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Elon Musk’s Taxpayer-Subsidized Starlink Yanks Cheaper $40 Plan Because Network Couldn’t Handle The Load

from the stop-subsidizing-terrible-billionaires dept

We’ve noted how Republicans are rewriting the 2021 infrastructure bill (they voted against) to ensure that billions of dollars in taxpayer-funded broadband grants wind up in the back pocket of Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos (and their low-Earth orbit (LEO) satellite broadband ventures, Starlink and Project Kuiper). This is billions of taxpayer dollars being paid to billionaires in exchange for doing nothing differently.

Republicans are framing this as something that’s going to save taxpayers money, but it’s a lie.

I’ve explained in detail why that’s a problem: LEO networks may be initially cheaper to deploy, but the networks lack the capacity to actually scale to meet demand. Data indicates they harm astronomy research and the ozone layer. Money directed toward Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk is also money directed away from higher-capacity, faster, higher-quality fiber and wireless alternatives, many of which are actually owned by the local communities they serve.

Starlink is also expensive.

At up to $120 a month for a “real” plan at next-generation speeds, plus hundreds of dollars in up front hardware fees, the service is too expensive for most of the Americans desperate to be connected. Apparently aware of the criticism that taxpayers were giving billions of dollars to a billionaire for a system many people can’t afford, Starlink briefly introduced a slower, $40 monthly tier.

Which disappeared almost as quickly as it was introduced, because the network couldn’t actually handle the influx of new subscribers:

“The 100Mbps plan was not widely available, as it seemed to pop up in a relatively small number of areas where Starlink likely had excess network capacity. Some customers speculate that new users and existing subscribers scrambled to take advantage of the bargain deal, which caused Starlink to reach capacity in the eligible areas. The plan stood out for its low price while capping download speeds to 100Mbps.”

Starlink also imposes massive “congestion fees” in areas where it lacks capacity. These fees can be upwards of $750 in some areas. So again, you can probably see why it’s a bad idea for Republicans to treat Starlink as a connectivity panacea while showering it with subsidies that could be going to better, more affordable, higher capacity options.

Ideally, if you’re going to throw billions of subsidies at U.S. broadband, your technology priority should be fiber (preferably open access, community owned to counter monopoly dominance), wireless (either fixed or 5G), and then LEO satellite to fill in the gaps. Instead, Republicans are putting Starlink at the front of the line, and Musk and friends are whining about and harassing states that balk at this dumb idea.

Back in June, researchers showed in detail that given the limited nature of satellite physics, the more people that use Starlink, the slower the network is going to get. What, exactly, do folks think is going to happen when the network sees a mass infusion of taxpayer subsidized advertisement and usage?

To be clear: Starlink is great if you have no other options and can afford it. But it shouldn’t be the top priority in a historic round of taxpayer subsidies. That’s just begging for trouble down the road. But Republicans are so excited to throw billions of new dollars at their white supremacist billionaire godbaby, they don’t really care about the actual real world impact at the other end of the line.

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Companies: spacex, starlink

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Comments on “Elon Musk’s Taxpayer-Subsidized Starlink Yanks Cheaper $40 Plan Because Network Couldn’t Handle The Load”

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14 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

There's something going on in Starlink's network

TL;DR: It’s weird and we don’t know what it is, but it’s definitely not anything a healthy network should be doing.

Over the past few months, a number of us who work in the network engineering space have seen…odd…things at Starlink. These have included severe throttling (for no apparent reason), weird routing behavior, major packet loss, TCP connection drops, botched path MTU discovery, and other things that fall under “WTF?!”

Some of us have shared observations and compared notes, and: we’ve got nothing. We all agree that this shouldn’t be happening, but because none of us are inside Starlink, we don’t know what the root cause really is. But: it looks like a network (and a network operations staff) under stress, because systems and people both start to mess up when things get bad enough. My personal guess is that this is related to a point made in this article: they oversold capacity and now they can’t handle it.

Anonymous Coward says:

There are a lot of economic reforms that will have to be forced down the GOP’s throats, figuratively at gunpoint or otherwise, when the public starts to hound the GOP’s 37% voter support floor of Trump for being corrupt directly on billionaire giveaways.

Finding wedges to split apart the GOP’s voting coalition and constantly cause circular firing squads is their greatest fear and something they have no defense against currently. It should be the top priority between affordability arguments that Republicans lied and raised prices on everyone, especially the right wing populists.

Moe Dumb says:

My internet options are dismal: musklink, crime warner or verisin

  • I can’t afford the first (and would not if i could)
  • The second I refuse to use (charged me several months despite not having service due to multiple tornados hitting town)
  • The third is refuse (average download speed ~0.6mb/s, often drops to 0.12mb/s, slower than DSL from the 90’s)

I live in one of the top 100 cities by population in America and I still have no access to fiber at home except from taco bell.

Felon Mush could personally come to my apartment and offer to install a top end satellite link and give me a butt massage with his tongue and I’d still choose the basically-dialup-speed home wifi.

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awomanhasaname says:

Subsidy claims.

I’ll hope to be corrected, but I don’t think anyone has actually received money, period.

Not for Fiber, nor any other technology.

All the deployments I’ve seen so far are RDOF where the SpaceX award was cancelled.

Mike, you’re the editor. There’s somewhere out there where broadband deployment subsidies are recorded.

How much has actually been paid and to whom?

awomanhasaname (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Karl has been writing for months as though money has actually been spent on this service.

I think he’s wrong. Moreso, I believe Karl knows he’s wrong.

There’s someplace out there that tracks both payments and rollouts for BEAD. I’m willing to bet that not only has starlink received zero, but that no one has received anything.

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