Hi list:

Thought many of you would find this article interesting. I certainly did. 
There's hope yet!!

http://news.com.com/What+the+Democrats+win+means+for+tech/2100-1028_3-6133833.html

~Perian
  What the Democrats' win means for tech 
 
 By Declan McCullagh
  
http://news.com.com/What+the+Democrats+win+means+for+tech/2100-1028_3-6133833.html
  

 Story last modified Thu Nov 09 09:16:53 PST 2006 

   


 
 
 It was the narrowest of Republican margins in the U.S. Senate that doomed a 
crucial vote on Net neutrality earlier this year.  By an 11-11 tie, a 
GOP-dominated committee failed in June to approve rules requiring that all 
Internet traffic be treated the same no matter what its "source" or 
"destination" might be. A similar measure also failed in the House of 
Representatives. 
  But now that this week's elections have switched control of the House back to 
the Democrats--and they appear to have seized the Senate as well--the outlook 
for technology-related legislation has changed dramatically overnight. 
 On a wealth of topics--Net neutrality, digital copyright, merger approval, 
data retention, Internet censorship--a Capitol Hill controlled by Democrats 
should yield a shift in priorities on technology-related legislation. 
 Network neutrality is one of the clearest examples of a partisan rift. In the 
Senate, all the Republican committee members but one voted against extensive 
broadband regulations. These regulations are backed by Internet companies such 
as Google and eBay, but are opposed by telecommunications and hardware 
providers. 
 "Clearly, we're going to have to address the question of network neutrality," 
Rep. John Dingell, a Michigan Democrat, told reporters on Wednesday. Dingell, 
who has served in the House for more than 50 of his 80 years, is set to be the 
next chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which writes 
telecommunications laws. 
  Dingell didn't elaborate. But he's previously gone on the record as a staunch 
supporter of extensive regulations that would prohibit network operators from 
charging content providers extra for premium placement or faster delivery, 
dubbing it "private taxation of the Internet." (Network operators say they may 
need to do this to recoup their vast investments in new broadband 
infrastructure.) 
 Net neutrality
Adam Green, a spokesman for the liberal advocacy group Moveon.org, predicted 
that the election results would be a boon to the enactment of extensive Net 
neutrality regulations. "Internet freedom should not be a partisan issue. But 
Republicans have consistently been standing in the way, and there is zero doubt 
that the increased Democratic control of Congress will be fantastic news," said 
Green, whose group lobbies on the topic. 

 Rep. Nancy Pelosi, the California Democrat set to be the next House Majority 
Leader, has also been a strong supporter of more Net neutrality regulations. 
Pelosi said in June that "without Net Neutrality, the current experience that 
Internet users enjoy today is in jeopardy." 
  The issue of electronic surveillance represents another partisan divide. 
House Democrats cast 62 votes against the 2001 Patriot Act, but only three 
Republicans opposed it. Similarly, not one Democrat opposed a more recent 
amendment requiring the executive branch to disclose its data-mining 
technologies, while 165 Republicans did. 
  Caroline Fredrickson, director of the ACLU's Washington office, said she 
hoped the new Congress would investigate the National Security Agency's 
domestic spying program. "The illegal spying program should be a primary focus 
of congressional efforts to investigate this administration's abuse of power," 
Fredrickson said. "The president himself has admitted to authorizing this 
warrantless spying in direct contravention of the dictates of FISA," or the 
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. 


 Longtime Washington observers acknowledge that neither party is that 
principled when it comes to the topic of electronic surveillance. Rather, 
positions on privacy can become partisan methods of attacking the party that 
holds the White House. (Republicans, now stalwart defenders of the Patriot Act, 
were advocates of protecting privacy during President Clinton's time in office. 
Republican Sen. Conrad Burns said the White House "has no respect for privacy," 
and House Majority Leader Dick Armey used words like "Orwellian" to describe 
administration proposals.) 
   The ACLU is pinning some of its hopes on Rep. John Conyers, the Michigan 
Democrat who is set to be the next chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. 
Conyers has suggested imposing greater controls on government surveillance and 
is in a key position to lead a high-profile investigation.  
  "Several of the new committee chairs have already expressed their intention 
to conduct a thorough inquiry into the unlawful actions of this 
administration," Fredrickson said. 
  Digital copyright
Digital copyright is another topic that likely will be heavily influenced by 
the congressional shakeup--though more because of new committee chairmen than 
the shift in party alignments. 
 Hollywood tends to be solidly Democratic: Employees of companies like Viacom, 
Walt Disney and Vivendi Universal consistently write checks to Democratic 
politicians over Republicans, by a 2-to-1 margin. (And Sen. Bob Dole, a 
Republican, famously bashed Hollywood during the 1996 presidential campaign.) 
  But in practice, Republican politicians have been nearly as enthusiastic 
about helping Hollywood. It was Sen. Ted Stevens, an Alaska Republican, who 
endorsed the so-called broadcast flag for television in January. It was a New 
Jersey Republican, Rep. Mike Ferguson, who introduced the legislation for 
digital radio two months later, and another from North Carolina, Rep. Howard 
Coble, who co-sponsored a plan in mid-2002 to let copyright holders disable PCs 
used for illicit file trading. And Sen. Orrin Hatch, a Republican, once called 
for remotely destroying pirates' computers. 

 The Motion Picture Association of America said on Wednesday that it 
encountered bipartisan opposition in the House--from Republican Joe Barton and 
Democrat Rick Boucher--when trying to enact a broadcast flag bill before. Such 
a law is designed to curb digital TV piracy by making certain receivers illegal 
to sell. 
  Because of Barton and Boucher's opposition, "we have bipartisan challenges on 
that, and we hope to have a bipartisan solution," said John Feehery, MPAA's 
executive vice president for external affairs. "We'll have to see how it all 
shakes out with the (new) chairmen." 

Key chairmen
 One question worrying Washington insiders is who will be the next chairman of 
key subcommittees, such as one dealing with writing copyright laws. 
  "We're going through a process right now of just deciding what those 
priorities are going to be for the next year," Feehery said. "We've been 
working hard on the analog hole and broadcast flag--the bottom line is (that) 
we want to limit the impact of piracy on our industry." 
  If Boucher gets the nod as chairman, a broadcast flag becomes far less likely 
and changes to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act's "anti-circumvention" 
sections become politically feasible. "He would be a big boost to our efforts 
to allow innovation to develop," said Art Brodsky of Public Knowledge, an 
advocacy group that has opposed content providers on many digital copyright 
bills. 
If Rep. Howard Berman, however, gets the job, the recording industry and motion 
picture industry will have a staunch ally as subcommittee chairman. Berman, a 
Hollywood Democrat, has sponsored legislation in the past that would let 
copyright holders legally hack into peer-to-peer networks. (Berman currently is 
the subcommittee's top Democrat, but there's speculation that he'd take a 
different chairmanship.) 
Gary Shapiro, president of the Consumer Electronics Association, said that his 
group's strategy to oppose to the broadcast flag won't change much. "Our 
strategy is (to) work with both parties," Shapiro said. "Technology is the 
field that's growing the national economy. It's not a partisan issue." 
Shapiro is worried about what might happen in a so-called lame-duck Congress, 
which will reconvene briefly this fall under Republican control. Tennesseean 
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, who is retiring, could "try to hurt us 
badly," Shapiro said. "He indicated he's going to try, with the broadcast flag 
and audio flag, possibly attached to a spending bill. We're very concerned 
about that and we're going to be very vigilant." 

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