GNG News Guy
06-26-2008, 03:33 PM
http://i.dslr.net/urls/50/5350.gif (http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/US-Broadband-Cannot-Be-Fixed-Until-You-Tackle-Corruption-95609)
An eclectic and disjointed mix of businesses, consumer advocacy organizations, politicians and technologists this week banded together under the "Internet For Everyone (http://internetforeveryone.org/)" banner to promote, well, Internet for everyone. The group's long list (http://internetforeveryone.org/index.cfm?objectid=C480EC17-1D09-317F-BB701132BCFCB04B) of strange bedfellows includes the ACLU, Google, Consumer's Union, Internet2, OpenDNS, Free Press, the Writers Guild of America, the Nancy Drew fan fiction club and many more. According to the group's website, the organization has four primary principles (http://internetforeveryone.org/index.cfm?objectid=BA7FA96A-1D09-317F-BB66C67AAC9FF276):http://thegng.org/quote_left_white.gifTo make sure every American can benefit from the new economy and guarantee all citizens play an active role in our democracy, our nation must embark on a national campaign to connect every American to a fast, affordable and open Internet.http://thegng.org/quote_right_white.gif
Internet For Everyone Coalition
Access: Every home and business in America must have access to a high-speed, world class communications infrastructure.
Choice: Every consumer must enjoy real competition in online content as well as among high-speed Internet providers to achieve lower prices and higher speeds.
Openness: Every Internet user should have the right to freedom of speech and commerce online in an open market without gatekeepers or discrimination.
Innovation: The Internet should continue to create good jobs, foster entrepreneurship, spread new ideas and serve as a leading engine of economic growth.
I've seen enough of these types of groups come and go to begin to wonder what the actual point is. A group that wants a fast, fair Internet is about as pertinent as a group that demands tasty strudel for everyone.
The problem is that while these groups field yet another feel-good event where Internet Ivy League celebrities like Tim Wu (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Wu) and Larry Lessig (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Lessig) wax poetic on the limitless potential of the Intertubes, AT&T lobbyists are purchasing your State's entire legislative body in order to pass the "Anti-competitive consumer sodomy act of 2008" or some variant (http://thegng.org/shownews/82501) thereof.
I'd be more impressed if these groups dropped the banal, vague principles (seriously, who exactly opposes "innovation?") and took a strong stance on the real issues that have kept competition in this country stagnant: government corruption, an un-skeptical media, the incumbent stranglehold on policymakers, the massive web of disinformation (http://thegng.org/shownews/83624) created by lobbyists, and the complete bi-partisan failure (http://www.oecd.org/document/54/0,3343,en_2649_33703_38690102_1_1_1_1,00.html) in government leadership.
With George Carlin's passing -- and his streamlining of the Ten Commandments fresh on my mind -- I'll replace the group's fairly mundane four principles with one. One that will be immensely more productive:
Tackle corruption: The FCC should be stocked with technologists and visionaries, not bleating political partisans whose primary loyalties lie with the nation's largest corporations. Every effort should be made to purge the incumbent lobbyist stranglehold on this nation's policy makers. Until you do this, you will fix nothing.
We have no competition without leadership. What leadership we do have acts primarily as an extension of the nation's broadband duopoly. Tackle corruption, and you create competition. Create competition and you solve this industry's most dire problems (network neutrality, anti-competitive monopoly behavior, ISP marketing department use of the term "eXtreme"). Fail to address this government's corruption, and you might as well be holding a Tupperware party.
read comment(s) (http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/US-Broadband-Cannot-Be-Fixed-Until-You-Tackle-Corruption-95609)
An eclectic and disjointed mix of businesses, consumer advocacy organizations, politicians and technologists this week banded together under the "Internet For Everyone (http://internetforeveryone.org/)" banner to promote, well, Internet for everyone. The group's long list (http://internetforeveryone.org/index.cfm?objectid=C480EC17-1D09-317F-BB701132BCFCB04B) of strange bedfellows includes the ACLU, Google, Consumer's Union, Internet2, OpenDNS, Free Press, the Writers Guild of America, the Nancy Drew fan fiction club and many more. According to the group's website, the organization has four primary principles (http://internetforeveryone.org/index.cfm?objectid=BA7FA96A-1D09-317F-BB66C67AAC9FF276):http://thegng.org/quote_left_white.gifTo make sure every American can benefit from the new economy and guarantee all citizens play an active role in our democracy, our nation must embark on a national campaign to connect every American to a fast, affordable and open Internet.http://thegng.org/quote_right_white.gif
Internet For Everyone Coalition
Access: Every home and business in America must have access to a high-speed, world class communications infrastructure.
Choice: Every consumer must enjoy real competition in online content as well as among high-speed Internet providers to achieve lower prices and higher speeds.
Openness: Every Internet user should have the right to freedom of speech and commerce online in an open market without gatekeepers or discrimination.
Innovation: The Internet should continue to create good jobs, foster entrepreneurship, spread new ideas and serve as a leading engine of economic growth.
I've seen enough of these types of groups come and go to begin to wonder what the actual point is. A group that wants a fast, fair Internet is about as pertinent as a group that demands tasty strudel for everyone.
The problem is that while these groups field yet another feel-good event where Internet Ivy League celebrities like Tim Wu (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Wu) and Larry Lessig (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Lessig) wax poetic on the limitless potential of the Intertubes, AT&T lobbyists are purchasing your State's entire legislative body in order to pass the "Anti-competitive consumer sodomy act of 2008" or some variant (http://thegng.org/shownews/82501) thereof.
I'd be more impressed if these groups dropped the banal, vague principles (seriously, who exactly opposes "innovation?") and took a strong stance on the real issues that have kept competition in this country stagnant: government corruption, an un-skeptical media, the incumbent stranglehold on policymakers, the massive web of disinformation (http://thegng.org/shownews/83624) created by lobbyists, and the complete bi-partisan failure (http://www.oecd.org/document/54/0,3343,en_2649_33703_38690102_1_1_1_1,00.html) in government leadership.
With George Carlin's passing -- and his streamlining of the Ten Commandments fresh on my mind -- I'll replace the group's fairly mundane four principles with one. One that will be immensely more productive:
Tackle corruption: The FCC should be stocked with technologists and visionaries, not bleating political partisans whose primary loyalties lie with the nation's largest corporations. Every effort should be made to purge the incumbent lobbyist stranglehold on this nation's policy makers. Until you do this, you will fix nothing.
We have no competition without leadership. What leadership we do have acts primarily as an extension of the nation's broadband duopoly. Tackle corruption, and you create competition. Create competition and you solve this industry's most dire problems (network neutrality, anti-competitive monopoly behavior, ISP marketing department use of the term "eXtreme"). Fail to address this government's corruption, and you might as well be holding a Tupperware party.
read comment(s) (http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/US-Broadband-Cannot-Be-Fixed-Until-You-Tackle-Corruption-95609)