TECH BLOG
Live From the Tech Policy Summit: The Communications Explosion
By Rachelle Crum
TechNewsWorld
Part of the ECT News Network
03/27/08 3:24 PM PT
Fast-accelerating advances in communications -- through the creation and adoption of more and better wireless technologies -- may bring obvious benefits, but along with the advantages come complex problems and daunting challenges. The Tech Policy Summit is one venue for leaders with a variety of backgrounds and interests to begin sorting them out.

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Opening Up
Today's highlights included a keynote by FCC Commissioner
Robert McDowell, who opened up his address by noting that the summit
reflects "the wonderful reality that we are privileged to live in the
most exciting time ever in the history of communications."
Half of the world's population now has a cell
phone , he observed. "No technology has ever penetrated this deeply this fast."
Along with all of the obvious advantages, there's a downside. "Just
like our gangling and awkward teenage years, the new media economy is working through
growing pains," commented McDowell.
The 700 MHZ auction was "all about trying to bring new
blood into the broadband game," he said. However, with the telecom behemoths dominating the show, many of the worries he harbored about the auction's outcome apparently were justified.
On open access -- a policy that Google (Nasdaq: GOOG)
had vigorously championed -- McDowell remarked that the market had long been heading toward the open waters of open access.
Any self-congratulations on Google's part were akin to "a rooster taking credit for the sunrise," he quipped.
McDowell waxed enthusiastic over the future of the FCC. "We have
the building blocks for a healthy, well-funded agency. ... We're
marching down the road of technological innovation, and we always
will."
The Wireless Revolution
During her roundtable discussion on wireless innovation,
Rachelle Chong, a commissioner on the California Public Utilities
Commission, jokingly told the audience
that the panel members "should
disagree with each other often -- and if they disappoint me, there will
be hell to pay."
Carolyn Brandon, vice president of policy for
CTIA, dominated the discussion with her enthusiasm over the Comcast-BitTorrent agreement, which she called "absolutely fabulous."
The other participants -- Michael Calabrese, vice president of
the Wireless Future Program for the
New America Foundation, Simon
Wilkie, professor and executive director of the
USC Center for
Communications Law and Policy, and Brian Knapp, vice
president of corporate affairs and chief privacy officer for the
"social compass" application provider
Loopt -- touched on such
topics as m-commerce, white space and
municipal wireless.
White space is "sitting there doing nothing," Wilkie remarked.
Boring? Not So Much
Kai Ryssdal, host of the public radio business program "Marketplace," picked the brain of
Craigslist Founder and Customer Service Representative Craig
Newmark on subjects ranging from society to the Internet to himself.
"People always want to give each other a break," said the soft-spoken Newmark. "People of goodwill are
getting together ... to change things."
His philanthropic efforts are giving him a new appreciation of lobbyists, he said. "There are a small number of people who have given the industry a bad name."
As for the fame he acquired for his namesake site -- which he called "pretty much an online flea market" -- Newmark said it's "all very surreal ... very odd. I'm just not used to that kind of attention. It all
changes when I'm in L.A. I've been in L.A. about 36 hours, and already I want to adopt a baby from overseas."
Newmark maintained a self-deprecating tone throughout the interview. "In high school, I really did wear a plastic pocket protector," he confessed.
"I'm as boring as you can get. I wear gray socks. Brown is the new black," he said, in defense of his suit.

Click here to e-mail Rachelle Crum.