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[DMCA-Activists] Frankston on Latest + Connectivity, Speech and The Tran


From: Seth Johnson
Subject: [DMCA-Activists] Frankston on Latest + Connectivity, Speech and The Transport
Date: Sun, 13 Mar 2005 08:36:55 -0500

> http://www.frankston.com/?name=SATNConnectivityDays


Tuesday, March 08, 2005

BobF at 3:37 PM:

Connectivity in Days in Washington


Later this month (March 2005 for visitors from the future) we
will see two important cases presented to the Supreme Court (of
the US) followed by David Isenberg's Freedom to Connect
(http://freedom-to-connect.net/).

Of the two cases the better known is MGM vs Grokster
(http://www.eff.org/IP/P2P/MGM_v_Grokster/). Is file sharing a
criminal act? It would be tragic if the special interests of a
relatively small industry (even if very loud) were to be used to
thwart basic technologies even as the same kinds of technology
are being used by NASA to share the bounty of its expeditions.

Also on the same day, March 29, 2005, the court will hear the
"Brand X" case
(http://www.democraticmedia.org/news/washingtonwatch/BrandXfiles.html).
At issue is the question of the degree to which Cable TV
companies can limit our choices. They have become communications
carriers essentially no different from phone companies. It's not
just about choosing your ISP (Internet Service Provider) --
Comcast vs AOL. The services, such as Email, are not really part
of the Internet itself -- they are built on top of it. What you
need is an access provider -- you can build they services
yourself. It's if you had to buy an expensive flavoring in order
to get water delivered to your house.

The question is whether the Internet is just another television
station. Connectivity, as in the opportunity to communicate, is a
fundamental right. Any unnecessary limitations are in direct
violation of the US Constitution's guarantee of free speech.
Unnecessary is not the same as inconvenient -- if there is a way
to avoid compromising free speech then one must take that course.

Unfortunately free speech seems to frighten people as in today's
concerns about "decency". I'm amazed at how difficult it is to
extend such rights to media not available in 1776. Rather than
using the term "media", we should talk about transports-a word
with less problematic semantic loading.

At one time it made sense to view each transport as an incidental
component of a service. Each service provider built a transport
for a particular purpose at a high cost. Thanks to packet
connectivity, the transport is now a fungible commodity apart
from each service. It is no longer defensible to allow control of
the transport to be used to limit our ability to communicate.

Taking advantage of the new technologies the CableCos are rolling
out Video on Demand which gives each subscriber a separate video
stream. There is no excuse for not using this stream for all
viewing. It's far more efficient than broadcasting all signals
all the time "just in case" someone may tune to it. When you
change the channel it would just send a signal to the head-end to
select a video stream. To the subscriber it would look just like
the current system except that there would be no need to
broadcast a hundred or more video streams whether or not people
are watching them. This is exactly the way DSL was designed to
work in the 1980's when the Telcos wanted to become video
providers. Using DSL as an Internet transport demonstrates how
easy it is to repurpose the stream and how much more valuable the
transport becomes.

In return for their privileged position as the only transport,
the telephony companies were not allowed to discriminate based on
the content of phone calls. Their role began to change when
CableCos provided a second pipe though at first it was a
different kind of service using a one-way transport.

As long as the capacity is limited they must not be allowed to
hold us hostage. The good news is that the marketplace is working
to increase the capacity. I am relatively fortunate in having a
choice of three carriers: RCN, Comcast and Verizon and the speed
is increasing and will soon surpass the 10Mbps I was supposed to
get in 1996 and Verizon is promising up to 30Mbps this year (at a
premium price). It's still not the 100Mbps common in Japan but is
a step in the right direction. But progress has been slow because
it threatens the carriers' ability to take advantage of
artificial scarcity. No wonder they are actively trying to
prevent others from offering local connectivity.

One difficulty is that the industries are mired the rules that
defined them. The FCC still has different rules for cable and
telephone companies but Mike Powell and others are advocating an
"Internet" policy that would provide simple rules for those that
provide transport. This would provide a real incentive for
companies to take the initiative and offer unfettered transport.
Such a policy would achieve the goals of "Brand X" and create
huge economic value in providing opportunities for new business
and services.

David Isenberg's "Freedom to Connect" starts the very next day,
March 30th. There is already enough to talk about but the timing
of these cases will add to what already promises to be a very
exciting event but I hesitate to suggest you attend since I'm
overwhelmed just looking at the program and the list of
participants. I hope David doesn't learn from the CableCos and
Telcos because he could stretch the conference out for a whole
month and charge a high "value" price obfuscated by the
complexity a myriad of tiny twisted charges.

See you there.





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