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Subject: IP: One last item on the e-rate and FCC chairman Kennard



>
>From: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
>
>[Recently I spoke with a Manhattan media executive who is a family member.
>He heard FTC chairman Robert Pitofsky speak at an event well-attended by
>high tech execs. The audience reportedly was flabbergasted by the way
>Pitofsky "spoke down" to them, as if they didn't understand their business
>or technology and needed government officials to explain it to them. Even
>more disturbing (I'm told) were the veiled do-this-or-else regulatory
>threats. But because of the FTC's power, audience members weren't exactly
>eager to say this publicly. I will forward other perspectives. --Declan]
>
>*********
>
>Date: Fri, 28 May 1999 13:07:52 -0400 (EDT) 
>From: Charles Platt
><cp@sedona.net> 
>Subject: Kennard 
>
>I just had the dubious pleasure of listening to FCC chairman Kennard 
>delivering a speech at Vortex99, a conference attended by many CEOs of 
>the computer industry.
>
>"We're spending a lot of time at the FCC grappling with policy issues
>relating to the deployment of broadband," he began. What policy issues? 
>Well, the FCC had to decide whether a cable owner should be compelled to
>carry competitors' bitstreams in the interests of the free market. (Does
>this sound a little ... odd?) The FCC also had to decide if regulations
>affecting long-distance phone should be applied to cable, since cable will
>soon be conveying phone calls via IP. (The mind boggles.) Kennard then
>claimed, "we are trying to get out of micromanagement of the marketplace."
>He implied that cable owners will not be subjected to any new regulation.
>But of course he said nothing about the existing regulations providing
>protection from competition that cable companies currently receive.
>Presumably this will continue. 
>
>"We have a duopoly now," he said, referring to cable and phone companies. 
>"But it's better than nothing."
>
>Inspirational!
>
>He finished up by saying that yesterday he cast "one of the most 
>important votes of my chairmanship. Maybe one of the most important votes 
>I will ever cast." This was to extend the "e rate." The tax to support 
>deployment of Net access to public schools. This includes an EXTRA $900 
>million per year, which will be hidden in the long-distance charges on 
>your phone bill.
>
>I stood up and suggested that this might not be justifiable. I use the 
>Web in the course of my work. I live in a rural area where connections 
>are so poor, there's not much point in using anything faster than a 14.4 
>modem. If I am able to do my work with this equipment, why should I be 
>compelled to pay an extra $5 per year tax (along with all other phone 
>users) to give school kids equipment that is better than the equipment I 
>use? 
>
>In reply Kennard said that he could not tolerate the terrible inequality 
>between rich children who have net access, and poor children who do not. 
>"You may be willing to wait ten years for this inequality to be erased. I 
>am not willing." He glared at me. "I guess your premise is that we can't 
>afford to do this," he said.
>
>Of course this is not my premise at all. My premise is that you can buy a 
>14.4 modem for maybe $30 and you can get unlimited-time net access for 
>$20 a month. Add a second-hand 486 computer for $100, and a school kid is 
>all set. Are we seriously suggesting we need to spend more than $2 
>billion a year to facilitate this, because public schools can't afford it?
>
>Alas there is a no-followup-questions rule here, so I was not able to 
>state this. Kennard was able to insinuate that I am a borderline racist 
>(!) before he went on to take the next question. (Kennard himself appears 
>to be half black, and he referred to his wife attending a "negro school" 
>in the South and being deprived of proper textbooks.)
>
>More and more, when I am confronted with any political animal, I feel 
>almost unconmtrollable rage. The self-righteousness is intolerable as 
>they tell me how "we" should spend "our" money (translation: MY money).
>
>Oh well.
>
>--CP
>
>
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