By Renay San Miguel TechNewsWorld Part of the ECT News Network
06/25/08 11:53 AM PT
Embellishing on the basic American entitlements to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, a new lobbying group is promoting broadband Internet access for all. InternetForEveryone.org wants to make it an issue in the upcoming general elections and is urging citizens to clamber onto the high-speed bandwagon.
eMarketer Whitepaper: Optimizing the E-Commerce Experience
From the Web to the Contact Center, are you prepared to proactively engage and keep your savvy customers? Read how e-commerce leaders are optimizing their sites with ratings, reviews, live help, Web analytics, mobile and more.
An election looms, and the candidates' talking points are being set: war, the economy, the environment. Now a new advocacy group wants the next president and lawmakers to add one more item to their to-do list: a national broadband policy that ensures high-speed Internet access for all Americans.
The group,
InternetForEveryone.org, features an array of high-profile technology experts such as Google's (Nasdaq: GOOG) Vinton Cerf, the man who helped write the protocols for the Internet; and Jonathan Adelstein, one of the Democrats on the Federal Communications Commission.
InternetForEveryone.org did not announce any specific proposals for Congress to consider, but members are urging the public to help pressure lawmakers -- and the next administration -- to develop incentives that will result in higher broadband speeds at more affordable prices in all parts of the country.
Let the High-Speed Conversation Begin
"It's an impressive lineup," Leslie Harris, president of the nonprofit, nonpartisan
Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT), told TechNewsWorld. Among InternetForEveryone.org's founding members are digital law experts Lawrence Lessig of Stanford and Tim Wu of Columbia, along with an assortment of CEOs and venture capitalists.
"From what I can tell, this is not about pushing one idea over another," Harris said. "It's about a national conversation, getting consumers to be a part of a political force. We're the country that created the Internet, but our broadband penetration is not growing as fast as many other countries, either in the number of people served or in speed and the capacity of the pipes."
High-Tech Policy Agenda
CDT is also asking citizens to provide input on what the next administration should emphasize in technology policies. The group's online initiative,
The Internet in Transition, prompts comments on Net neutrality, privacy and greater access -- and a national broadband policy would impact all of those issues, Harris said.
"We have to start thinking of broadband in terms of its implications for the economy and the innovation agenda," she said. "I think we have [presidential] candidates who have a deeper understanding of that than the current administration."
Implications for the Wired Home
If the group can achieve its goals, the impact on society could be huge, observed Beki Grinter, associate professor at Georgia Tech's School of Interactive Computing.
"I think it's very necessary. ... Broadband is where a lot of innovation is heading in the technology industry," she told TechNewsWorld. "One example is the smart home, networked with all the resources that the Internet provides, but also working with doctors online and making that available to all Americans. You can reflect on the history of the telephone and the 'lifeline' guarantees. ... That's what universal access needs to mean now regarding broadband -- and I think it's a way to make inroads into the digital divide."
User-Friendly Access
A successful plan for greater access to broadband shouldn't necessitate advanced computer skills for anyone who wants to connect to the Internet, cautioned Grinter.
"The technology push is one piece of it, making the economics work so that the technology can roll out. But the technology pull -- making people want to use it, making them feel comfortable, safe and in control -- that is going to be equally important," she said. "It's a potential obstacle that doesn't receive enough attention, the usability of these technologies."
Charter Scraps User-Tracking Plan After Privacy Flap June 25, 2008
Caving to pressure from privacy groups and members of Congress, Charter Communications will not launch a pilot program with partner NebuAd that tracks the online activity of users to serve ads that match their specific interests.
Related Stories
A Fertile Field for Digital Television in Europe May 15, 2008
There's a lot of room for interactive and digital television services to grow in Europe. Over the next decade, digital terrestrial television offerings will play a very important role in the European TV market, according to Parks Associates analysts Kurt Scherf and Jayant Darasi.
Comcast Considers Pinching Pipes on Broadband Plans May 08, 2008
Comcast appears to be testing the waters to gauge customer reaction to a broadband access cap. The company is reportedly considering charging customers who exceed a monthly cap of 250 gigabytes based on usage above that level, tacking on another $15 for every additional 10 gigabytes used.
Related News Alerts
More by Renay San Miguel
An FBI Cybercrime Agent's Tales From the Trenches November 09, 2009
The stories that FBI Assistant Director of Cybersecurity Shawn Henry can tell are enough to keep any network security administrator up at night. The methods of criminal hackers are becoming disturbingly affective, he says, and changing attitudes on the nature of online privacy are giving rise to additional risks. On the bright side, he also sees a growing degree of cooperation among law enforcement groups.
Cyber-Meltdown: Managing the Message When IT Hits the Fan November 06, 2009
The situation is a perfect nightmare for any megacorporation: Firewalls are breached, mountains of sensitive data are stolen, and the smell of extortion is in the air. Luckily for all involved, the cyberattack that experts tackled at the 20th World Congress of the Information Security Forum was merely a simulation. The exercise's take-aways, however, proved revealing.
Droid: Enjoyed November 06, 2009
The Motorola Droid may well be the most intriguing smartphone to come along since Apple redefined the term in 2007. Comparisons with the iPhone are inevitable, of course -- Droid loses on app shop size but wins with its carrier, Verizon. People who use a great deal of Google applications will find Droid especially useful.