Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
From the start, Australia's National Broadband Network was billed as a
game changer that would future proof the nation by delivering super
fast internet services.
Almost a decade on from those promises,
there's a growing number of angry residential customers and small
businesses who are bitterly disappointed with the NBN. "I am a
very, very frustrated NBN customer... What I've got is a trench running
halfway up the driveway and a piece of PVC pipe with a rope running
through it - and that's all." Customer
On Monday night, as
the NBN reaches a milestone, passing the half-way point in its rollout,
Four Corners investigates the problems fuelling this dissatisfaction. "Nobody
knows what anybody else is doing. The retail service providers don't
know what NBN Co is doing, I don't know what either of them are doing,
and NBN Co don't seem to know what they themselves have done." Software
developer
For many Australians, the NBN has turned out to be a
lottery. Not all customers are receiving the same connections. And in
some regional areas there is a stark digital divide, between those with
high-speed fibre to the premises, and neighbours stuck with old copper
connections who worry they're becoming digital second class citizens. "On
the left hand side as we're driving down this street, those houses can
have access to fibre to the node. On the right hand side, they're fibre
to the premises, so this is the digital divide." Former Mayor
We examine what's driving the decision making about the rollout, and investigate why some customers are being short-changed on expensive data plans that fail to deliver what they promise." "We definitely feel like we're being ripped off." Customer
As
critics warn that Australia will soon be a decade behind its near
neighbour New Zealand in the digital transformation, reporter Geoff
Thompson visits New Zealand's 'Gigatown', Dunedin, to look at how
superfast broadband is transforming the way they do business. Back in
Australia, the government insists the NBN is going to plan and will be
steadily upgraded. "The NBN will be fit for purpose. It will
support the needs that Australians have. But no network, no technology,
is ever set in stone. There are always upgrades." Communications
Minister
In interviews with the Communications Minister and
the current and former heads of NBN Co. we examine whether a decade of
politicking has compromised the ability of the NBN to deliver for all
Australians. "I just feel incredibly disappointed that an
opportunity to build a first class network that would set Australia up
for the future was squandered, and squandered for the wrong reasons."
Former NBN executive What's wrong with the NBN?
Reported by Geoff Thompson and presented by Sarah Ferguson, goes to air
on Monday 23rd October at 8.30pm. It is replayed on Tuesday 24th October
at 1.00pm and Wednesday 25th at 11pm. It can also be seen on ABC NEWS
channel on Saturday at 8.10pm AEST, ABC iview and at
abc.net.au/4corners.
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