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The Book of Broken Promises:
$400 Billion Broadband Scandal & Free the Net exposes the
broken promises of the "Bell" companies--- now AT&T,
Verizon and Centurylink, (throw in the cable companies) and is being
pre-released because these are critical times in communications.
- SPECIAL PROMOTION: NOW
ONLY $2.99 as a PDF download CLICK
HERE
- 540 pages, 731 footnotes
On
Sale Until Sept 25th, 2014: The official release
as a paperback and e-pub will be Oct 20th, 2014.
About the Previous Books.
- David Cay Johnston,
Recipient of the Pulitzer Prize, Author of "The Fine Print",
2012 --
About
"$300 Billion Broadband Scandal", 2005: "Kushnick's
estimate comes from his meticulous analysis of disclosure document filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission and other regulatory agencies..."
- I, Cringley,
PBS, 2006
"The
$200 Billion Rip-Off: Our broadband future was stolen."
- Dr. Robert ("Bob")
Metcalfe,
co-inventor of Ethernet, (computer networks), Foreword, "Unauthorized
Bio of the Baby Bells", 1999.
"The
part of Kushnick's expose that angers me most is how the Bells have
used the Information Superhighway (broadband) to win concessions on
how much money they can extract from their monopolies."
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Ripped
out of the headlines, The Book of Broken Promises is
not only a factual history of broadband in America from AT&T,
Verizon and CenturyLink that you were never told about, and
it is not just some cautionary tale, but is the third in a trilogy
of books by telecom analyst Bruce Kushnick. It:
- Supplies
new, never seen before data, telco financials and analysis that
could solve Net Neutrality issues and restructure communications.
- Documents
in detail the broken promises and failure to upgrade the networks--
even though customers paid over $400 billion in excess fees
and phone charges and America should have been already upgraded
to fiber optics.
- Did you we
were all charged over 9 times to wire America's schools &
libraries?
- Tells the
complete history of the mergers and broken promises that
created AT&T Verizon and Centurylink - and what to expect
from the current mergers.
- Covers
current critical broadband, Internet, phone, cable and wireless
service issues including Net Neutrality, the "IP transition",
AT&T-Direct TV and Comcast-Time Warner mergers, the cable
"Social Contract", special access, the FCC and regulators,
deregulation bills from hell, municpality build outs, etc.
- Exposes
how they keep control with fake consumer groups (astroturf),
paid off politicians, corporate-funded stink tanks, co-opted non-profits,
massive skunkworks, and dis-information campaigns, not to mention
a group called ALEC.
- Delivers
encyclopedic coverage, with hundreds of links to reports,
articles, financials.
- And don't
worry; all of this jargon will be explained.
Time
to Take Action: The Book of Broken Promises outlines
a proactive plan to restructure communications in the US, supplying
extensive data and analysis for solving Net Neutrality issues, moving
America's broadband-Internet networks to a fiber optic utility that
allows "Open Access" competition for all services - cable,
phone, broadband, ISP and the secret-wireless networks.
And most importantly,te
plan lowers your rates on all services, makes sure customers have
options and everyone gets the fiber optic upgrades they paid for.
On
Sale now: The official release of The Book of Broken Promises as
a paperback and e-pub will be Oct 20th, 2014.
This is
the third book of a trilogy that started in 1999:
- The
Unauthorized Bio of the Baby Bells and Info-Scandal,
with Foreword by Dr. Robert Metcalfe, tells the history of the
break up of the original AT&T in 1984 through 1997. It also
documents how the companies changed focus from local utility companies
to international communication conglomerates-where the local customer
and networks no longer mattered.
- Original
Printing: Paperback: 508 pages, 664 footnotes.
- $200
Billion Broadband Scandal,
starts in 1992 and was first published in 2005, and documents
how the phone companies made commitments to rewire America and
received $200 billion through 2004 from changes in state law to
customers. It also covers how the FCC decided to close the networks
to direct competition. Featured on Bill Moyer's Emmy nominated
PBS special, "The
Net At Risk", in 2006, it was updated to $300
Billion Broadband Scandal in 2009. It has had over 710,000
downloads, with over 41,000 in just one week --July 16th, 2014.
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