You → your device
Every session starts here: your phone, laptop, or TV sends a request.
Every session starts here: your phone, laptop, or TV sends a request.
Your modem/router translates and forwards traffic. Some requests may be fulfilled by your browser or operating system's local cache before they even leave your home.
Your packets ride Comcast/Astound's 50-year-old coax to fail. Meanwhile, City Hall gets fiber. 45% loss documented [proof].
From the neighborhood, traffic often rides publicly funded middle-mile fiber connecting community anchors and carriers.
Comcast's regional core shows 45% packet loss. This has gone unresolved for years [4 years documented].
At an IX (e.g., Seattle), networks swap traffic so your packets find the best path to whatever website or database you are trying to access.
If not served earlier, your request may still be fulfilled by a CDN or cloud edge server located near a major hub. These caches reduce load on origin services and accelerate responses.
Your request reaches the app/service cluster, and responses come back along the same path.
Scroll through this actual PingPlotter trace to see exactly where our internet breaks down. Each section highlights a different part of the journey from your home to Google's servers.
This PingPlotter trace from Bremerton to Google (142.251.215.228) shows the full hop-by-hop path. The red bars indicate packet loss — data that never made it to its destination [PingPlotter]. The trouble clusters at specific upstream hops, while earlier segments remain stable in this capture [PingPlotter].
192.168.0.1 (Archer_AX55) — the local router. ~0.7 ms latency and no loss in this capture indicate a healthy home segment [PingPlotter].
The local coaxial plant was first laid in the 1970s–1980s [1998 Plan]. Today, Bremerton pays $3.4M for government fiber [Wave contract] while residents suffer on this same 1970s coax. This is Infrastructure Apartheid.
Ownership chain: AT&T Broadband acquired TCI in 1999 [AT&T acquisition]; Northland's Bainbridge system changed hands in 2001 [Northland sale]; Comcast absorbed the systems in 2002 [Comcast merger]. In 2024, a single Comcast line cut caused widespread local disruption [outage report].
By 1998, TCI covered ~15,000 households under obligations to upgrade to a 54-channel system with fiber [Comp Plan p.98]. Northland served ~980 subscribers across Suquamish, Indianola, Bainbridge, and north Poulsbo [Comp Plan p.98], with Falcon/North Star in other pockets [Comp Plan p.98]. Before upgrades were delivered, AT&T/Comcast took over the plants [AT&T 1999].
When the line was cut in 2024, much of the county lost service [outage report]. The Bainbridge Island Library remained online via KPUD public fiber serving anchor institutions [BTOP anchors], and it was used by residents during the outage window [news].
When the public builds infrastructure, it works.
68.86.177.1 → 96.216.66.145 → 96.216.66.133 are the next Comcast-labeled hops in the trace [PingPlotter]. From here, transport parallels publicly funded regional routes built under KPUD/NOANet’s dark-fiber program [BTOP].
KPUD/NOANet backbone — county-owned public infrastructure constructed circa 2010 with federal/state investment and local matches [BTOP]. Latency is rock-solid across this span in the capture window [PingPlotter].
During the 2024 Comcast cut, the Bainbridge Island Library remained online via KPUD public fiber [news]. Residents flocked there for internet. Public infrastructure works. Private infrastructure failed.
Examples of CAIs: Bainbridge High School; Bremerton Fire Station #3; Manchester Elementary; Port Orchard EOC; Poulsbo Fire; Silverdale Library; Seabeck Elementary [BTOP CAIs].
Outcome: a robust county fiber backbone serving critical institutions — but not households [KPUD map]. Comcast interconnects with that backbone while residents fund both the public build (taxes) and private bills [double-pay].
The path forward: Retire obsolete coax last-mile create KMBA and allow it to extend fiber to homes where authorized [WA PUD]. The backbone is already public.
Hop 6 shows catastrophic 45% loss [evidence]. This isn't congestion—it's failure.
Similar, recurring backbone issues have been reported on Comcast’s Seattle iBone (e.g., sustained loss affecting VPNs) [Seattle iBone].
Meanwhile, Comcast marketing/public statements highlight upgrades and investment [Comcast PR].
At Google’s edge (e.g., 142.251.70.97; 216.239.56.223), latency stabilizes and loss disappears in this trace segment [PingPlotter].
www.google.com (142.251.215.228) responds with ~13 ms RTT and no loss in the capture window [PingPlotter].
The bottom graph shows variation from ~12:15–12:25; spikes align with packet-loss periods at the backbone hops in this sample [PingPlotter]. The pattern recurs in additional captures, especially during evening peak [PingPlotter].
Comcast franchise expired May 2023 [County admission]. Wave expired January 2023 [documentation]. Both operating without valid authority for 20+ months while collecting fees.
The ISP backbone is the single point of failure in these observations. Public infrastructure performs well and destination services are healthy; congestion and loss concentrate in Comcast’s regional core path in this dataset [PingPlotter].
Public fiber, competitive choice, and liberation from monopoly extraction. 700+ miles ready [KPUD map]. $65/month rates [KPUD pricing]. $12M+ already invested [evidence]. This is what's possible when we establish the Kitsap Municipal Broadband Authority.
Your devices connect the same way, but everything after this changes for the better.
No more forced rental fees for Comcast equipment. Use any router you want.
This changes everything. Public fiber replaces ancient coax [KPUD map]. $65/month for gigabit [KPUD pricing]. Multiple ISPs compete for your business on open-access infrastructure [BTOP]. $1,000+ back in your pocket annually [calc].
KPUD/NoaNet infrastructure you already paid for [KPUD map]. No congestion. No throttling. NEXT: Keep scrolling to watch Comcast/Astound literally EXPLODE...
THE KEY VICTORY: KPUD connects directly to the Seattle Internet Exchange [BTOP]. The bottleneck that's plagued Kitsap for years? DELETED.
KPUD peers directly with Netflix, Google, Microsoft [BTOP]. Lower latency, better routing, no middleman markup.
Popular content cached locally. Netflix and YouTube load instantly. Gaming servers have minimal ping.
$32.5M stays in Kitsap annually. Gigabit for everyone at half the cost. KMBA: Because residents demanded public control of public infrastructure.
Fiber promised in Comprehensive Plan [document]
$12M+ public investment in KPUD fiber [BTOP]
Franchises expire, operation continues illegally [proof]
City pays $3.4M for fiber, you get 45% loss [contract]
Infrastructure Apartheid exposed. Time to act.