Effort to Widen U.S. Internet Access Sets Up Battle

By BRIAN STELTER and JENNA WORTHAM
March 12, 2010

The Federal Communications Commission is proposing an ambitious 
10-year plan that will reimagine the nation's media and technology 
priorities by establishing high-speed Internet as the country's 
dominant communication network.

The plan, which will be submitted to Congress on Tuesday, is likely 
to generate debate in Washington and a lobbying battle among the 
telecommunication giants, which over time may face new competition 
for customers. Already, the broadcast television industry is 
resisting a proposal to give back spectrum the government wants to 
use for future mobile service.

The blueprint reflects the government's view that broadband Internet 
is becoming the common medium of the United States, gradually 
displacing the telephone and broadcast television industries. It also 
signals a shift at the F.C.C., which under the administration of 
President George W. Bush gained more attention for policing indecency 
on the television airwaves than for promoting Internet access.

According to F.C.C. officials briefed on the plan, the commission's 
recommendations will include a subsidy for Internet providers to wire 
rural parts of the country now without access, a controversial 
auction of some broadcast spectrum to free up space for wireless 
devices, and the development of a new universal set-top box that 
connects to the Internet and cable service.

The effort will influence billions of dollars in federal spending, 
although the F.C.C. will argue that the plan should pay for itself 
through the spectrum auctions. Some recommendations will require 
Congressional action and industry support, and will affect users only 
years from now.

...

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/13/business/media/13fcc.html

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