One of the things I like about e-mail lists is learning things about
myself that I never knew before, especially regarding my occupation. For
the last 9 months or so I've been working part-time with a Washington
think tank in an analyst capacity, not as a lobbyist, and not on the
Comcast payroll. My views about Internet regulation precede this job and
haven't been altered by it. For purposes of the present discussion, I'd
rather be known as the guy who wrote the first IEEE 802 standard for
Ethernet over twisted pair, or designed the Wi-Fi MAC protocol, or the
DRP for UWB, or something like that.
As Suresh notes, the idea that the FCC overstepped its bounds in the
Comcast order is hardly controversial. It's not even a matter of opinion
any more, as the decision written by the most liberal judge on the 3rd
Circuit, David Tatel, means it's the law. The debate about how to
regulate the Internet is now premised on the fact that the old rationale
doesn't hold up to scrutiny, so deal with it.
RB
On 4/11/2010 11:23 PM, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
On Mon, Apr 12, 2010 at 11:41 AM, Paul WALL<pauldotw...@gmail.com> wrote:
It should probably be noted, for purpose of establishing bias, that
Richard is a Washington lobbyist, hired to represent Comcast on
regulatory matters. What he views as overstepping legal bounds,
others may view as protecting consumers...
Hell, funnily enough Susan Crawford warned at the time that the FCC
action wouldn't stand up in court the way it was done.
http://www.circleid.com/posts/comcast_vs_the_fcc_a_reply_to_susan_crawfords_article/
--srs
--
Richard Bennett
Research Fellow
Information Technology and Innovation Foundation
Washington, DC