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Published byBarnaby Curtis Modified over 9 years ago
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Competing visions of the NII and the 1996 Act
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Visions for a National Information Infrastructure –Who will build it? –Who will pay for it? –What role for government? –What will fill the pipe?
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« … life in cyberspace seems to be shaping up exactly like Thomas Jefferson would have wanted: founded on the primacy of individual liberty and a commitment to pluralism, diversity, and community. » (Kapor, 1993)
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Consensus Private, not public Hybrid network Video driven
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(Jeffersonian) Policy Principles Encourage competition Where necessary, minimal government intervention Universal access Content: user control Uses: people can choose the role they play Architecture: interoperable Protect free speech and privacy
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The Telecommunications Act of ‘96 Initial ambition: Provide a coherent framework for communication policy in the age of convergence.
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Scope of the act Telephone services (local, long- distance, wireless) Broadcast television Cable television Content and programming on TV and Internet.
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Main themes of the Act Competition / Entry Ownership and rates Content
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Competition / Entry: Local network open to competition BOCs Obligations: –Interconnection –Unbundling –Resale –Collocation Long-Distance open to BOCs …once there is substantial local competition Phone companies can offer video
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Ownership, licensing and rates TV-station ownership cap raised to 35% of population –Allowed the FCC to double the spectrum available to Broadcast TV for DTV –Broadcasters get more flexibility as to services they may offer (e.g. PPV, wireless phone, paging, data, etc..) but would have to pay fees based on the value of that spectrum if it were auctioned Cross-ownership phone-CATV OK Lifts rate regulation on CATV
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Content “Communication Decency Act” (struck down 1997) –Struck down by Supreme Court in 1997 (Reno v. ACLU): (CDA) is an unconstitutional restriction on free speech, affirming a lower court decision “V-chip” requirement
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Universal Service, Interconnection Universal Service Fund - 96 act is first to codify Universal Service. From implicit to explicit subsidy Interconnection / unbundling: who defines the details?
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Four Issues about new telecoms 1. Local vs Long Distance: What's competitive? 2. What kind of competition? Facility or service 3. Three layers, with different economics 4. The New media landscape
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