everyone has better than we have in Australia. I can't wait to go back to Asia after citizenship to join the developed world again.
  • zokier 10 hours ago
    Switzerland also happens to have over 5x population density of USA, and 80% higher household median income based on quick google.
    • jmalicki 9 hours ago
      While Switzerland has higher median HHI than the US as a whole, the Bay Area in California does have comparable median household income.

      In the Bay Area, Sonic does offer 10Gbps fiber internet in some places on new buildouts.

      I struggled to find a use case for it, except as a WAN between a homelab and a remote datacenter where I could do crazy things like run an NFS server over the internet or stream training data to a GPU, etc.

      • kalleboo 6 hours ago
        > crazy things like run an NFS server over the internet

        Is that so crazy? If 10G was the default, you could just plop a cheap NAS at home and nobody would need to pay monthly subscriptions for cloud services.

        • cbg0 1 hour ago
          How is 1G insufficient for running a NAS over the internet?
        • jmalicki 5 hours ago
          For cloud services, I only need to match the bandwidth my cellphone has for my home NAS, so 1Gbps would be fine.

          10Gbps is like.... my /home on my desktop could be served via NFS from somewhere else and it would probably be barely noticeable. That's just another level of crazy.

  • panick21_ 16 minutes ago
    As a Swiss person with access to 25Gbit, its honestly just to hard to get a actual router that can do 25Gbit, I opted for 10Gbit, just so I could use a normal router.
  • lclc 3 hours ago
    It's definitely because of the free markets. Only because Init7, the provider who actually provides the 25 Gbit/s, is constantly fighting Swisscom, the government-owned provider.
  • db48x 1 hour ago
    Actually, Ziply Fiber offers 50Gbps symmetrical service in the Northwest of the US: <https://ziplyfiber.com/internet/multigig>.

    The free market is not a lie, it’s just that a lot of our politicians have lost their faith in it. That lead them to agree to local monopolies. Ziply, however, has broken out of that model and has been growing aggressively. It’s not perfect, but it’s good.

    • buildbot 54 minutes ago
      oooooo how did I miss this before
  • therealdrag0 1 hour ago
    Dumb questions if the fiber is open to anyone, what service does the internet provider actually provide?
  • anonymousiam 8 hours ago
    So the author's proposed solution is more government control. Pass.
  • clcaev 10 hours ago
    This factoring of a market to enable competition by centralizing minimal infrastructure seems the bedrock of best governmental practice. Are there other examples to lean on? How do we turn this into common knowledge?
  • ksec 4 hours ago
    Even in Wireless / Mobile Carrier they have company like American Tower / China Tower that shares infrastructure cost. So none of this is new, I always thought the reason it is not done is because of company interest and politics. Internet should be treated just like Electricity and Water.

    There are other things we could do without completely changing the dynamics or policy. We could mandate all home leasing and selling to have Internet Speed labeled. Giving consumer the knowledge and choice. And all future new home to have at least 1Gbps Internet and upgradable to 10Gbps or higher as standard. The market will sort itself out. And give government some space and room to further negotiate terms with companies.

    Now the technical question, why no sharing? why point to point? why 4 fibre and not 2 or 8? And the no sharing is a little bit of gimmick, because at the end of the day everything is shared. The backbone has 100Gbps and you cant have 10 labours all using 25Gbps. I also dont think P2P make sense in a metropolitan city like Tokyo, New York or Hong Kong, especially in high rise, ultra high density buildings with limited space. When 50G-PON barely meet demands we are looking at 100G or 200G-PON. Individual fibre is simple not feasible in those settings.

  • IFC_LLC 6 hours ago
    Good take, and most of the data in the article is quite correct. The problem is a total mix up of cause and effect. The US has had a decent communication network since way back. We had telegraph, telephone and telex. Bell and AT&T and all that stuff. We've invented and piloted modems, T1 and cable TV.

    Our infrastructure at times goes back 200 years old. We have rules and words in today's networking linguo that go back 70 years old. You can't just go and tell that it would have been better this way. It absolutely would. And I'm happy for Swiss people who can have 25gpbs at a fraction of the cost. But you can't do that with an emerging tech that is trying to replace existing architecture.

    Swiss guys built all that after the tech was wide-spread in the world, and they have built it over a very outdated infrastructure. It was a breeze.

    US just unable to use this approach. We can't.

    Should we come up with a new one? Yes. Should we look at the Swiss solution and try to replicate it. Yes. Is it awesome? Yes. Would it work here? No.

    • lava_pidgeon 6 hours ago
      Ehm,

      Do you seriously think 70 years ago Swiss had no telephon net so they create a new one?

      Or is this argument that US is just too special to change?

  • klamann 1 hour ago
    But here’s the crucial part. This article didn't start as LLM slop. It didn't happen because the author actually didn't have anything meaningful to say. It happened because the author chose to "spell check [the article] with AI".
  • exabrial 8 hours ago
    What? There is no free market with wired internet. State, federal, and municipalities entrenched local monopolies through "tax breaks", subsidies, over regulation, piles of permits, and many more.

    The cable/fiber providers played all areas of government like a fiddle.

    • strictnein 7 hours ago
      The amount of people here who think any market failure in the US is due to it being a "free market" is kind of astounding. There are exactly zero "free markets" in the US.
  • andy99 10 hours ago
    What does one achieve with 25 GB internet? Are speeds actually usefully faster, or is there some other bottleneck that makes the practical speed the same as in the US?

    Also any workload I have that is bandwidth heavy would be on clouds machines between data centres and generally very fast. Are there reasons why someone at home would benefit from 25GB internet beyond whatever is available?

    Is this a case of over engineered central planning instead of a blow against the free market?

    • jasonwatkinspdx 10 hours ago
      I think you misunderstood the article, or perhaps didn't read it?

      So the way the system works is each house has 4 physical fibers into it, that go into a central office without being aggregated up. Inside the central office any ISP can offer any speed vs price option they want, because they just patch you in at layer 1.

      So of course, most people wouldn't necessarily need to get 26Gbit. But if you want to offer it as an ISP you can, and it's up to customers to decide if it's worth the price.

      One obvious use case would be folks that work with high resolution video. Uncompressed 8K is about 8TiB per hour of footage. Compressed raw like RED cinema et all are more like 1TiB per hour at the high quality settings.

      25Gbit vs 1Gbit for moving 1TiB is 5 minutes vs 2 hours.

      A quick google says the 25Gbit service from Init7 is $80 bucks a month.

      Sounds like an astoundingly good deal vs what's available in the US to me.

      • raw_anon_1111 9 hours ago
        And a slightly more detailed Google search says it isn’t a sold or universally.
    • manquer 10 hours ago
      Workloads emerge with higher capacity not other way around. Lossless media, to virtual reality applications all scale better with more available bandwidth.

      An average AAA game is 100-200GB today. That is not by accident, The best residential internet of 1Gbps dedicated it is still 30 minutes of download, for the average buyer it is still few hours easily.

      A 2TB today game is a 5 hour download on 1 Gbps connection and days for median buyer. Game developers can not think of a 2TB game if storage capacity, I/O performance, and bandwidth all do not support it.

      Hypothetically If I could ship a 200TB game I would probably pre-render most of the graphics at much higher resolutions/frame-rates than compute it poorly on the GPU on the fly.

      More fundamentally, we would lean towards less compute on client and more computed assets driven approach for applications. A good example of that in tech world in the last decade is how we have switched to using docker/container layers from just distributing source files or built packages. the typical docker images in the corporate world exceed 1GB, the source files being actually shipped are probably less than 10Mb of that. We are trading size for better control, Pre built packages instead of source was the same trade-off in 90s.

      Depending on what is more scarce you optimize for it. Single threaded and even multi-threaded compute growth has been slowing down. Consumer internet bandwidth has no such physics limit that processors do so it is not a bad idea to optimize for pre-computed assets delivery rather than rely on client side compute.

      • raw_anon_1111 9 hours ago
        And even at 1Gbps when I had it, the game servers couldn’t keep up.
        • simoncion 8 hours ago
          I'll assume by "game servers" you mean "video game binary and asset distribution servers that support game stores like Steam and Epic and others".

          When I paid Comcast for 1.5Gbit/s down, Steam would saturate that downlink with most games. I now pay for service that's no less than 100mbit symmetric, but is almost always something like 300->600mbit. Steam can -obviously- saturate that. Amusingly, the Epic Games Store (EGS) client cannot. Why?

          Well, as far as I can tell, the problem is that -unlike the Steam client- the EGS client single-threads its downloads and does a lot of CPU-heavy work as part of those downloads. Back when I was running Windows, EGS game downloads absolutely pegged one of my 32 logical CPUs and left a ton of download bandwidth unused. In contrast, Steam sets like eight or sixteen of my logical CPUs at roughly half utilization and absolutely saturates my download bandwidth. So, yeah... if you're talking about downloads from video games stores it might be that whatever client your video game store uses sucks shit.

          OTOH, if you're talking about video game servers where people play games they've already installed with each other, unless those servers are squirting mods and other such custom resources at clients on initial connect, game servers usually need like hundreds of kbps at most. They're also often provisioned to trickle those distributed-on-initial-connect custom resources in an often-misguided attempt to not disturb the gameplay of currently-connected clients.

    • hparadiz 10 hours ago
      I can actually get 7 gbit but have no idea what I'd use with it. I'd need to upgrade my entire lan just to make use of it.
      • simoncion 9 hours ago
        > I'd need to upgrade my entire lan just to make use of it.

        If the concern is cost (rather than recabling the house) Mikrotik sells solid, inexpensive gear. Its management UIs take a bit of getting used to, but are fine once you've figured them out. You can also find two-port Intel 10gbit NICs on the Newegg "Marketplace" for ~40USD [0], and -while most already come with modules (and you will be informed if they don't)- if the X520s you're sold don't permit non-Intel transcievers, the NIC's firmware can usually be easily modified to change that. [1]

        [0] <https://www.newegg.com/intel-e10g42bfsr/p/N82E16833106041>

        [1] <https://forums.servethehome.com/index.php?threads%2Fpatching...>

    • wat10000 10 hours ago
      I routinely max out my 1Gbps connection downloading large files for work. 25Gbps would cut my waiting substantially. I'm not sure how likely it is that the server would be able to fill that pipe, but if such connections were common, they'd probably make it happen.

      If people don't actually use the extra speed then it's effectively free to provide, anyway. If providers could advertise 25Gbps while only needing the same capacity they do for 1Gbps, I imagine they'd do it just to bring in a few more customers. The fact that they don't suggests it would result in more usage suggests it would be useful.

    • Hikikomori 10 hours ago
      How many times has this argument been made?
  • aetherspawn 8 hours ago
    Australia copied the Swiss model and in a very short period of time we went from 2Mbps flaky copper to now you can upgrade most properties to 2Gbps fiber for around $300 one-off fee.

    I hear 10Gbps is coming soon. The only annoying thing is that ours, despite being terminated the Swiss way, isn’t symmetrical, I think due to congestion on the sea cables?

    • shell0x 6 hours ago
      I highly doubt that. As a German who lived in Asia and now Australia, this is the most incompetent country. They can't get anything right. I live in the city of Sydney and can only get 1 Gbps down and 200 mbps up for 109 AUD a month. I lived in 2017 in Singapore and the internet was already better than that for 1/3 of the price.

      Australia seems to be pretty backwards in general though.

      • cbg0 1 hour ago
        What a time to be alive to see people put "only" in front of "1gbps". We've come very far.
      • suslik 4 hours ago
        In Belgium you get 500/100 for 65 euro, which is even worse.
  • qq66 2 hours ago
    What is the benefit of 25Gbps home internet?
    • Podrod 33 minutes ago
      You literally cannot think of a single benefit for having fast Internet?
  • Aurornis 5 hours ago
    This article is hard to take seriously when it presents 25 Gbps internet like it's available everywhere in Switzerland. Even the page you click on has an "Up to" and requires you to enter your address to check availability.

    That's on top of the usual problems with comparing small European countries to all of America. Switzerland's entire population is barely larger than the population of New York City. There are several metro areas in the US with more people than Switzerland.

    Switzerland is also very, very small. It's lands mass is equal to about 0.5% of the United States. We only have a handful of states smaller than Switzerland.

    There are valid geopolitical discussions to be had, but it's hard to read these articles that single out tiny little European countries and compare them to the sprawling United States and ignore the elephant in the room.

  • jeffrallen 11 hours ago
    This is about urban Switzerland. Way out in the country, we still have crap copper up on poles, which maxes out at 25 Mbits.

    But yes, Swisscom (owners if the old crap copper) do have to let the competitors use it.

  • ekropotin 9 hours ago
    Im genuinely curious what is a use-case for 25GB Internet in a typical Switzerland household?
  • fainpul 41 minutes ago
    Good article which would be even better without the AI slop images.
  • cjs_ac 14 hours ago
    Australia and the UK both have a similar business environment to the Swiss model (but without the superior bandwidth) due to the way that their government-owned telephone monopolies were privatised: Telecom Australia (now called Telstra) and British Telecom (now called BT) were required to allow their newly-formed competitors to sell services over their networks (for appropriate maintenance fees, of course).

    The US and German models are consequences of just yelling 'Free market!' without stopping to think about what's actually being sold in that market, and how to encourage genuine competition.

    • twelvedogs 11 hours ago
      Australia is still pretty messy, Telstra was privatised and pretty much stopped upgrading their network for years around the 24 mb ADSL level

      Eventually we had a forward thinking prime Minister create a new company that started running fibre to homes and wholesaling it to non government businesses but they lost power and fibre to the home became fibre to the neighbourhood running the last bit over existing phone lines

      Eventually it was returned to fibre to the home as upgrading existing lines to run shitty 100mb connections was actually much more expensive than just running fibre

      We're only now starting to get to the point where fibre is fairly available when it could have been ten years ago

      • 0xy 10 hours ago
        They stopped upgrading their network because government was publicly implying they'd do something nationally on broadband.

        Before then, they were rolling out fast internet. Telstra's cable network (aka. BigPond Ultimate at the time) could do 100Mbps fifteen years ago!

        Today, the Australian government continues to stomp on the neck of the free market. Numerous initiatives for faster and better privately operated fiber wholesale networks have been sunk by the government, including TPG and others.

        TPG wanted to roll out faster AND cheaper fiber in the inner city. Government said no thanks, we'll keep NBN with abysmal upload speeds to protect our investment.

        • twelvedogs 1 hour ago
          I disagree, Sol Trujillo became ceo of Telstra in 2005 and immediately started cutting everything to the bone, Kevin Rudd didn't even get into power until 2007 and the NBN wasn't announced until 2009, fairly large gap there
        • November_Echo 7 hours ago
          > TPG wanted to roll out faster AND cheaper fiber in the inner city. Government said no thanks, we'll keep NBN with abysmal upload speeds to protect our investment.

          Allowing other networks to take away the easiest, highest margin customers would break the NBN. It would likely lead us back to an unfit for purpose, "Free Market" situation, that further disadvantages rural, regional, and remote communities.

        • FireBeyond 10 hours ago
          > Telstra's cable network (aka. BigPond Ultimate at the time) could do 100Mbps fifteen years ago!

          Mhmm, it was great. But at what cost, you had on most plans a 1GB monthly cap.

          And then when I went to an ISDN connection they wanted 9c per megabyte. To be fair, they would let you do things like join their squid proxy caching hierarchy, but bleh.

    • consp 11 hours ago
      We've had the same issue in the Netherlands as the UK (telecom getting free infrastructure), and the end result is them blocking every fiber connection for years and then buying up all of the ones trying when it suited them. And the cable companies had a freebie for decades because they got most of their infra for free without the "share space" requirement (because only a major part, and not all, was funded by municipalities and it took a while to get them all in one company), and the cable companies decided not to invest in anything. And now we have the fiber-to-the-bottom where they are installing as fast as they can, but only with a governmental monopoly in place with dubious sharing agreements.

      Due to "competition" and "fare ride" my soon to be (it's taken over 4 years and likely will take forever..) fiber will cost me 22 euro/month more than if I would have gotten the cable from across the road ... but the companies have "exclusive" rights since they would not have "financed" it otherwise (the quotes are all marketing bs).

      • 0x3f 9 hours ago
        In the UK, they split the infra provider (Openreach) from the consumer company (BT). So it's no longer BT giving access to the other providers.

        In theory, BT has no special access to the infra at all, and they're on a level playing field with other providers.

        That may not be perfectly true in practice, but my impression is there are no large differences between providers on the same infra. Choosing between providers mostly comes down to packaging and customer service in the end.

    • yawnxyz 9 hours ago
      Australia has the absolute worst internet
    • roughly 9 hours ago
      > The US and German models are consequences of just yelling 'Free market!' without stopping to think about what's actually being sold in that market, and how to encourage genuine competition.

      The point of a system is what it does. In America, it fosters centralization of wealth on a massive scale. That’s the point, not some unexpected side effect of the theory nobody saw coming.

    • globular-toast 1 hour ago
      The UK could have had it decades ago, but the Thatcher government didn't allow it. Instead the UK gave permission to a couple of companies to dig up the streets and lay infrastructure in places of their choice. Those companies later merged into one shitty company called Virgin Media. The places they targeted were easy, dense neighbourhoods. BT, on the other hand, was required to provide everyone in the country with a phone line, no matter how remote. Today Virgin Media offers asymmetric gigabit and it's still the only choice for many because real fibre rollout is happening at a glacial pace. They also get people to sign 18 month contracts which aren't terminated if you move house. In some places, like mine, existing conduit means some ISPs are allowed to run their own fibre and these are some of the best connections available today. But most ISPs still get you to sign 18 month or longer contracts. The shitty ones, like Virgin Media won't even terminate your contract if you move to place they don't supply.
  • poly2it 14 hours ago
    This article would be so much better without the generic AI-generated images everywhere.
    • sschueller 14 hours ago
      Agreed but I didn't want to just take random images from the web that I don't have the rights too and I my artistic skills are not good enough.
      • LoganDark 14 hours ago
        You could just not generate extra images that aren't relevant to the article. I like the charts and diagrams even when they're AI, because they serve a purpose. But the extra images for flair or whatever are completely pointless and even annoying.
        • Svip 14 hours ago
          I would go a little further (and apologies for being rather blunt): but I find the over-use of irrelevant images to be rather insulting, as if I am unable to maintain focus on an article, without the frequent shiny object.
          • LoganDark 14 hours ago
            I wouldn't necessarily call that further. The images I like are relevant because they visually explain things that are helpful. The images I don't like are irrelevant because they serve no purpose other than to Be Images for no good reason.
        • sschueller 14 hours ago
          Ok thanks. I will keep that in mind for my next post.
          • heystefan 10 hours ago
            Please ignore them, the images definitely helped understand the issue better. Don't anchor on a couple of grouchy hn posters.
    • 0xsn3k 14 hours ago
      i agree, i do like the article content itself, but the AI-generated images (clearly nano banana btw) really kill the credibility. even just using stock images with the watermarks clearly visible would be better
  • grg0 9 hours ago
    Ho-lee smokes is that Speedtest screenshot even real? Have some mercy for those of us in third-world infrastructure (US).
  • oyebenny 2 hours ago
    I'm jealous.
  • btorretta 7 hours ago
    why is it a lie? a natural monopoly doesn't bar other entrance, it's just naturally difficult, like space travel. also, unpopular comment but who cares? my Internet does everything I want it to and I'd wager that the price from the swiss government is highly subsidized. A market means a meeting of supply and demand, it's possible that currently the swiss speed is overboard for most users.
  • burnt-resistor 12 hours ago
    Municipal and co-op broadband in the US needs subsidies, loans, replication, and expansion. Where I live has a farmer co-op for electricity and internet in a mostly sparse, rural area with various residential housing developments scattered around. What was GFiber in the regionally-nearby metropolitan area had beta 20 Gbps internet for $250 USD/mo. 1 Gbps symmetric fiber co-op is $100 USD/mo. Prices are high compared to Europe. Possibly not high prices compared to Australia.
  • danielmarkbruce 6 hours ago
    Path dependence is a thing.
  • kylehotchkiss 5 hours ago
    How many Switzerlands is USA again
  • renewiltord 5 hours ago
    I think there’s quite a little bit missing here. As an example, Switzerland’s road/rail lines and US road:rail lines are both treated in this way and the outcomes are different. So I think the dominant effect isn’t in this form of building.

    In addition, requiring fiber to each new home would expand housing costs in the US substantially because many are not located close by to existing fiber networks.

    I’m not familiar with Swiss government policy but their government construction efforts are frequently far more successful for lower costs than ours. I cannot say whether Switzerland does it differently but usually in the US if there is surplus to be captured it is captured. As an example, if the Swiss system were to be implemented with US tools it would look like a government project would here: private companies would be invited to build the fiber to each home, and eventually one would win the contract and if the economic benefit would be $1b, they would charge $0.99b to construct it. M

    If the government itself attempts to build it, it is constrained by its pension obligations and its desire to remain solvent to not actually have employees on staff. It therefore will use contractors in order to do things and we’re back in situation 1.

    Governments originally formed for this kind of shared task and to enforce no free riding on it. But whatever factors drive US politics, US government purposes are to extract maximally from economically productive classes and redirect it to politically productive classes - through the use of selective government contracts and populist giveaways.

  • bethekidyouwant 13 hours ago
    Why isn’t france your European example? Its larger and better served than switzerland
  • raw_anon_1111 9 hours ago
    This article is technically incorrect on so many levels I didn’t even bother to finish it.

    1. There may be a territorial monopoly on cable. But there is nothing stopping other companies from laying fiber. There are areas - including where I use to live that had cable and the phone company laying fiber

    2. Everyone on the internet is using a “shared” connection. The difference is whether it is shared at the last mile or upstream. If your ISP doesn’t provision enough upstream capacity, the last mile doesn’t matter.

    3. Fiber is rarely shared at the last mile.

    4. Just a little research says 25Gbps is not universal across Switzerland

    5. When I did have AT&T Fiber that advertised at 1GB u/d, it didn’t slow down no matter what time of day.

    Please don’t suffer from the Gell-Mann Amnesia Effect. M

    • ragall 4 hours ago
      > But there is nothing stopping other companies from laying fiber.

      Yes there is: the cost.

      > Fiber is rarely shared at the last mile.

      It is in Switzerland. That's the whole point of this setup.

      > Just a little research says 25Gbps is not universal across Switzerland

      It is in the big cities. Elsewhere the same arrangement is true, but on a lower scale.

      • raw_anon_1111 4 hours ago
        You know being shared at the last mile is exactly what you don’t want?

        The article made it seem like everyone in Switzerland had access to 25Gbps - thst isn’t true.

        • ragall 3 hours ago
          The last mile is owned by the local monopoly and can be switched over to any provider. In that sense it's shareable, but the physical medium is not shared. This is very good.

          > The article made it seem like everyone in Switzerland had access to 25Gbps

          Lack of reading comprehension skills.

  • dangus 7 hours ago
    Before I start with my real comment I'll point out that the AI slop images really detract from this article and the author should stop.

    To be fair to America here, it's pretty well served overall and is doing a lot better than the past. Average speeds are at around 100 Mbps with extremely widespread advanced 5G networks doing even better than that.

    Cellular in particular is an area where the USA still seems to be ahead of most places, although they certainly pay for it. (Even that has gotten way, way better. I'm getting really nice MVNO service with unlimited data and even a decent unlimited tethering plan for less than $30/month)

    25 Gigabit is nice but that's so expensive on the client device side to the point where it's basically unattainable for any consumer. Your average consumer primarily uses the Internet via WiFi devices that might max out at 300Mbps practical speeds or lower depending on when they purchased their devices and WiFi access point and their distance from it.

    Then you've got the problem of the speed on the other end. 25Gb fiber is great until you realize that the server you are downloading from is only going to give you 1/100th a lot of the times.

    I haven't even mentioned the fact that you're now adding CPU and SSD bottlenecks to the equation. I'm pretty sure 25Gb/s is higher than the maximum write speed on my SSD.

    I have gigabit fiber at home and the ability to buy faster speeds from my ISP but I find the idea totally pointless when that means I would have to buy $500 in networking equipment (if not more) and possibly rewire my home (currently sketchy Cat 5e that seems to be installed poorly and I'm lucky to have that). I even have the latest WiFi 7 from a highly reputable prosumer brand along with very new WiFi 7 and 6E 6Ghz client devices but the highest speed I see using those devices where I want to use them is around 600Mbps.

    • Karuma 3 hours ago
      Only the images? The entire article is pure AI slop. But no one even cares anymore... People seem to love this kind of empty text, or no one even reads anymore, or everyone here is a bot already... Who knows.
      • sschueller 8 minutes ago
        The article is not AI slop.

        I spent 4 days on it and the video I made to go along with it with me speaking every word. The video has no AI, it is all stock video and audio footage which I pain stackenly stiched together in DaVinci Resolve.

        I used AI to spell check and fix my ESL grammer in the article. Initially I also generated a number of unnecessary AI images which I removed again. I only left the ones that explain certain things like the p2p model.

  • FpUser 8 hours ago
    Switzerland - self hosting paradise.
  • gigatexal 10 hours ago
    what a well written article.

    makes me very much consider moving to Switzerland. I'd be happy with symmetric 5Gbit internet. Anything more would be overkill imo.

    I hated working with ISPs in the states. Ever try cancelling Comcast? You literally get routed to a department whose sole reason for being is to talk you out of it.

    I really like the idea, share the lines compete on execution.

    One thing the article doesn't mention is in Germany the electricity and gas lines are more or less this approach. I can switch electricity providers like the article author can switch ISPs. It's a common practice to do so about 1x a year to take advantage of customer acquisition incentives.

  • deafpolygon 14 hours ago
    if the internet cabal in the US was actually a free market, you’d be right!
  • some_furry 8 hours ago
    Another thing that I think Europeans often fail to take into consideration is scale.

    USA: 9,147,590 km^2

    Switzerland: 41,295 km^2

    That's a factor of 221.5 to 1.

    • martinald 7 hours ago
      Yes but if you compare urban areas (where 80% of people live in both continents) in US and Europe it's not massively different (Europe maybe 2-4 more dense depending on the country/city).

      Obviously you're not going to lay fibre to the last 1% of population in the US (for the most part).

  • lamnbt 32 minutes ago
    [dead]
  • dlcarrier 12 hours ago
    tl;dr: The lie here is the assumption that the US has, or has ever had, a free market for wired internet service providers.

    The article initially does a good job of describing the situation, but gets a bit confused when it gets to the history of the US, especially this line "This is what happens when you let natural monopolies operate without oversight." What it's discussing is not natural monopolies; it's discussing public utilities which are granted monopolies expressly through regulation, not despite it. Also, the US has a lot of oversite on wired ISPs. The prices are almost always approved by regulators.

    A good example of a natural monopoly is Google search. It's pretty common for people to get frustrated by it, and look for other search engines. There's also multiple companies trying to compete with it. Normally this would mean that users would migrate to the competitors, but Google's search algorithms have been so good that practically every user has stayed with Google.

    Natural monopolies are still easily disrupted, if the naturally-occurring barrier changes. For example, Internet Explorer had a natural monopoly, due to Microsoft's "embrace and extend" strategy giving it many capabilities that other web browser didn't have. When the internet market quickly migrated from a feature-first market to a security-first market, Internet explorer was quickly overtaken by Chrome and Firefox. There's a reasonable chance the same thing will happen with Google Search, as the market for it's search algorithm is overtaken for the marked for LLM based web searches, which Google is pretty bad at.

    Anyway, the reason Comcast or Charter is the only one that provides cable internet in your area isn't because it's too expensive for anyone else to deploy cables. At the margins they operate, it would be well worthwhile to invest in a parallel infrastructure, but it's downright prohibited almost everywhere in the US. In fact, they may own the rights to lay cable, despite having never laid any. This is the case where I live, for the phone company, which plays by similar rules.

    Fixed-wireless internet providers are starting to provide some competition, as backhauls have improve enough that cellular providers can compete with wired internet providers. T-Mobile is currently offering $20/mo fixed wireless add-on plans, with a five-year price guarantee. To complete with the fixed-wireless market, Comcast has launched a service called NOW Internet, which starts at $30/mo with a similar price guarantee and no no add-on requirement.

    Speaking of "starting at", a large source of high prices is the common use of FUD to pressure users into paying for more than they need, or can even use. Very few households peak at more than even 40 Mbps (https://www.wsj.com/graphics/faster-internet-not-worth-it/) and the starting price of almost every provider is above that, but must customers have been talked into higher-tier plans.

    The only web hosts that regularly provide data faster than that are video game distributors, so if you are in the type of household that would like to download game updates in minutes, instead of tens of minutes, while also watching multiple 4K video streams, then comparing other plans may be worthwhile, otherwise stick with the absolute cheapest plan available from all providers that serve your area. (And, if you are big on multi-player gaming, selecting the ISP with the lowest latency will be beneficial, but all plans from a given service will be the same latency.)

    • zimpenfish 10 hours ago
      > The only web hosts that regularly provide data faster than [40Mbps] are video game distributors

      No? I've been trying to download my MyMiniFactory library[0] and I'm currently getting 25MBps over 5 downloads. A single download will easily do 15MBps.

      [0] Which sucks, even at high speed - they have no API, no bulk download, and you're limited to 6 items at a time. I have to click through 1000+ items with easily 5000+ sub-items and individually download each one.

    • LoganDark 10 hours ago
      > tl;dr: The lie here is the assumption that the US has, or has ever had, a free market for wired internet service providers.

      The point is that "free market" is a lie, not that the US ever had one.

  • LeonTing1010 4 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • 3yr-i-frew-up 7 hours ago
    [dead]
  • black_13 2 hours ago
    [dead]
  • amazingamazing 14 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • sschueller 14 hours ago
      Slop? I wrote this myself over the last 4 days.

      [edit] Since people really hate the AI images, I have removed all of the ones not relevant to the article. As soon as the github action is through it will be deployed.

      • mfi 14 hours ago
        The article was well written, really enjoyed it and I learned something as a Swiss citizen using this outlet every day! But I agree with the other commenters, I would replace the AI generated images with something else, they drag drown the articles credibility IMO
        • LoganDark 14 hours ago
          I would get rid of just the irrelevant images and leave the others. There are a few that are actually helpful.
      • raw_anon_1111 9 hours ago
        Your article has so many bad premises it might have gone better with AI

        https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47654841

      • LoganDark 14 hours ago
        The AI-generated images really hurt the article. I found myself skipping everything except for the charts/diagrams.
        • sschueller 14 hours ago
          Would you prefer a large wall of text? If that is what people rather have I would leave them out next time. I find it easier to read with images in between the text but I agree, it would be better if the images where not AI.
          • LoganDark 14 hours ago
            Again like I said, I don't mind the charts and diagrams but I don't like the random extras.

            First image: extra. "The Paradox" section header: extra. "The Natural Monopoly" section header: sort of helpful. "The German Model" and "The American Model" headers: also sort of helpful. Also, the chart of monopoly territories is definitely helpful. But then after that, the "monopoly power" image is complete slop. "The Swiss Model" header is sort of helpful. The following couple of photos are also helpful! Speedtest result is helpful. But then the image after that is kind of pointless. "The Oversight" header is kind of pointless. The photo after that is kind of helpful. "The Answer" header I can't really make sense of and I'd lean more towards not helpful.

            • sschueller 13 hours ago
              Thank you for your feedback. I have adjust the article now.
              • LoganDark 13 hours ago
                Thank you, this is a lot better!
  • jmyeet 9 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • joe_the_user 13 hours ago
    Looks like a good article explaining some key concepts like natural monopoly.

    And yeah, the US model is to tout free enterprise to the skies but then have the state give control of a given market to a single or a couple of monopolists.

    The problem is the US has created a constituency of state-dependent small and large business people whose livelihood depends this contradictory free-enterprise ideology.

  • userbinator 10 hours ago
    All connections to the Internet are at some level "shared", except perhaps if you get a direct connection to one of the core routers. As others have mentioned, this is in a dense area and much closer to being in a LAN environment.

    The other point that I'd like to bring up is how useful is a 25G connection to your local demarcation point if your speeds to most sites will be far lower in practice because the Internet isn't circuit-switched.

    Care to give a rebuttal?

    • userbinator 6 hours ago
      Apparently this discussion is full of people who don't even know how the Internet actually works. Not surprising for an article that is basically ragebait.
  • perching_aix 9 hours ago
    The author keeps repeating this idea of a "dedicated internet connection" (DIA), and it kind of just irks me. Not because the author is wrong in how they use it, but because the term itself I find misleading, and I hate to see it continue to poison the common discourse.

    A dedicated last-mile connection gives you a dedicated link to your ISP’s edge network, not a dedicated path across the internet. You won’t compete with your immediate neighbors on a shared access network anymore, sure, but you’re still sharing the ISP core, peering links, and transit links with the rest of their customers.

    In practice this usually works well enough, because ISPs engineer their core and peering capacity with low over-subscription, especially for business and DIA customers. So you can often push near line rate anyway, but not because you have a truly reserved slice of the internet. A Switzerland-sized country would need like petabit-scale connectivity to provide actually dedicated 25G links (or even just 1G links) to everyone.

    • userbinator 6 hours ago
      Very true. The bottleneck isn't going to be the last mile nearly all the time. In any case, it's clear we're arguing with a ragebait article and a bunch of others who have basically no understanding of how the Internet (or networks in general) works.