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Subject: [IP] more on Krugman on "Digital Robber Barons", nyt 6 Dec
------ Forwarded Message From: Dana Blankenhorn <danablankenhorn@mindspring.com> Reply-To: Dana Blankenhorn <danablankenhorn@mindspring.com> Date: Fri, 06 Dec 2002 11:46:51 -0500 To: dave@farber.net Subject: Re: <[IP]> Krugman on "Digital Robber Barons", nyt 6 Dec http://www.corante.com/mooreslore/20021201.shtml#14444 An Easy Mistake to Make The FCC is planning on re-monopolizing the wired Internet. The agency will not only allow cable companies to keep competing ISPs off their lines, but extend this to the Bell companies. If BellSouth wants, for instance, it can force me to move my DSL service to them from Earthlink, or lose the wired access. Naturally liberals are aghast. Paul Krugman calls the wired boys "Digital Robber Barons." (free registration required) On the surface it looks terrible, and personally it will be inconvenient. But Krugman doesn?t know about wireless. He doesn?t know about WISPs, and he doesn?t know about UltraWide Band (UWB). Why should he? He?s not a tech writer. Wireless is "inside baseball," the province of a small number of hobbyists and entrepreneurs. And how can it compete with the phone and cable monopolies? The answer is Moore?s Law. Between the 802.11 A and B standards we?ve got plenty of digital space to play with, in unlicensed frequencies. The necessary equipment gets cheaper and better every year. In accounting terms, wireless equipment is 3-year property. Buy it, install it, and three years later you?ll be motivated to upgrade. The user pays. That?s the way cell phones work. The only reason you have powerful carriers there is because they?re using licensed frequencies. The 802.11 standards work on unlicensed frequencies. In contrast wires are difficult and expensive to upgrade ? it?s 30-year property. And the carrier pays. Wired communications is a terribly capital-intensive industry. That?s why competition there is naturally limited. Wireless is changing those rules. Combine wireless with competitive fiber and you can bypass the Bells. Force competitive ISPs like Earthlink off the wires and you have motivated entrepreneurs, tons of them. Result: the Bells will die. Michael Powell is going to sign their death warrant, simply by giving them what they want. The Bells don?t understand Moore?s Law any better than their critics do. Which is actually a good thing. Dana Blankenhorn -----Original Message----- From: Dave Farber <dave@farber.net> To: ip <ip@v2.listbox.com> Date: Friday, December 06, 2002 11:24 AM Subject: <[IP]> Krugman on "Digital Robber Barons", nyt 6 Dec > >------ Forwarded Message >From: Tim Finin <finin@cs.umbc.edu> >Organization: http://CSEE.UMBC.EDU/ >Reply-To: finin@cs.umbc.edu >Date: Thu, 05 Dec 2002 23:52:12 -0500 >To: dave@farber.net >Subject: Krugman on "Digital Robber Barons", nyt 6 Dec > >Digital Robber Barons? >Paul Krugman, NY Times, December 6, 2002 >http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/06/opinion/06KRUG.html > >Bad metaphors make bad policy. Everyone talks about the >"information highway." But in economic terms the >telecommunications network resembles not a highway but the >railroad industry of the robber-baron era - that is, before >it faced effective competition from trucking. And railroads >eventually faced tough regulation, for good reason: they had >a lot of market power, and often abused it. > >Yet the people making choices today about the future of the >Internet - above all Michael Powell, chairman of the Federal >Communications Commission - seem unaware of this >history. They are full of enthusiasm for the wonders of >deregulation, dismissive of concerns about market power. And >meanwhile tomorrow's robber barons are fortifying their >castles. > >... > > > >------ End of Forwarded Message > >------------------------------------- >You are subscribed as danablankenhorn@mindspring.com >To unsubscribe or update your address, click > http://v2.listbox.com/member/?listname=ip > >Archives at: http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/interesting-people/ ------ End of Forwarded Message ------------------------------------- To unsubscribe or update your address, click http://v2.listbox.com/member/?listname=ip Archives at: http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/interesting-people/
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