ANSWERS SOUGHT FOR US BROADBAND DECLINE
[SOURCE: PCMagazine, AUTHOR: Chloe Albanesius]
A U.S. innovation brain drain, coupled with sloppy government handling of 
subsidy programs and data collection, have contributed to a decline in the 
country's broadband standing, technology experts told the Senate Commerce 
Committee on Tuesday. The hearing was held a day after the Organization for 
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) issued new global broadband 
per-capita penetration data that saw the U.S. fall from 12th to 15th place out 
of 30 countries. Some viewed the results as a sign that the U.S. is falling 
behind its global counterparts, while others said it was unfair to compare the 
U.S. against the smaller and more densely populated countries that beat the 
U.S. in the OECD rankings.  The questions that panelists tangled with mainly 
dealt with issues of geography. In Europe, where per-capita broadband 
penetration is growing, world powers like the United Kingdom are smaller 
geographically than California. The person-to-person proximity also allows 
infrastructure buildouts to serve more people. While this isn't a problem in 
major cities, serving rural customers with broadband access is still a thorny 
issue.  One of the issues left undefined was the definition of "broadband". Add 
to that the lack of reliable government data, and the problem becomes even more 
complicated, witnesses said. Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii), who chairs the 
Commerce Committee, said that he would soon introduce a bill to promote 
innovation and improve the federal commitment to basic research on 
communications. He is also penning broadband data development legislation that 
would call for the collection of broadband data collection at the federal and 
state levels, a complaint that was voiced by several speakers.
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,2121582,00.asp
* Statement by Sen Inouye:
"The broadband bottom line is that too many of our international counterparts 
are passing us by.  For this we are paying a price.  Some experts estimate that 
universal broadband adoption would add $500 billion to the U.S. economy and 
create more than a million new jobs."
http://commerce.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Hearings.Statement&Statement_ID=243
* Statement by Sen Ted Stevens:
http://commerce.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Hearings.Statement&Statement_ID=242
* U.S. Broadband Access Slips Further
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/apr2007/tc20070424_190579.htm?campaign_id=rss_daily

MARKEY HOLDS HEARING ON INTERNATIONAL BROADBAND
[SOURCE: Rep Ed Markey (D-MA)]
Rep Edward J. Markey (D-MA) chaired a hearing of the House Commerce 
Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet Tuesday on lessons the 
United States broadband industry can learn from international broadband 
expansion. In his opening statement he said, "It is clearly time for us to look 
beyond our borders in developing our nation’s broadband strategy.  While U.S. 
broadband adoption is certainly increasing and deployment continues, in 
international broadband rankings a nation must essentially run in order to 
stand still.  Relative to other countries, however, it appears as if America’s 
broadband penetration is stalling at “dial up” speed while other nations have 
developed national plans and are moving ahead." ... "Advanced, high speed 
broadband service is the indispensable infrastructure of the 21st Century.  It 
will be the vehicle through which countless other economic, civic, and cultural 
activities occur.  As we assess where we stand today, I think the way to 
achieve greater progress is not from more hortatory rhetoric or excuses for 
poor rankings ­ the U.S.  needs a plan. In my view, the United States started 
out on the right path.  The 1996 Telecommunications Act mandated a robust 
unbundling and interconnection regime designed to jump-start competition both 
between and among technology platforms.  The idea was that competition would 
reduce prices, improve service, and spur innovation ­ including the deployment 
of broadband by incumbents and competitors.  Gradually, however, we lost our 
way, as regulators became convinced that competition within a platform actually 
hindered overall broadband deployment.  As a result, we now have a residential 
broadband duopoly marked by relatively slow speeds and high prices. Many other 
nations took one look at our broadband situation, learned from our experience, 
and took the opposite approach.  In Japan and the U.K. for instance, they 
implemented policies such as local loop unbundling and broadband resale that 
facilitate competition using the incumbent’s plant, regardless of technology.  
As a result, Japan and the U.K. today have faster broadband, cheaper broadband, 
and more broadband choices."
http://markey.house.gov/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2775&Itemid=141
* Upton Comments on Broadband
At the same hearing, Rep Fred Upton (R-MI) said, "As a result of ... FCC and 
judicial actions, we at long last have a semblance of a national broadband 
policy that promotes competition, is pro-investment not anti-investment, and 
that imposes minimal government regulation upon broadband services and 
facilities.  I am confident that these long sought pro-broadband policy 
decisions will greatly accelerate broadband deployment.  They are only now 
taking hold as the regulatory uncertainty that hung over broadband was, as we 
thought in 2002, an investment stifling factor. We heard last week at the 
wireless hearing about how the spectrum resulting from the DTV transition will 
permit wireless providers to provide significant broadband services.  So, 
rather than look for new regulatory solutions, we must continue to promote 
competition, promote new technologies, promote and foster broadband network 
investment, and rely on competition and deregulatory not government regulation."
http://www.house.gov/upton/press/press-04-24-07.html

WHY THE US DOESN'T MEASURE UP
[SOURCE: Free Press, AUTHOR: Ben Scott]
In testimony before the Senate Commerce Committee today, Free Press Policy 
Director Ben Scott urged lawmakers to pursue a comprehensive national broadband 
policy that will bring more broadband competition to American households. 
“Above all, we need competition policy to drive down prices, accelerate speeds, 
and deliver an attractive value to the consumer,” Scott said. “We must not 
sacrifice the long-term interests of the country for the short-term interests 
of incumbents that have long shielded themselves from an open market.” “This 
isn’t just a matter of pride at stake,” Scott said. “This is real money. The 
economic benefits of higher broadband penetration accumulate exponentially. 
Even a small increase in broadband penetration can generate a consumer surplus 
measured in the billions of dollars. While we aren’t capturing these dollars, 
someone else is.”  “This is a paradigm-shifting moment for American 
telecommunications,” Scott concluded. “It is imperative that we choose wisely.”
http://www.freepress.net/news/22657
* Read Scott's testimony at: 
http://www.freepress.net/docs/42407bssentestimony.pdf
* U.S. Falling Behind Further and Faster on Broadband
http://www.consumersunion.org/blogs/hun/2007/04/us_falling_farther_and_faster.html


---------------------------------------------------------------
             WWWhatsup NYC
http://pinstand.com - http://punkcast.com
--------------------------------------------------------------- 

_______________________________________________
Discuss mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.isoc-ny.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss

Reply via email to