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Canada beats U.S. in broadband speeds

Canadian broadband users enjoy significantly higher network speeds than that of the world’s largest superpower, according to a report released by the Washington-based Communications Workers of America.

The report, based on aggregated data from nearly 80,000 broadband users, found that the median real-time download speed in Canada is 7 Mbps, versus 1.9 Mbps in the U.S. Canada still comes well after several other industrialized nations, however. Japan’s download speeds were clocked at 61 Mbps, while South Korea’s reached 45 Mbps and France 17 Mbps.

The report is based on data collected through the speed test at SpeedMatters.org, a CWA project launched last September “to help bridge the digital divide and keep America competitive by encouraging the government to adopt national policies to bring about universal, affordable high speed broadband access for all Americans, no matter where they live.” The CWA is a labor union with a membership of more than 700,000 in fields such as telecommunications, media, manufacturing, health care and aviation.

According to the report, the U.S. is 16th in the world in deployment and availability of high-speed networks.

“Speed defines what is possible on the Internet. Speed determines whether we will have the 21st century networks and communications necessary to grow our economy and jobs,” said CWA President Larry Cohen, in a statement. “It’s clear that other nations — all of our economic competitors, in fact — have made the decision to promote true high speed networks. The longer we delay, the more we put our economic growth at risk.”

The CWA said it supports many of the provisions in the Broadband Data Improvement Act, a bill introduced in May by Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii). The legislation would require the collection and evaluation of data on broadband deployment, an upgraded definition of “high speed,” and grant programs for states and local communities to conduct their own broadband mapping.

“The first step in an improved broadband policy is ensuring that we have better data on which to build our efforts,” Inouye said at the time. “In a digital age, the world will not wait for us. It is imperative that we get our broadband house in order and our communications policy right. But we cannot manage what we do not measure.”

The CWA report also ranks individual states based on average Internet download connection speeds. The state with the fastest connection speed is Rhode Island, at 5.011 Mbps., followed by Kansas, at 4.167 Mbps; New Jersey, at 3.68 Mbps; New York, at 3.436 Mbps.; and Massachusetts, at 3.004 Mbps. The states ranking at the bottom are Wyoming, at 1.246 Mbps.; Iowa, at 1.262 Mbps; West Virginia, at 1.117 Mbps; South Dakota, at 0.825 Mbps; and Alaska, at 0.545 Mbps.

That means that it would take 15 seconds to download a 10MB file in Rhode Island and nearly two and a half minutes to download the same file in Alaska, the CWA report found.

The voluntary speed test was conducted online at SpeedMatters.org between September 2006 and May 2007. Most of the people who took the test had either a DSL or cable modem connection. Because 30 per cent to 40 per cent of Americans still use a dial-up connection, the median speeds in the report were higher than if dial-up users had also participated, the report said.

In May, U.S. Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.), chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet, held a hearing on draft legislation to address broadband mapping and data collection in the U.S.

Markey said at the time that the current data-collection methods used by the Federal Communications Commission are “inadequate and highly flawed.” He said that according to the FCC, a single broadband subscriber in a certain ZIP code area could indicate that the entire ZIP code area has broadband availability, even if the sole subscriber is a business and not a residential consumer. Such interpretations could result in inaccurate measurements of broadband availability and use, Markey said.

He also said that the federal Telecommunications Act compels the FCC to assess the nationwide availability of “advanced telecommunications capability,” which Congress defined as having “high speed” capability. However, he said, the FCC defined “high speed” in 1999 as meaning 200Kbit/sec. Markey said the draft bill proposes increasing the definition tenfold to 2 Mbps.

Markey also said that the U.S. lags behind other nations when it comes to cost of broadband access. He said speeds of 50 Mbps., which is not available to residential consumers in this country, is available to Japanese consumers for roughly US$30 per month. U.S. consumers typically pay $20 for about 1 Mbps. service and $30 to $40 for about 4 Mbps. service.

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