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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nabi, Syed Tauhidun, Wen, Zhuowei, Ritter, Brooke, Hasan, Shaddi
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.08518
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author Nabi, Syed Tauhidun
Wen, Zhuowei
Ritter, Brooke
Hasan, Shaddi
author_facet Nabi, Syed Tauhidun
Wen, Zhuowei
Ritter, Brooke
Hasan, Shaddi
contents The FCC's National Broadband Map aspires to provide an unprecedented view into broadband availability in the US. However, this map, which also determines eligibility for public grant funding, relies on self-reported data from service providers that in turn have incentives to strategically misrepresent their coverage. In this paper, we develop an approach for automatically identifying these low-quality service claims in the National Broadband Map. To do this, we develop a novel dataset of broadband availability consisting of 750k observations from more than 900 US ISPs, derived from a combination of regulatory data and crowdsourced speed tests. Using this dataset, we develop a model to classify the accuracy of service provider regulatory filings and achieve AUCs over 0.98 for unseen examples. Our approach provides an effective technique to enable policymakers, civil society, and the public to identify portions of the National Broadband Map that are likely to have integrity challenges.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2410_08518
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Red is Sus: Automated Identification of Low-Quality Service Availability Claims in the US National Broadband Map
Nabi, Syed Tauhidun
Wen, Zhuowei
Ritter, Brooke
Hasan, Shaddi
Networking and Internet Architecture
The FCC's National Broadband Map aspires to provide an unprecedented view into broadband availability in the US. However, this map, which also determines eligibility for public grant funding, relies on self-reported data from service providers that in turn have incentives to strategically misrepresent their coverage. In this paper, we develop an approach for automatically identifying these low-quality service claims in the National Broadband Map. To do this, we develop a novel dataset of broadband availability consisting of 750k observations from more than 900 US ISPs, derived from a combination of regulatory data and crowdsourced speed tests. Using this dataset, we develop a model to classify the accuracy of service provider regulatory filings and achieve AUCs over 0.98 for unseen examples. Our approach provides an effective technique to enable policymakers, civil society, and the public to identify portions of the National Broadband Map that are likely to have integrity challenges.
title Red is Sus: Automated Identification of Low-Quality Service Availability Claims in the US National Broadband Map
topic Networking and Internet Architecture
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.08518