Archive for the ‘broadband’ Category

DC Regulators Host Unique Debate On News Industry’s Future

December 3, 2009

Washington, DC ─ More than 70 communications experts this week debated how consumers can protect their interests despite the decline of traditional newspapers and broadcasters.

Increased government support for news-gathering was the key topic in the path-breaking two-day conference entitled, “How Will Journalism Survive the Internet Age?” hosted by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on Dec. 1 and 2.  Industry speakers ranged in clout from News Corp. Chairman and CEO Rupert Murdoch to web-based start-ups much like Connecticut Watchdog.

“It’s good that we can have an honest discussion” of the relationship between law and business opportunities said Reed Hundt, a 1990s chairman of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).  The Democrat said that long-standing fears of government meddling with the news media would have made such a conference “unthinkable” previously during his decades in Washington since he left Yale Law School in 1974.

Some tension is inevitable.  “The news media is here in part to make life miserable for public officials,” said Steven Waldman, an FCC official just three days on the job as a senior advisor to its chairman Julius Genachowski after a career as an Internet entrepreneur and reporter for such publications as Newsweek and the online edition of the Wall Street Journal.

The FTC conference speakers and their videos are on the workshop section of the FTC website: www.ftc.gov.

Many speakers noted that traditional media are reacting to declines in their advertising by cutting coverage of vital public affairs. 

“We cannot risk the loss of an informed public and all that means because of this market failure,” said U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-California), who added that any proposed solutions through his committee would require bipartisan support.

Murdoch complained that Internet-based rivals infringe the copyrights of traditional media, hurting the public.  Arianna Huffington, founder of the Huffington Post (for which I write also) responded that every news operation uses content from others under longstanding, court-enforced “fair use” standards, and that innovation is helping the public.  

Aneesh Chopra, assistant to President Obama for technology, said the new administration is relying on technology and inputs from the public in unprecedented ways.  He cited as examples communication on such consumer needs as health care options and such public affairs concerns as lobbying for federal contracts.

National Public Radio President and CEO Vivian Schiller said her network’ success provides a model for public/private funding.  Even so, the network’s local coverage should be enhanced by more federal money, she said in arguing that funding doesn’t mean government control. 

Josh Silver, executive director of Free Press, countered that improper political interference in public broadcasting has been documented in recent years.  Even so, he advocated more federal funding for news organizations and infrastructure, along with more “firewall” protections for journalistic independence. 

Historians noted that federal policies on infrastructure development, copyright, taxation and antitrust have long assisted the news media.

The conference’s final panel included the founders of two web-based start-ups from Connecticut.  Branford Eagle editor Marcia Chambers, who is also journalist-in-residence at Yale, began her news site as a column four years ago.  She plans to work with others to “reinvigorate state coverage.” 

Paul Bass, editor of the New Haven Independent, said he started with $80,000 in funding after leaving his longstanding job at the Advocate, and now has an annual budget of close to a half million dollars.  Bass, also executive director of the Online Journalism Project, said that interactive journalism enables community “conversations” never previously possible.

The 30-year-veteran of the news business concluded, “This is the best time to be a journalist.”

Sept. 3 DC Radio: Should Feds Get Emergency Power To Run The Internet Under Senate Bill?

September 3, 2009

The controversial new Senate bill that would enable the President to take control of the Internet in case of emergency was today’s featured topic on the DC Update edition of My Technology Lawyer Radio. The show is available via the Listen Live! archive.

Senate Jay Rockefeller (D-West Virginia) says the Cybersecurity Act of 2009 reintroduced last month is needed to protect the nation’s infrastructure and businesses from hackers. Experts who analyzed the benefits and dangers of the proposal are:

• Illena Armstrong is editor in chief of SC Magazine, the leading business magazine for the information security industry. She manages editorial staff in New York and Michigan, and oversees the award-winning monthly publication and its other editorial offerings, including scmagazineus.com, several eConferences, countless webcasts, weekly and monthly newsletters, and the annual SC World Congress conference and exposition.

• Eric Green is program director of the SC World Congress, being held October 13-14 in New York City. For over a decade, he has been closely involved in creating marketing strategies for many security and FORTUNE 1000 companies by leveraging his expertise and network of high-level contacts in the public and private sectors. He’ll summarize highlights on the Rockefeller proposal from the perspective of leading companies at the Congress, which is described below.

• Brian Cute is vice president for discovery services at Afilias, Inc., with over 12 years experience in the Internet and communications industry. He provides secure and selective visibility services to global supply chain participants. Also, he is active in the Internet Society chapter being created in Washington, DC. Its first free event will feature prominent Internet experts describing the Internet’s future on Sept. 14 in Washington, DC. Details are below.

Update is co-hosted by the show’s founder and business radio pioneer Scott Draughon and by Washington commentator Andrew Kreig. Co-hosts begin the show with an update on Washington policy news affecting businesses nationally.

Rockefeller, chair of the Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee, praised his proposal here. But a news report today raising related concerns is: “Obama White House Has Secret Plan To Harvest Personal Data From Social Networking Websites.”

Radio listeners can call in questions at 866-685-7469 or by email: radio@MyTechnologyLawyer.com. Update focuses on Washington policy that impacts the nation’s business, politics and quality of life. As listener advisories: Mac computer users need the tool “Parallels” to hear a Windows Media Player, and some companies block radio programs from computers.

About SC Magazine and SC World Congress
SC Magazine is the leading monthly title and the largest dedicated information-security publication for IT security professionals in the U.S. Its reach extends to Europe and Australia through independently managed operations. It works to build relationships with all sectors of the information security industry, including chief information security officers and other executives in various markets – from government to finance, as well as product and service providers, software developers, consultants, system resellers and others. Details.

From October 13 – 14, the publication will hold its second annual SC World Congress at the Sheraton New York Hotel & Towers in New York City, which gathers together the leading voices in the information security arena for two days of pertinent conference session examining topics ranging from data theft and compliance to establishing partnerships between government and private sectors. Also, the industry’s top vendors will assemble on the expo floor to show off scores of solutions. Keynotes include Heartland Payment Systems’ Robert Carr and the Federal Trade Commission’s William Kovacic. For additional details, visit here.

About Afilias & The Internet Society

Afilias is the world’s leading provider of Internet infrastructure solutions that connect people to their data. In providing such connection services as domain name, the DNS, or RFID data, the company promises connection in a reliable, secure, stable, and globally available manner. Details. As Vice President, Brian Cute’s work in the Domain Name System includes registrar and registry experience leading initiatives on Wait List Service, private domain registrations, the elimination of BulkWHOIS, the .net RFP, the .com contract approval, as well as representing the private sector in the U.N. World Summit on the Information Society.

As a personal initiative, he is helping re-launch the greater Washington, DC chapter of the Internet Society Including Maryland and Virginia. New members are welcome, with no cost to join. Its first event is a discussion of the Internet’s future, scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Sept. 14 at the National Visitor’s Center at the Capitol in Washington. For details on the event and chapter membership, visit here: www.isoc-dc.org.
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Tech Radio April 2 Topics: Law Firm Upgrades, Rural Fiber & New Disputes On Lobbying Rules

April 2, 2009

Advocates of new concepts in law firm efficiency and fiber deployment to rural areas engaged in a vigorous debate April 2 on My Technology Lawyer Radio.

The weekly webcast radio show that I co-host with Scott Draughon probed recent lobbying restrictions on those seeking $787 billion in federal stimulus spending. The rules announced March 20 require registered lobbyists to put in writing any advocacy to relevant government officials so that the request can be posted on the website http://www.recovery.gov. The purpose is to keep the public informed. Funding lobbyists have been joined by several public interest groups in opposing the new rules. The public interest groups claim the rules won’t be effective because the truly powerful tend not to be registered lobbyists themselves, but to hire them. Challenges have also been raised on constitutional grounds.

A link via http://www.MyTechnologyLawyer.com/wireless connects to the radio stream or archived past shows. Guests were:
• Jerry Baxley, principal at Optical Networks Inc. He is working on the deployment of a fiber and wireless network throughout Alabama, and serves also as Executive Director of the Family Law Association of Alabama.
• Geoff Daily is a technology journalist who writes a blog called App-Rising.com and is executive director in the newly formed Rural Fiber Alliance.

Probe the Past To Protect the Future

March 5, 2009

To build the public confidence needed for economic recovery, Congressional leaders need to be much tougher in overseeing such high-level decision-making as the $30 billion more in bailouts for American International Group (AIG) that the Obama Administration announced on Monday (March 2).

After so much savings and job loss the public deserves far more assurance that investigations will get to the bottom of past and present decisions by Democrat and Republican alike. Vast questions remain about the last decade’s federal deficits, even as the government fast-tracks $787 billion in new stimulus spending and proposes a $3.6 trillion annual federal budget that includes a $1.75 trillion deficit. Fears are growing that oversight won’t be effective. Congressional committees must become better watchdogs, especially because of cutbacks by the traditional news media and foot-dragging by Executive Branch officials who fear accountability.

Wrong-doers and their apologists insist that the country should look forward for the betterment of all, and that any future problems will be dealt with fairly. Nonsense. As always, justice starts by a review of the evidence. “Sunshine is the best disinfectant,” Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis famously said. But pest control is useful too. Either way, strong measures are required to build public confidence for legitimate initiatives on such complex questions as which companies are “too big to fail,” and which ones should pay the price for their terrible decisions.

Congress is taking well-publicized steps for increased oversight. Yet vigorous public pressure is required to ensure that their “investigations” are not merely for show. For example:

• Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) is holding a hearing today on “Truth” to examine Bush Administration policies that led to torture, rendition and imprisonment without trial. But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-California) is among those who fear that the Senate probe might foreclose further inquiry, including potential liability.

• House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers (D-Michigan) again subpoenaed former Presidential advisor Karl Rove to respond Feb. 23 to allegations that the White House helped fire federal prosecutors for political reasons, including tolerating corrupt contracts and targeting such Democratic politicians as Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman. But Rove again ignored the subpoena. In doing so, he continued his defiance enabled by the Bush Justice Department during the nearly two years since contracts attorney and Republican political operative Jill Simpson stepped forward with allegations against Rove and federal authorities prosecuting Siegelman.

• The House Energy and Commerce Committee concluded its year-long investigation of Federal Communications Commission Chairman Kevin Martin in December with a majority report entitled “Deception and Distrust,” finding that he had abused his power. But the Committee could not persuade Martin or three of his top appointees (including his Chief of Staff and the FCC Inspector General) to appear before them to answer the allegations – even though the FCC was created in the 1930s as an agency independent of the Executive Branch, and subject to oversight.

As usual, pressure for government contracts and favorable law is the basic problem. Back in the 1800s, the word “lobbyist” was coined to describe those operating from the lobby of the Willard Hotel near the White House. Today’s Willard is replicated by thousands other venues that breed the kind of scandals that have blighted every U.S. Presidency of any duration, especially during war. During the Civil War, for example, a much-smaller Washington and its adjoining suburbs hosted between 7,500 and 15,000 prostitutes, with the heaviest concentrations near the Army encampment of Gen. Joseph Hooker between Congress and the White House.

Republican President Dwight Eisenhower warned in his 1961 “Farewell Address to the Nation” against a vast “military-industrial complex” that threatened democracy. As the former World War II hero feared, those dangers are now undermining not simply the contracting process, but also such institutional protections as Congress, the courts and news media.

For those searching for protections in the U.S. Constitution, the most explicit reside in Congress. But protection is dwindling from there when Executive Branch officials refuse to testify by citing “Executive Privilege,” a Constitutional myth that was initiated in 1958 and much-expanded since Watergate.

As an advocate for business in Washington civic affairs for nearly two decades, I’m convinced that these problems require our full attention. Regarding the news media, their income stream is increasingly dependent on affiliated businesses and not on serving subscribers. The major TV networks, for instance, make virtually nothing from direct customer billings via cable and satellite, although many in the public naively assume that they’re being served via a “marketplace of ideas.” In fact, traditional and new media alike depend heavily on the goodwill of government officials, plus advertising. The financial reports of the Washington Post, for instance, show that since 2007 it has been making more than ten times its revenue from its education industry affiliates as from its Post subscriptions. Although new media are more entrepreneurial and increasingly broader-based in consumer appeal, many of their roots are in fairly recent federal Internet research and privatization policy — and many of their futures are highly dependent on favorable regulation, merger approval and stimulus spending.

Congress and many other government officials face strong temptation to go through the motions of vigorous oversight, but to defer quietly at critical junctures to special interests that can help with campaign contributions, plus investment tips and jobs for friends. In terms of self-policing, forget about it. The U.S. Senate Ethics Committee recently reported for the second year in a row that it took no disciplinary action against anyone.

To illustrate how the House of Representatives sometimes works, let me reconstruct a conversation I had with Democratic U.S. Rep. Rosa DeLauro a decade ago when I sat next to her on a flight from Washington to her home district in New Haven, Connecticut. I was near the beginning of a long run as president of the Wireless Communications Association International, and took the opportunity to describe unrelated problems that I had observed in the justice system and relevant news media.

“You’ve got to do something!” I recall her responding.

“Me? I’m in business, and you’re in Congress.”

“Yes, but we can’t do much.”

At least she was trying, unlike many who quickly disintegrate from their Mr. Smith Goes to Washington idealism. But the upshot is that we all, in effect, passed the buck for years, and it’s now a fine mess that we’re in. The three examples of Congressional investigations cited above each illustrate important problems.

Regarding today’s Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on U.S. government-run torture, should the goal of such a review simply be to fact-finding and promises not to torture others? We already had that during the Church Committee hearings in the 1970s. And if the Senate process isn’t done correctly, clever defense attorneys are adept at using a legislative investigation to eliminate more serious liability down the road. Who’s reporting to the public on those fine points?

In the Siegelman case, Alabama’s leading Democrat was convicted in 2006 of re-appointing an industry executive to a state advisory board in return for $500,000 for a state ballot referendum campaign. Siegelman was promptly shackled after sentencing and shipped to prison to begin a seven-year sentence. Supposedly, this helps ensure good government. But if Siegelman were framed to get him out of the way, what’s the public interest in that? Perhaps even more important, why can’t Congress get answers so long after the underlying events that go back to the late 1990s?

In case you’re wondering how you’ll know what’s going on, consider the results of the year-long House Commerce Committee probe of abuse of power allegations against the Bush FCC Chairman Kevin Martin. The still-boyish looking Martin might have seemed overmatched in defying longtime Committee Chairman John Dingell (D-Michigan), now the longest-serving member of Congress in U.S. history after succeeding his father in 1955. The white-haired, cane-carrying, tough-talking Dingell ostensibly wielded vast oversight power over the FCC. But his power base was declining, in part because of his strong support for the embattled U.S. auto industry.

Martin, by contrast, could rely upon his tight bonds with the White House and his confidence that most in the financially stricken news media had other priorities than scrutinizing someone with so much power over their companies. To be sure, there were a few critics such as the iconoclastic conservative editorial pages of the Wall Street Journal worried about arbitrary interventions disrupting free markets. Martin also had to endure some adverse headlines from the Commerce Committee report in December. But Martin, as a former member of Independent Prosecutor Ken Starr’s team pursuing President Bill Clinton, knew better than most the dangers of answering questions under oath. So, he issued his own statements, including a summary for posterity on the FCC website summarizing his accomplishments: “Driving Investment and Innovation While Protecting Consumers.”

No small-timer, Martin’s previous job before becoming an FCC Commissioner had been leading the 2000 Bush-Cheney Florida vote recount that enabled the Bush Presidency. Martin’s wife Cathie Martin then went to work in the Bush Administration as communications director for Karl Rove before promotion to the same post for Vice President Dick Cheney. In other words, her job was to influence the communications industry, and her husband’s was to regulate it. Rather convenient, yes?

If you already knew these things, I’ll plead guilty right now to wasting your valuable time. But if not, let’s consider what’s necessary to make our government the public’s servant instead of its master. One key test for the Obama Administration will be whether the land-rush for stimulus spending dollars proceeds in a transparent and otherwise effective manner, or whether it becomes a black box of unknowable criteria, as sometimes seems the case in such financial bailouts as that for the insurer AIG. Another promising sign would be whether Obama’s Attorney General Eric Holder enforces Congressional subpoenas, and otherwise takes the steps to foster a non-political and transparent justice system. Or will the Obama Administration itself try to benefit from expanding Executive Privilege, and otherwise limit effective oversight by a compliant Congress?

In shoring up the public will to dig deep, we can learn from former CBS News anchor Walter Cronkite. He was steeled as a World War II correspondent, and then recognized in1970s public opinion surveys as, “The most trusted man in America.” This is what he said in 2002 looking back at all that he’d seen: “Not only do we have a right to know, we have a duty to know what our Government is doing in our name.”

Agenda & News Coverage of Feb. 19 Broadband Stimulus Forum

February 24, 2009

$6 billion or more of the overall economic stimulus package will be allocated towards the deployment and use of broadband communications services. The bill, directed the FCC, NTIA, and the Department of Agriculture’s Rural Utility Service (RUS) to adopt quickly the rules and regulations that will govern how the money will be spent.

U.S. Broadband Stimulus Spending & Benefits To Be Debated Feb. 19 on Radio

February 18, 2009

WASHINGTON, DC (Feb. 18, 2009) – Three experts will provide diverse perspectives Thursday to a nationwide radio audience about specifics in $787 billion in controversial new U.S. stimulus spending. The discussion focusing especially on $6 billion in broadband spending will be on the weekly wireless edition of the Internet radio program My Technology Lawyer Radio at 1 p.m. (Eastern) co-hosted by show producer Scott Draughon and Capital-based commentator Andrew Kreig.

Stimulus Spending Debated Feb. 12 on Tech Radio Show

February 12, 2009

Broadband Subsidies May Test Obama Savvy On Ethics & Public Patience

February 10, 2009

http://www.rcrwireless.com/section/reality_check/