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Subject: cis.upenn.edu (really linc) is off the sir for a period unknown) mail will be difficult till it come199309151658.AA04188@eff.org
THE NATIONAL INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE:
AGENDA FOR ACTION
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Executive Summary Tab A
The NII: Agenda for Action Tab B
Benefits and Application Examples Tab C
Information Infrastructure Task Force Tab D
U.S. Advisory Council on the NII Tab E
NII Accomplishments to Date Tab F
Key Contacts Tab G
TAB A THE NATIONAL INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE:
AGENDA FOR ACTION
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
All Americans have a stake in the construction of an
advanced National Information Infrastructure (NII), a seamless
web of communications networks, computers, databases, and
consumer electronics that will put vast amounts of information at
users' fingertips. Development of the NII can help unleash an
information revolution that will change forever the way people
live, work, and interact with each other:
o People could live almost anywhere they wanted, without
foregoing opportunities for useful and fulfilling
employment, by "telecommuting" to their offices through an
electronic highway;
o The best schools, teachers, and courses would be available
to all students, without regard to geography, distance,
resources, or disability;
o Services that improve America's health care system and
respond to other important social needs could be available
on-line, without waiting in line, when and where you needed
them.
Private sector firms are already developing and deploying
that infrastructure today. Nevertheless, there remain essential
roles for government in this process. Carefully crafted
government action will complement and enhance the efforts of the
private sector and assure the growth of an information
infrastructure available to all Americans at reasonable cost. In
developing our policy initiatives in this area, the
Administration will work in close partnership with business,
labor, academia, the public, Congress, and state and local
government. Our efforts will be guided by the following
principles and objectives:
o Promote private sector investment, through appropriate tax
and regulatory policies.
o Extend the "universal service" concept to ensure that
information resources are available to all at affordable prices.
Because information means empowerment--and employment--the
government has a duty to ensure that all Americans have access to
the resources and job creation potential of the Information Age.
o Act as a catalyst to promote technological innovation and
new applications. Commit important government research programs
and grants to help the private sector develop and demonstrate
technologies needed for the NII, and develop the applications and
services that will maximize its value to users.
o Promote seamless, interactive, user-driven operation of
the NII. As the NII evolves into a "network of networks,"
government will ensure that users can transfer information across
networks easily and efficiently. To increase the likelihood that
the NII will be both interactive and, to a large extent, user-
driven, government must reform regulations and policies that may
inadvertently hamper the development of interactive applications.
o Ensure information security and network reliability. The
NII must be trust- worthy and secure, protecting the privacy of
its users. Government action will also ensure that the overall
system remains reliable, quickly repairable in the event of a
failure and, perhaps most importantly, easy to use.
o Improve management of the radio frequency spectrum, an
increasingly critical resource.
o Protect intellectual property rights. The Administration
will investigate how to strengthen domestic copyright laws and
international intellectual property treaties to prevent piracy
and to protect the integrity of intellectual property.
o Coordinate with other levels of government and with other
nations. Because information crosses state, regional, and
national boundaries, coordination is critical to avoid needless
obstacles and prevent unfair policies that handicap U.S.
industry.
o Provide access to government information and improve
government procurement. The Administration will seek to ensure
that Federal agencies, in concert with state and local
governments, use the NII to expand the information available to
the public, ensuring that the immense reservoir of government
information is available to the public easily and equitably.
Additionally, Federal procurement policies for telecommunications
and information services and equipment will be designed to
promote important technical developments for the NII and to
provide attractive incentives for the private sector to
contribute to NII development.
The time for action is now. Every day brings news of
change: new technologies, like hand-held computerized
assistants; new ventures and mergers combining businesses that
not long ago seemed discrete and insular; new legal decisions
that challenge the separation of computer, cable, and telephone
companies. These changes promise substantial benefits for the
American people, but only if government understands fully their
implications and begins working with the private sector and other
interested parties to shape the evolution of the communications
infrastructure.
The benefits of the NII for the nation are immense. An
advanced information infrastructure will enable U.S. firms to
compete and win in the global economy, generating good jobs for
the American people and economic growth for the nation. As
importantly, the NII can transform the lives of the American
people -- ameliorating the constraints of geography, disability,
and economic status -- giving all Americans a fair opportunity to
go as far as their talents and ambitions will take them. TAB B THE NATIONAL INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE:
THE ADMINISTRATION'S AGENDA FOR ACTION
Version 1.0
I. The Promise of the NII
Imagine you had a device that combined a telephone, a TV, a
camcorder, and a personal computer. No matter where you went or
what time it was, your child could see you and talk to you, you
could watch a replay of your team's last game, you could browse
the latest additions to the library, or you could find the best
prices in town on groceries, furniture, clothes -- whatever you
needed.
Imagine further the dramatic changes in your life if:
o The best schools, teachers, and courses were available
to all students, without regard to geography, distance,
resources, or disability;
o The vast resources of art, literature, and science were
available everywhere, not just in large institutions or
big-city libraries and museums;
o Services that improve America's health care system and
respond to other important social needs were available
on-line, without waiting in line, when and where you
needed them;
o You could live in many places without foregoing
opportunities for useful and fulfilling employment, by
"telecommuting" to your office through an electronic
highway instead of by automobile, bus or train;
o Small manufacturers could get orders from all over the
world electronically -- with detailed specifications --
in a form that the machines could use to produce the
necessary items;
o You could see the latest movies, play the hottest video
games, or bank and shop from the comfort of your home
whenever you chose;
o You could obtain government information directly or
through local organizations like libraries, apply for
and receive government benefits electronically, and get
in touch with government officials easily; and
o Individual government agencies, businesses and other
entities all could exchange information electronically
-- reducing paperwork and improving service.
Information is one of the nation's most critical economic
resources, for service industries as well as manufacturing, for
economic as well as national security. By one estimate, two-
thirds of U.S. workers are in information-related jobs, and the
rest are in industries that rely heavily on information. In an
era of global markets and global competition, the technologies to
create, manipulate, manage and use information are of strategic
importance for the United States. Those technologies will help
U.S. businesses remain competitive and create challenging, high-
paying jobs. They also will fuel economic growth which, in turn,
will generate a steadily-increasing standard of living for all
Americans.
That is why the Administration has launched the National
Information Infrastructure initiative. We are committed to
working with business, labor, academia, public interest groups,
Congress, and state and local government to ensure the
development of a national information infrastructure (NII) that
enables all Americans to access information and communicate with
each other using voice, data, image or video at anytime,
anywhere. By encouraging private sector investment in the NII's
development, and through government programs to improve access to
essential services, we will promote U.S. competitiveness, job
creation and solutions to pressing social problems.
II. What Is the NII?
The phrase "information infrastructure" has an expansive
meaning. The NII includes more than just the physical facilities
used to transmit, store, process, and display voice, data, and
images. It encompasses:
o A wide range and ever-expanding range of equipment
including cameras, scanners, keyboards, telephones, fax
machines, computers, switches, compact disks, video and
audio tape, cable, wire, satellites, optical fiber
transmission lines, microwave nets, switches,
televisions, monitors, printers, and much more.
The NII will integrate and interconnect these physical
components in a technologically neutral manner so that no one
industry will be favored over any other. Most importantly, the
NII requires building foundations for living in the Information
Age and for making these technological advances useful to the
public, business, libraries, and other nongovernmental entities.
That is why, beyond the physical components of the
infrastructure, the value of the National Information
Infrastructure to users and the nation will depend in large part
on the quality of its other elements:
o The information itself, which may be in the form of
video programming, scientific or business databases,
images, sound recordings, library archives, and other
media. Vast quantities of that information exist today
in government agencies and even more valuable
information is produced every day in our laboratories,
studios, publishing houses, and elsewhere.
o Applications and software that allow users to access,
manipulate, organize, and digest the proliferating mass
of information that the NII's facilities will put at
their fingertips.
o The network standards and transmission codes that
facilitate interconnection and interoperation between
networks, and ensure the privacy of persons and the
security of the information carried, as well as the
security and reliability of the networks .
o The people -- largely in the private sector -- who
create the information, develop applications and
services, construct the facilities, and train others to
tap its potential. Many of these people will be
vendors, operators, and service providers working for
private industry.
Every component of the information infrastructure must be
developed and integrated if America is to capture the promise of
the Information Age.
The Administration's NII initiative will promote and support
full development of each component. Regulatory and economic
policies will be adopted that encourage private firms to create
jobs and invest in the applications and physical facilities that
comprise the infrastructure. The Federal government will assist
industry, labor, academia, and state and local governments in
developing the information resources and applications needed to
maximize the potential of those underlying facilities. Moreover,
and perhaps most importantly, the NII initiative will help
educate and train our people so that they are prepared not only
to contribute to the further growth of the NII, but also to
understand and enjoy fully the services and capabilities that it
will make available.
III. Need for Government Action To Complement Private Sector
Leadership
The foregoing discussion of the transforming potential of
the NII should not obscure a fundamental fact -- the private
sector is already developing and deploying such an infrastructure
today. The United States communications system -- the conduit
through which most information is accessed or distributed -- is
second to none in speed, capacity, and reliability. Each year
the information resources, both hardware and software, available
to most Americans are substantially more extensive and more
powerful than the previous year.
The private sector will lead the deployment of the NII. In
recent years, U.S. companies have invested more than $50 billion
annually in telecommunications infrastructure -- and that figure
does not account for the vast investments made by firms in
related industries, such as computers. In contrast, the
Administration's ambitious agenda for investment in critical NII
projects (including computing) amounts to $1-2 billion annually.
Nonetheless, while the private sector role in NII development
will predominate, the government has an essential role to play.
In particular, carefully crafted government action can complement
and enhance the benefits of these private sector initiatives.
Accordingly, the Administration's NII initiative will be guided
by the following nine principles and goals, which are discussed
in more detail below:
1) Promote private sector investment, through tax and
regulatory policies that encourage innovation and promote long-
term investment, as well as wise procurement of services.
2) Extend the "universal service" concept to ensure that
information resources are available to all at affordable prices.
Because information means empowerment, the government has a duty
to ensure that all Americans have access to the resources of the
Information Age.
3) Act as catalyst to promote technological innovation and
new applications. Commit important government research programs
and grants to help the private sector develop and demonstrate
technologies needed for the NII.
4) Promote seamless, interactive, user-driven operation of
the NII. As the NII evolves into a "network of networks,"
government will ensure that users can transfer information across
networks easily and efficiently.
5) Ensure information security and network reliability.
The NII must be trustworthy and secure, protecting the privacy of
its users. Government action will also aim to ensure that the
overall system remains reliable, quickly repairable in the event
of a failure and, perhaps most importantly, easy to use.
6) Improve management of the radio frequency spectrum, an
increasingly critical resource.
7) Protect intellectual property rights. The
Administration will investigate how to strengthen domestic
copyright laws and international intellectual property treaties
to prevent piracy and to protect the integrity of intellectual
property.
8) Coordinate with other levels of government and with
other nations. Because information crosses state, regional, and
national boundaries, coordination is important to avoid
unnecessary obstacles and to prevent unfair policies that
handicap U.S. industry.
9) Provide access to government information and improve
government procurement. As described in the National Performance
Review, the Administration will seek to ensure that Federal
agencies, in concert with state and local governments, use the
NII to expand the information available to the public, so that
the immense reservoir of government information is available to
the public easily and equitably. Additionally, Federal
procurement policies for telecommunications and information
services and equipment will be designed to promote important
technical developments for the NII and to provide attractive
incentives for the private sector to contribute to NII
development.
The time for action is now. Every day brings news of
change: new technologies, like hand-held computerized
assistants; new ventures and mergers combining businesses that
not long ago seemed discrete and insular; new legal decisions
that challenge the separation of computer, cable and telephones.
These changes promise substantial benefits for the American
people, but only if government understands fully the implications
of these changes and to work with the private sector and other
interested parties to shape the evolution of the communications
infrastructure.
IV. Managing Change/ Forging Partnerships
We will help to build a partnership of business, labor,
academia, the public, and government that is committed to
deployment of an advanced, rapid, powerful infrastructure
accessible and accountable to all Americans.
Forging this partnership will require extensive inter-
governmental coordination to ensure that Administration,
Congressional, state and local government policy regarding the
NII is consistent, coherent, and timely. It also requires the
development of strong working alliances among industry groups and
between government and the businesses responsible for creating
and operating the NII. Finally, close cooperation will be needed
between government, users, service providers, and public interest
groups to ensure that the NII develops in a way that benefits the
American people.
Specifically, the Administration will:
(1) Establish an interagency Information Infrastructure
Task Force
The President has convened a Federal inter-agency
"Information Infrastructure Task Force" (IITF) that will work
with Congress and the private sector to propose the policies and
initiatives needed to accelerate deployment of a National
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