-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.wired.com/news/news/business/story/21985.html
<A HREF="http://www.wired.com/news/news/business/story/21985.html">Business
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The Seedy Side of the FCC
by Declan McCullagh
12:15 p.m.  28.Sep.99.PDT

GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK, Wyoming -- Americans often seem to view the
US Federal Communications Commission as something between a benign
nuisance and an antediluvian bureaucracy.

But is the FCC really a group of modern-day Don Corleones who run a
protection racket complete with threats to kowtow to government demands
or else?

That's how one FCC commissioner views his colleagues. "They are engaged
in shakedowns, extortions, and things that fall outside the formal
regulatory process," Harold Furchtgott-Roth said Tuesday at a Hudson
Institute conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

"The commission has been very effective in shaking down companies [and
deciding] which communities get served first, which communities get
served last, [and] who the assets get spun off to," he said.

Furchtgott-Roth, a Clinton appointee who is the sole economist among the
agency's four other lawyers-turned-commissioners, is frequently the lone
dissenting voice when the FCC considers new regulations. Under US law,
the FCC has broad regulatory authority over telecommunications
companies.

He criticized the conditions the FCC required before approving the
SBC-Ameritech merger, and pointed at "the conditions which SBC has
'voluntarily' submitted with a gun pointed at its head.

"Somehow, all the conditions have nothing to do with wireless licenses,
but a lot of other things."

Furchtgott-Roth also slammed the so-called "Gore tax," or e-rate fee
 that the FCC devised to wire schools and libraries to the Net. "There
we have a situation where the commission has invented a tax to fund
programs at schools and libraries across America purportedly to bring
broadband. At first blush this seems like a good thing."

But, he said, Department of Education statistics published in January
1998 -- before the e-rate checks began to flow -- showed about 70
percent of schools already had access.

"This is just preposterous. Most schools and libraries were hooked up to
the Internet before a nickel of this multibillion dollar tax was imposed
on Americans. There's hardly a politician who's willing to stand up and
say this is an incredible fraud," Furchtgott-Roth said.

Martin Irvine, a Georgetown University professor who spoke Monday, said
his experience suggested otherwise. "I can't believe that so many
schools are connected," he said.

Irvine also said that the FCC should not refrain from regulation of the
Net and telecommunications businesses, saying that some forms of control
over what companies and individuals can do are better than others.
"Regulation does not equal regulation does not equal regulation," he
said.

Glenn Woroch, a research economist at GTE Laboratories, said he believed
that the FCC needed to intervene in the telecom industry -- and the
Internet business too. "I also think there's room for agencies like the
FCC to help the industry move out of certain conventions. There are a
lot of pricing conventions in the industry that are distortionary and do
not contain good incentives for investment," Woroch said.

He pointed to Internet peering arrangements as one area where the FCC
could intervene with regulations or standards-setting. "There's
something that cannot continue. But there's great difficulty in
coordinating the industry from that pricing system to one that's based
on cost," he said.

Furchtgott-Roth predicted that differences in regulation between the
Internet and more tightly controlled media like cable and broadcast will
make for some nasty fights. "It's going to be a very slow process and
it's going to create a lot of problems," he said.
Related Wired Links:
Feds OK Cell Phone Tracking
16.Sep.99.
FCC Sides with FBI on Tapping
27.Aug.99.




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