FCC now blogging, tweeting on national broadband

18.08.2009
The Federal Communications Commission has launched a new and whose initial purpose is to chronicle the FCC’s progress in .

The new blog, called “,” is being written solely to update the public on how the FCC’s broadband plan is evolving before it gets submitted to Congress next year. In his first post for the blog, said that the broadband plan’s goal will be to chart “a path toward bringing the benefits of robust broadband to all Americans” and he described the plan as “one of the most important initiatives that the FCC has ever undertaken.”

The FCC’s Twitter account, meanwhile, will be used to both update the public on the broadband plan and to provide more general news about communications policy in the United States.

The FCC is slated to present its plan to Congress in February 2010. The plan was commissioned to provide the government with a blueprint for building out broadband infrastructure in regions of the United States that currently lack access to quality, affordable broadband services.

The government last month set concrete terms for by defining it as any service that provides “two-way data transmission of at least 768Kbps downstream and at least 200Kbps upstream to end users.” The government also said that for any broadband project to receive federal funding, a project must provide service to an area where “no more than 50% of the households” have access to broadband service, where no fixed or mobile provider offers services of at least 3Mbps, or where the rate of subscribership to broadband services is less than 40%.