Faster and cheaper internet
>> Tuesday, December 4, 2018
BANTAY
GOBYERNO
Ike Señeres
I remember writing about speed and accuracy issues in our
election system. I am confidently qualified to talk about these issues, because
I was formerly Chairman twice of the COMELEC Computerization Technical Working
Group (TWG), appointed by both the Senate and the COMELEC.
At that time, I took the position that we
had to choose one over the other, meaning that we could not have speed and
accuracy at the same time. After realizing the new advances in the field of
information and communications technology (ICT) at this time, I have come to
the conclusion that nowadays, it is possible to achieve speed and accuracy at
the same time.
However, that conclusion comes with the
caveat that the human factor will not come into play, such as corrupt people
wanting to slow down the system for their own purposes, or to tamper with the
data, also for their own purposes.
As far as the internet is concerned, I
now say that we could have speed and economy at the same time, the end result
of which is having faster and cheaper internet, without sacrificing one over
the other. I could have been wrong, but in case of the elections, I really
believed at that time that counting the results too fast would result in lesser
accuracy and vice versa, prioritizing accuracy more would cause the system to
go slower. Looking back, it could be said that former COMELEC Commissioner Gus
Lagman was correct in saying that only the transmission should be computerized
because even now, the manual counting is not really that slow. In other words,
the slowness would have been tolerable, for as long as the accuracy is
commendable. In the case of internet prices however, I would dare say that long
ago and up to now, it could have gone lower if only the human factor did not
come into play.
Internet is internet, in much the same
way that rice is rice. What that means is that the price of internet in one
country should not differ much from the price of internet in other countries.
That should be the same reasoning in the case of rice, meaning that the price
of rice in one country should not differ much from the price of rice in other
countries. Just in case you have not noticed, I am sorry to tell you that the
price of internet in the Philippines is higher in many other countries.
By some stretch of our imaginations, that
might have been tolerable if it was faster than many other countries, but sadly
it is not. That is the same story in the case of rice, the price of rice here
is higher than many other countries. Again, that might have been tolerable if
the quality of rice is better, but sadly, it is not.
Without any doubt, I could categorically say that faster
internet is already available in many parts of our country, except that it has
not become cheaper in most parts of the country. As of now, it could be said
that we are caught between the devil and the deep blue sea, because it seems
that as of now, we could not bring down the prices of internet where it is now
faster, and we could not make it faster where it is now cheaper.
Whichever way you would look at this, I
could confidently say that the bottom line of this is the law of supply and
demand, and the commodity in question is bandwidth or to be more specific,
broadband. Just like all commodities that are affected by the law of supply and
demand, the price of the commodities are affected by the human factor, and by
that I mean the element of greed in the pricing of the commodities.
For obvious reasons, the engineers of
some internet service providers (ISPs) will never admit that internet speed in
the Philippines is slower because they do not know how to make it faster. On
the other hand, the managers of these ISPs might argue that they could not make
internet cheaper because they still have to recover their investments.
That also seems to be the logic of the
managers of tollways, who argue that they have to increase toll rates because
of the high costs of maintenance. That logic seems to be flawed, because as it
is supposed to be, the costs of utilities are supposed to be going down as these
are depreciated over a long period of time. At the very least therefore, we
could suspect that there is dishonesty involved in the pricing of tollway
rates, fuelled by no other than greed. Suffice it to say that that could be
happening as well in the pricing of internet rates.
Although
I might sound naive, I am willing to say that the separate efforts to make
internet speed in the Philippines become faster and cheaper could actually run
parallel to each other, wherein the two goals could possibly converge with each
other. On the technology side, I already know how to make it faster.
On the morality side however, I do not know how to make it
cheaper, because I could not offer a cure for greed. Yes, this is a morality
issue because if a company does not care for the good of the people, they would
not care if they are greedy or not.
As it is supposed to be, even a fraction
of one percent that is stolen could already be considered as graft. There was a
time when we tolerated graft up to 30%, but after that, we already thought it
was too much. Having said that, what should be considered tolerable profits for
the ISPs and what would be too much?
For feedback email iseneres@yahoo.com or text +639083159262
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