News: 0176636873

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Starlink Benefits As Trump Admin Rewrites Rules For $42 Billion Grant Program (arstechnica.com)

(Thursday March 06, 2025 @05:50PM (BeauHD) from the change-of-plans dept.)


An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:

> The Trump administration is eliminating a preference for fiber Internet in a $42.45 billion broadband deployment program, a change that is expected to reduce spending on the most advanced wired networks while [1]directing more money to Starlink and other non-fiber Internet service providers . One report suggests Starlink could obtain $10 billion to $20 billion under the new rules. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick criticized the Biden administration's handling of the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program in [2]a statement yesterday. Lutnick said that "because of the prior Administration's woke mandates, favoritism towards certain technologies, and burdensome regulations, the program has not connected a single person to the Internet and is in dire need of a readjustment."

>

> The BEAD program was authorized by Congress in November 2021, and the US was finalizing plans to distribute funding before Trump's inauguration. The National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), part of the Commerce Department, developed rules for the program in the Biden era and [3]approved initial funding plans submitted by every state and territory. The program has been on hold since the change in administration, with Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and other Republicans seeking rule changes. In addition to demanding an end to the fiber preference, Cruz wants to kill a requirement that ISPs receiving network-construction subsidies provide cheap broadband to people with low incomes. Cruz also criticized "unionized workforce and DEI labor requirements; climate change assessments; excessive per-location costs; and other central planning mandates."

>

> Lutnick's statement yesterday confirmed that the Trump administration will end the fiber preference and replace it with a "tech-neutral" set of rules, and explore additional changes. He said: "Under my leadership, the Commerce Department has launched a rigorous review of the BEAD program. The Department is ripping out the Biden Administration's pointless requirements. It is revamping the BEAD program to take a tech-neutral approach that is rigorously driven by outcomes, so states can provide Internet access for the lowest cost. Additionally, the Department is exploring ways to cut government red tape that slows down infrastructure construction. We will work with states and territories to quickly get rid of the delays and the waste. Thereafter we will move quickly to implementation in order to get households connected." Lutnick said the department's goal is to "deliver high-speed Internet access... efficiently and effectively at the lowest cost to taxpayers."



[1] https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/03/starlink-benefits-as-trump-admin-rewrites-rules-for-42b-grant-program/

[2] https://www.commerce.gov/news/press-releases/2025/03/statement-us-secretary-commerce-howard-lutnick-bead-program

[3] https://www.ntia.gov/blog/2024/every-state-and-territory-ready-implement-internet-all



Not sure how to respond (Score:3)

by I've Got Three Cats ( 4794043 )

Should I react with outrage at the potential corruption; or, with the complete lack of surprise that comes with resignation and total abandon?

Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

by Anonymous Coward

What ridiculous both sides word salad bullshit.

Re: Not sure how to respond (Score:3)

by fluffernutter ( 1411889 )

No, I have never seen a government being in someone from outside and just start handing them things before. This is much worse than anything I have seen in my lifetime.

Re: Not sure how to respond (Score:2)

by fluffernutter ( 1411889 )

Bringing in*

Re: (Score:1)

by ArchieBunker ( 132337 )

This is unheard of behavior even for banana republics.

Re: (Score:2)

by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

> Your government, and all other governments are corrupt.

Usually they at least make an attempt to hide the corruption. This is like Trump getting on stage and handing Leon one of those oversized Publisher's Clearinghouse checks, and the rest of the Republican Party just nods approvingly.

Re: (Score:2)

by Xenx ( 2211586 )

The lesser of two evils is still the lesser of two evils. The goal might be to get rid of both evils, but you're still better off living with the lesser until then.

Re: (Score:2)

by ihavesaxwithcollies ( 10441708 )

> The Biden NTIA's rules did not prohibit the use of fixed wireless and satellite technologies, but defined "priority broadband projects" as those that use end-to-end fiber-optic architecture. The rules said states could choose a non-fiber provider if the cost of running fiber to a particular location is above the state's "extremely high cost per location threshold," or "for other valid reasons subject to approval" by the NTIA.

I guess this is the grift. There are rules in place to allow exactly what the overtly corrupt gop wants. They want to shred that regulation to appease their unelected illegal immigrant leon and let all the taxpayer's money flow freely into his pockets. Americn vioters has done fucked up.

Re: (Score:2)

by Entrope ( 68843 )

Where do you see corruption in removing an explicit preference that favors one particular technology unless that technology crosses a very high cost threshold? To me, imposing that preference -- rather than looking at cost effectiveness as a primary factor -- is the corrupt choice.

Re: Not sure how to respond (Score:1)

by ihavesaxwithcollies ( 10441708 )

First off, you have to read the article. It explains why you want fiber over satellite. Second, i can easily disprove your whole argument by just this, if satellite is so great and better than fiber, why does almost no one use it, except in extreme cases? Why would ted cruz want to tear apart regulation from a president who was competent and wanted to stop corruption? It is almost as if it was there to prevent illegal immigrant con men from taking money to provide a shitty service.

Re: (Score:2)

by Entrope ( 68843 )

If I wanted a non-answer, I would have non-posted.

Fiber is better than satellite if you have sufficient population density, but most of those areas are already well-served by fiber or cable. This whole bill is about subsidized access to places where fiber and cable don't make economic sense without subsidies -- which are mostly some variation of what you call "extreme cases".

Re: (Score:1)

by Tailhook ( 98486 )

You should react with relief that the absurd decisions that blocked Starlink from winning grants that it clearly deserved have been corrected. Starlink solves real problems that our balkanized, corrupt, legacy communication system has been failing to solve for decades. The fact that it wasn't embraced as a solution is one of the most shameful and stupid instances of dysfunction out the FCC that I can recall.

Re: (Score:2)

by caseih ( 160668 )

"Potential" corruption? This is the textbook definition of corruption.

Re: (Score:2)

by gweihir ( 88907 )

You will get your Volksempfaenger and you will love it!

Honestly this kind of petty corruption (Score:2, Interesting)

by rsilvergun ( 571051 )

Even in the billions is the least of my worries. There is solid evidence that 7 million Americans were prevented from voting last year, naturally the vast vast majority were Democrats. The voting Rights act was struck down and a whole bunch of Jim Crow era laws that were still on the books took effect.

My personal favorite is that if a person challenges your your signature on your ballot you required to come down to the courthouse and represent yourself in court. In the middle of the week. When lots of p

Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

by battingly ( 5065477 )

You think there's going to be a next presidential election? I like your optimism.

Re: (Score:2)

by rsilvergun ( 571051 )

Right now it's going to be like Russia where there's an election but we all know the winner. That's because the Republican party is going to use advanced voter suppression tactics in Democrat districts. They will use gerrymandering maps to figure out which districts to suppress.

The Democrats need to do something about that but I don't understand why but they refuse to. They know about the problem. There's a journalist who specializes in researching and covering voter suppression in America, predictably

Re: (Score:2)

by blue trane ( 110704 )

Did we find the stalker?

Re: (Score:2)

by ihavesaxwithcollies ( 10441708 )

The weirdo is obviously mentally ill and i would assume delusional and dangerous. Lucky it’s the internet

Re: (Score:2)

by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

> Even in the billions is the least of my worries. There is solid evidence that 7 million Americans were prevented from voting last year

So when you get that "Offtopic" mod, you've at least owned it this time.

> You also had 7-hour wait times to vote

Uh, nope, my partner and I did the whole early voting thing and it was a literal walk-in.

> in swing states

Oh. Yeah, Florida's not really that anymore.

> Maybe you agree with the administration right now but if you do you better hope that doesn't change.

Word on the street is people are really not happy about the continuing egg shortage and retailers jacking up prices as a reactionary move towards the tariffs. This is the most often I've ever had people just randomly approach me while I'm out shopping just to express their dissatisfaction with things (ge

Dude if you're voting in Florida (Score:2)

by rsilvergun ( 571051 )

They didn't bother to use voter suppression tactics on you because the state is completely under Republican control. Especially if you are in a red district which you probably are.

You ever wonder why a state like Missouri that has a 40% black population is still a red state? No you probably never wondered that...

When people say you need to get woke that's what they mean. Always remember when they come for somebody's rights you're next. They're coming for your property and they're going to take it an

Re: (Score:2)

by BeTeK ( 2035870 )

"My personal favorite is that if a person challenges your your signature on your ballot you required to come down to the courthouse and represent yourself in court. In the middle of the week. When lots of people can't get the day off. " Wouldn't an ID solve this issue like any other civilized countries?

Re: (Score:2)

by caseih ( 160668 )

Yes if the government granted approved IDs to everyone without a discriminating fee, and provided free access to the kinds of proof of citizenship that such an id requires, and make it a lot less difficult to do in general. But you see the types of people that can't vote because of this sort of thing are really not the kinds of people we want voting anyway.

And there's the separate problem of jerrymandering. See North Carolina, Missouri, and other places for the formula the GOP has been following with grea

Re: (Score:2)

by Tailhook ( 98486 )

Oh look, and election denier.

Gentrification (Score:3)

by JeffSh ( 71237 )

this program, regardless of the administration, has always been about gentrification of rural areas, which will come at the expense of, not to the benefit of, the existing rural populations. This is about not just directing US federal government spend toward favored companies, but also about providing subsidies that make living in a rural place more affordable than it otherwise would be, for the wealthy people to swoop in, buy land, build houses with gates that can be safely isolated from the rabble occupying cities.

Optics aren't great (Score:2)

by SirSpanksALot ( 7630868 )

The optics of this really aren't great - but for rural connectivity ASAP? Starlink is the only current viable option. If Bezos would hurry the fuck up, Kuiper would also be a great option. These options should absolutely be getting funding specifically to subsize people in poor rural areas that can't afford the upfront costs for something like Starlink - Fiber to the home isn't going to be cost effective in very rural areas and will take many many years and an order of magnitude more money to connect tho

We Need to Talk About Wireless (Score:5, Insightful)

by organgtool ( 966989 )

Wireless is great for certain uses, especially as a backup to fully-wired systems, but there are many benefits to wired service. Underground wired service can't be easily blocked, intercepted, jammed, or destroyed by missiles (without causing a war) while satellites are vulnerable to all of those issues. While I believe satellite communications would be a great backup solution, I'm very hesitant to rely on them for our primary form of communication. Even in my own home, I've run Cat5 to almost every room to ensure stable and secure connections.

A friend of mine said it best: if Starlink was the best option for internet service, it would be eating Verizon's and Comcast's lunch. And if it's not good enough to be the preferred method of playing Call of Duty, then why should we be trusting it with our country's most sensitive communications?

Of course, none of this matters since oligarchs are only interested in funneling tax dollars to the companies they own, which is the exact thing they claim they're trying to prevent.

Re: (Score:2)

by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

> A friend of mine said it best: if Starlink was the best option for internet service, it would be eating Verizon's and Comcast's lunch. And if it's not good enough to be the preferred method of playing Call of Duty, then why should we be trusting it with our country's most sensitive communications?

My father has it at his place up in the mountains of NC. It's fine for most online tasks that the average person would be using broadband for. The issue is mostly that the price sucks unless Starlink really is your only option (of course, even then the price still sucks, but what choice do you have?). Never thought I'd be saying that the evil ol' cable companies actually have the best deal, but there it is.

Re: (Score:2)

by BeepBoopBeep ( 7930446 )

If starlink is your only option, the price doesnt suck because you dont have a comparison of a "less suck" option. At least they provided an option so the price is good.

Re: We Need to Talk About Wireless (Score:2)

by jrnvk ( 4197967 )

> Underground wired service can't be easily blocked, intercepted, jammed, or destroyed by missiles (without causing a war) while satellites are vulnerable to all of those issues.

Not to be that guy, but I have seen plenty of vehicles over the years take out cable and fiber service with incredible ease. I have yet to see a normal person down an orbiting satellite using conventional tools.

Re: (Score:2)

by mysidia ( 191772 )

none of this matters since oligarchs are only interested in funneling tax dollars to the companies they own

Yes... Democrats and Republican administrations want the EXACT same thing in this respect. It is just different companies they want to funnel our money to with different justifications. For Trump's administration it is Elon. etc. I would say these broadband grants should not be avilable to Wireless or Satellite operators, simply because they are not in the business of building out perman

Well, that makes the grift rather obvious (Score:5, Insightful)

by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

> In addition to demanding an end to the fiber preference, Cruz wants to kill a requirement that ISPs receiving network-construction subsidies provide cheap broadband to people with low incomes.

If ISPs can charge whatever the hell they want for the service, then why are we giving them government money in the first place? If they want to play the free market game, it's time to get off the government teat.

Re: (Score:3)

by edi_guy ( 2225738 )

100% People necessarily make trade-offs when the move to a rural location. You want less traffic, less people, less civilization...that means paying more for some stuff, less for others. Don't have to pay for parking, but if you want super fast internet you will have to pay. Go ahead and subscribe to Starlink, just not on my dime.

If the republicans were honest brokers this whole program would go into the DOGE dumpster.

Translation (Score:4, Insightful)

by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 )

> "because of the prior Administration's ... favoritism towards certain technologies"

"... we're replacing it with favoritism of different technologies which benefit the guy who spent $300m to elect the current Administration."

Re: (Score:2)

by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

>> "because of the prior Administration's ... favoritism towards certain technologies"

> "... we're replacing it with favoritism of different technologies which benefit the guy who spent $300m to elect the current Administration."

Pretty much. I was wondering how Musk was gonna be okay with the EV tax credit going *poof*. Seems like he's planning to make it up with his fingers in plenty of other pies.

Re: (Score:2)

by hdyoung ( 5182939 )

This is one of those few cases where the current admin has a valid point. The previous admin shoveled $$$ at the traditional isp’s for rural broadband rollout, and they largely took the money and ran. The task was practically impossible anyways. The US is really frikkin big. Covering it with fiber optic cable is foolish. Satelite is a way smarter option.

Starlink isn’t the only satellite internet option, but they are the cheapest. I dont really like Musk, but credit is due for building yet ano

Fiber Is Great (Score:1)

by jrnvk ( 4197967 )

But we need to be practical here - you just cannot reach everyone with it. You need to provide some wireless alternatives.

Re: Fiber Is Great (Score:2)

by jrnvk ( 4197967 )

It really did not. While the provision was there, in practice no wireless provider was going to be awarded any money.

Meanwhile, in Europe... (Score:5, Interesting)

by Zarhan ( 415465 )

Take a look at Eutelsat stock. They are much smaller company, yes, but look at that stock price. Look at the 1-month graph, not the daily changes (today is down)

[1]https://finance.yahoo.com/quot... [yahoo.com]

That's over 550% gain in one WEEK from 1,20 to 6,91. In a Week.

Market at least is seeing that trustworthiness of US tech is going down.

Same with Rheinmetall [2]https://finance.yahoo.com/quot... [yahoo.com] - YTD up 100% or so.

US has recently shown that they simply cannot be trusted. Frankly, this should have happened years ago, but I guess everyone expected not to be living in the ridiculous timeline.

[1] https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/ETL.PA/

[2] https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/RHM.DE/

In other words (Score:1)

by quonset ( 4839537 )

Expect to pay more so President Musk can get his cut.

Fiber-only was never realistic (Score:4, Insightful)

by SuperKendall ( 25149 )

Fiber was never a great focus as if you can get fiber, you probably already have options at all!

I can't even get fiber where I live (yet), and I live in the middle of a dense city suburb. I only have Comcast as an option, yet even hear we don't really need help.

The places that need help is where everything sucks. My mom lives in a very rural area, and I tried different options for many years - cellular internet, point-to-point to a local tower provider, DSL... it was all TERRIBLE. None of them could support streaming higher than 480p!! And often not even that. It was OK for email and texts.

It was not Starlink came out and covered her location, that I was finally able to get her what I would consider *real* internet. It is the ONLY viable solution if you really want to reach all these almost off grid rural areas. Claiming you are going to run thousands of miles of fiber optic out to all these places is insane.

I know it' fashionable to hate Musk right now but seriously, what else besides StarLink can you even suggest for real right now?

Maybe rural cell coverage can be just good enough for some parts and they could go there when it works but having travelled around the U.S. a lot that is not viable over huge areas. And in case you had not noticed cell companies suck which I very much did notice when I tried an all-cell based solution, even outside of poor technical performance.

Re: (Score:2)

by edi_guy ( 2225738 )

I am no expert, but in the FAQ they seem to have this covered

"Eligible Entities will establish an Extremely High Cost Per Location Threshold above which an Eligible Entity may decline to select a proposal if use of an alternative technology meeting the BEAD Program’s technical requirements would be less expensive."

Not trying to ding on anyone's choice to live in a rural location, but why should folks in the suburbs subsidize internet for people in the countryside? These are choices people make to liv

This news is good! Elon can get things done. (Score:2, Insightful)

by Anonymous Coward

Let's add some perspective.

The Biden admin 42.5 Billion to implemented high speed internet, got jack shit got done. The Biden admin wasted 7.5 Billion to build about 7 charging stations. BTW, terrorist cultist retards have now destroyed more Tesla charging stations than that.

Harris pushed 375 BILLION to a bunch of newly formed non profits -- many of which had no tax history, which were being managed by John Podesta. The EPA pushed 20 Billion out the door to former Obama people, Stacey Abrahams and ot

Re: (Score:2)

by anoncoward69 ( 6496862 )

LMFAO 7.5 billion to build 7 charging stations? I'd love to see where all the money went. Tesla just built out a super charging station at the Wawa down the road from me with about a dozen of the new 4th gen chargers. I can't imagine that charging station costing much more than a million to build out. Thats a generous 100k per stall for hardware, delivery, permitting and installation.

Re: (Score:2)

by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

Musk's companies definitely get shit done, but the end result ends up not being all that affordable. I pay less than half of what Starlink costs for broadband through Spectrum at my home.

As for EV charging, I'll certainly admit the Supercharger network is convenient, but it costs more per mile than just buying gas for an economy ICE car (at least here in Florida, where gas is presently $3.13/gal). If I didn't have charging at home, owning an EV would've been a huge waste of money.

Yes, BEAD program was screwy and inefficient (Score:2)

by alispguru ( 72689 )

But, do you think the current administration will do anything better?

Or will they just do something just as screwy and inefficient, but with different corporate winners and losers?

The big telcos have outplayed the federal government every time a "broadband for all" program has been passed.

The worst in recent memory was the time the big telcos were given hundreds of millions to roll out broadband for all - they lobbied to get the definition of "broadband" at the time changed so ADSL would meet it, spent just

Good (Score:2)

by anoncoward69 ( 6496862 )

Sounds like the original broad band deployment program was written specifically for incumbent telcos since they are one of the few that already have infrastructure in place to support this. The telcos have already been given plenty of funding in the past to roll out fiber and they've done diddly squat with it. Today there are plenty of other options than fiber to get decent broadband to people in rural areas coax, cellular and sat are all options and all should be given a slice of the pie if their infrastru

Oh no! (Score:1)

by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 )

How dare he mess with, er, all that success that was going on before!

> the program has not connected a single person to the Internet!

Excellent (Score:2)

by schwit1 ( 797399 )

How many connections happened under President Biden? Very few.

Incumbet telcos will take how long and cost how much? Starlink will work now, everywhere.

Should we care who does it if it's done right away and the price is right?

Rooting for injuries (Score:2)

by abulafia ( 7826 )

The griftiest pieces of shit in the nation vs. the junky Nazi.

I would enjoy watching Verizon and ATT whine more if my country weren't being burnt down, but eh, you can't have everything, I guess.

One of the signs of Napoleon's greatness is the fact that he once had a
publisher shot.
-- Siegfried Unseld