Tim Wu and Derek Slater (Columbia University – Columbia Law School and Google, Inc.) have posted Homes with Tails on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
America’s communications infrastructure is stuck at a copper wall. For the vast majority of homes, copper wires remain the principal means of getting broadband services. The deployment of fiber optic connections to the home would enable exponentially faster connections, and few dispute that upgrading to more robust infrastructure is essential to America’s economic growth. However, the costs of such an upgrade are daunting for private sector firms and even for governments. These facts add up to a public policy challenge.
Our intuition is that an innovative model holds unrealized promise: household investments in fiber. Consumers may one day purchase and own fiber connections that run from their homes. They would then be able to connect to a variety of service providers, including today’s Internet, television, and telephone services, as well as ultra-bandwidth intensive services of the future. Consumers would have the opportunity not only to get a fast broadband connection, but also benefit from greater competition and lower prices in the retail service market.
And here is a bit more from Derek’s post on the paper:
We call this property model “Homes with Tails,” for the fiber would
form part of the property right in the home. Key facets of our approach
include:1. A “condominium” model for fiber ownership, in which individual
strands of fiber are sold to consumers, while maintenance and other
collective needs are managed jointly.2. Private firms and municipalities could consider selling fiber connections based on this model; and
3. Governments could consider using various mechanisms to support
consumer purchases, including a tax credit to homeowners or renters who
purchase a broadband connection.The idea of customer-owned fiber may seem odd, but it is important
to remember that many items that consumers buy today would have seemed
very strange not long ago. Until the personal computer, a computer was
something that only large companies owned. For decades, telephones were
available only for lease, not for purchase. Home fiber could be the
next technology that moves into the realm of consumer property.That said, the goal of this paper is rather limited: to outline what
customer-owned fiber might look like and suggest why it is worth
investigating further. We do not suggest that this model is the panacea
for broadband policy challenges; rather, it might serve as part of a
broader solution. Furthermore, there are many empirical questions and
obstacles to successful implementation that cannot be fully evaluated
at this time. In particular, no market for consumer purchase of fiber
currently exists, and there is a collective action problem in deploying
a network of this sort. The only way to truly test this model’s
feasibility is to attempt to implement it. Below, we describe one trial
that is already ongoing in Ottawa, Canada, and more experiments of this
kind would provide important insights.In the end, the intuition behind this paper is as old as property
theory: that people will spend more on and value more that which they
own.
Very interesting idea–recommended!
