Verizon, T-Mobile Overstate Wireless Coverage To Nab Billions In Undeserved Subsidies
from the same-as-it-ever-was dept
As more than $50 billion in broadband subsidies begin to flow, entrenched U.S. broadband providers are working overtime to try and secure their share of it by any means necessary. That has included sabotaging grant applications from competitors, changing state laws to dictate who can or can’t get these subsidies, and falsely inflating their actual broadband coverage to grab subsidies for areas they don’t actually serve.
Case in point: wireless providers like Verizon and T-Mobile have been dramatically overstating their 5G coverage to try and grab government subsidies for their fixed wireless access (FWA) broadband service. FWA is basically 5G for home use; wireless providers have been making some fairly modest inroads selling the service to users tired of substandard DSL or expensive cable service.
But their claims of who can actually get this service have been comically overstated to grab subsidies they may not deserve, both Bloomberg and Telecompetitor report:
According to Bloomberg, T-Mobile claims its fixed wireless offering can serve 45 million addresses, or more than a third of the 114 million locations listed on the government (a.k.a. FCC) maps. A Telecompetitor double-check of the map data updated February 1 shows a somewhat lower 40 million addresses for T-Mobile that would be considered served according to BEAD program rules.
Verizon claims it can cover 19 million locations, Bloomberg said. Here, too, Telecompetitor found a somewhat lower number between 17 million and 18 million locations that would be considered served by Verizon as of the February 1 map update.
Here’s the problem: by overstating their 5G home coverage in rural areas, wireless carriers are potentially preventing millions of addresses from being eligible for funding in the $42.5 billion Broadband Equity Access and Deployment (BEAD) program.
Numerous local cooperatives, municipalities, and locally-owned utilities have been stepping up to deploy fiber in areas long neglected by dominant local monopolies. This flood of new competitors keen on deploying less expensive fiber access is a nightmare for all incumbents, whether we’re talking about Comcast or Charter, or the nation’s wireless providers.
The FCC and NTIA have generally done a good job noting that fiber should receive subsidy priority, given that if you’re going to spend taxpayer money on broadband, it should be on the future-proof variety, and not on capacity-constrained services like Starlink or 5G… unless absolutely nothing better is available. 5G simply faces spectrum capacity and other constraints fiber doesn’t, including restrictions on video streaming normalized in the wake of the death of any real net neutrality oversight.
Due to shaky maps, there’s going to be an ocean of challenges across millions of addresses, and the FCC has generally been both feckless and incompetent when it comes to standing up to ISPs on any issue of importance, whether that’s directly ripping off consumers or overstating service availability. Their track record so far on correcting challenges to ISP coverage claims are mixed at best:
It’s important to note that stakeholders had the opportunity to challenge the FCC broadband map data. It’s also worth noting, though, that sources have told Telecompetitor that the FCC only approved a small portion of challenges made and offered little or no detail to explain why certain challenges were rejected.
Keep in mind that $42.5 billion in BEAD broadband subsidies from the infrastructure bill is only just starting to flow. We’re going to be inundated by a flood of stories showcasing incumbent telecom giants getting money for service they don’t deliver, in areas they don’t actually reach. I know this because this is how it’s always been; and U.S. telecom regulators, consistently worried about their post-FCC political careers at telecom industry think tanks, routinely lack the backbone for real reform.
Filed Under: 5g, bead funding, broadband, digital divide, fcc, fiber, high speed internet, infrastructure act, subsidies, telecom, wireless
Companies: t-mobile, verizon


Comments on “Verizon, T-Mobile Overstate Wireless Coverage To Nab Billions In Undeserved Subsidies”
It used to be called a CRIME
A crime worthy of executive bonuses.
and not a thing will be said about it, let alone done! and why? you may well ask but in reflection the answer is painfully clear. those giving the go ahead for the subsidies get some of it back, into their own personal ‘back pockets! that means these corporations/companies/industries can carry on regardless, still giving piss poor service and massive salaries for their hierarchy!! disgusting!
So whats the punishment for this kind of fraud? Because it’s fraud.
And what’s the govt doing in terms of auditing the companies claims? Of course, with so much money on the table they are doing proper auditing of the information provided by the carriers, right? RIGHT?
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The punishment is nothing because telecom companies have Congress firmly gripped by the balls and are full of cartoonishly evil and greedy executives.
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Matthew said something coherent and in line with reality!
Is this Bizarro World??
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It’s capitalist dictatorship. When corporations are in charge, you have no freedom.
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A broken clock is right twice a day.
Sadly, even I’m surprised that Matthew hates the rot as well. Though I suspect it’s not for the reasons we all hate the rot…
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We are already seeing protocols and TCP/IP being reverse engineered to bring new network infrastructure growth in the 1st world.
If two devices use the same protocol, they can communicate, much like languages. If a different protocol is used, it is segregated from all of the smartphones, IOT and other comoromised devices, but many of the same features (communication) are available.
Data is network and protocol agnostic.
Community broadband projects could start Internet 1.1 by using a different protocol on devices and network equipment and create domestic infrastructure that is segregated from the global network by simply using a variation of TCP/IP. Writing new protocols is what makes Internet 2.0 and greater possible.
The evolution of innovation changes many of the commerce models for the better. You can have a new phone network on Internet 1.1 or Internet 2.0 and no longer have any concerns of hostile cultures or nations. Its already on motion 🙂
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Yeah. Even the maxmind GeoIP database has been tainted by corrupt organizations selling IP pools to other countries, making the security feature of blocking continents and countries useless.
https://www.theregister.com/2023/02/15/apnic_election_controversy/
New variations of TCP/IP can reuse the entire IPV4 IP pool and have a clean slate design with security implemented by design.
Assigning IP pools by region is easy and there are more than enough IPV4 addresses to accomadate new infrastructure and new growth on domestic and regional levels.
New protocols will not even use IP addresses or domain names. Thats already a big win for nurturing new innovation. Internet 2.0 is a 21st century advancement.
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A new digital era of innovation sounds good.
Putting granny on a domestic digital network prevents most of the foreign scams and spam too.
Remote work is also evolved without a percentage of the 5 billion plus Internet users attacking IP addresses 24/7. Putting domestic networks on their own island changes the pace of disposible technology too. The technology is “good enough” in many ways, making 10 or 15 year upgrade cycles normal again.
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I think a lot of technology people that have looked at the problem of bit rot agree that new data infrastructure is the easiest solution to that problem.
Just walk away and take all of the quality data to a new network. It addresses hardware rot and software rot too. What was once old can effectively be new again and usable.
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Someone mentioned a generation getting zantac’d by bad information, but it looks like medicine rot causes cancer too.
https://www.reuters.com/legal/judge-weigh-key-evidence-ahead-first-zantac-cancer-trial-2023-02-16/
Those that avoided untested/unverified snake oil with medicine and data avoid that whole situation.
Bit rot and bad processes are real.
Hitting the right pages
I have a net10 phone
Mothers was Tracfone
Both owned by Verizon.
Along with about 10 other smaller companies.
Then lookup Internet phone on Google play, and there are Other services. Very interesting one’s. You can take a Cheap phone and never use the Cellphone service.
The understanding of this, tends to be Privacy, if there is any.
The only thing you get from Cellphones is being able to call/receive calls Anywhere you are(maybe). But if you dont like phones All over access to your life and it tracking you. 1 phone at home, working on a service already paid for, could be enough.
An Old idea from years ago, would allow Cable to install small antenna’s on the poles. And cover every town and city very easily. there would need to have Hubs in more locals, but the Durability of the system would be greater.
perhaps
if we stopped calling it “undeserved subsidies” and started calling it “Fraud” maybe it would get more attention from MSM?
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They already have a track record of spreading mental illness.
They already raced to the bottom and won. Notice the lack of quality or goals in their vocabulary and writing. MSM can only scrounge for mental illness stories. A victim of the 24/7 news cycle. They can only fill it with crap from overseas and ghetto reporting. Nothing that matters in the modern world.
They seem to be stuck in a vicious cycle of their own making, literally stuck in the 18th century.
https://www.gpb.org/news/2023/02/06/despite-billions-get-off-coal-why-indonesia-still-building-new-coal-plants
https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/india-set-crank-coal-power-meet-soaring-demand
Taking greenwashed money and making more CFPP’s in 2023 makes the UN statements of gloom and doom a joke on the world stage. MSM cannot say renewable investments are a lie. You have look for yourself 🙂
That illiterate curated content is already obsolete.
Another win for new digital infrastructure.
Internet 2.0 is a done deal 🙂
Nice post by the way. I loved the article very much. It was so informative and interesting
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