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[ NNSquad ] Internet infrastructure


From:    David Farber <dave@farber.net>
Subject: [IP] Infrastructure
To:      "ip" <ip@v2.listbox.com>

________________________________________
From: Erik Cecil [erik.cecil@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, July 25, 2008 5:02 PM
To: David Farber
Subject: Infrastructure

Dave,

This might be of interest to the list.  The U.S. Conference of
Mayors recently unanimously approved of a resolution calling upon
the Administration, FCC and Co ngres to develop a policies that make
high speed Internet access a national priority.  Some links /
reporting follow:

http://www.speedmatters.org/blog/us-mayors-high-speed-internet.html
http://www.baller.com/pdfs/major_cities_uscm_res.pdf

Long story short, this is a question of infrastructure.  And it
doesn't have to be complicated either.  The 1934 Act, as implemented
in today's world stands as an enormous impediment to serious
facilities-based competition.  We have too many laws created around
19th century views of technology, ruling over single pur pose
networks connecting single purpose devices in a world of
multipurpose connectivity and interactivity of a scope and scale
unimagined by any regulator, leg islator, judge and many
technologists even 20 years ago.

One thing, above all others is true, that unless and until we
fundamentally alter the economics and policy assumptions of
providing access to the edge, it won' t happen.  We need to rethink
Internet, cable, wireless, telecommunications, all of it.  No one
silo captures what's possible, needed, and necessary in a world
where devices need to interconnect for all sorts of reasons - from
running smart grids, to utility metering and control, to designing
sustainable cities.  We need to think of connectivity as
infrastructure, as a utility, not a service.  We need to provide raw
connectivity, not, as Bob Frankston points out, arbitrage d bits.
When we free ourselves from the limitations of our past assumptions,
we enable ourselves to look at things in a new light.  We open up
possibilities n ot yet imagined and create opportunities many of us
see as long overdue. Geoff Daily, for example, suggests that
communities lay conduit.  This alone would fun damentally alter the
economics of accessing the edge while keeping the government largely
out of playing in the market (this is a big danger; the Section 253 b
attles b/t cable, wireless ops and munis did not occur without
reason). See
http://app-rising.com/2008/07/the_best_municipal_broadband_s.html.

Food for thought.

Regards,

Erik Cecil



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