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On its webpage, NCTA says you can add "10G" to

On its webpage, NCTA says you can add "10G" to any broadband service you offer, including 2G, and the service will immediately be ready for customers. In other words, the service will be available to all, regardless of your state of residence.

"We believe that the new 10G technology is the future of wireless Internet, and that all of us are looking forward to its continued use and its continued advancement in our communities," said Michael O'Connell, NCTA executive vice president and senior vice president. "For more than a decade, the industry has been promoting a new technology that will revolutionize the way we connect our homes and businesses with a better Internet experience."

Cable and internet companies, such as Comcast, have been lobbying Congress for 10G. NCTA also created a $10 million grant program for research and development on the technology and has called for the federal government to contribute $1 million to $2 million in the program.

There has been a push for 10G to be part of the Federal Communications Commission's broadband guidelines. In October, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler said that the agency has "included a number of important guidelines for broadband investment and that's a sign that we're finally starting to see that the industry can support broadband innovation."

That same summer, National Cable and Telecommunications Association (NCTA) President Larry O'Connor criticized the FCC for blocking a proposal from the White House to roll out broadband fiber to rural areas. O'Connor also said that the FCC could not approve the proposal because it wouldn't work with existing networks.

"The FCC has been in a position where they've been using its power for the last decade to make sure that it's not part of their plans without ever bringing it back up," O'Connor said at the time.

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