Friday 5/19 there was a hearing on Privacy, Digital Inclusion, Lack of Needs
Assessment and Business Plan

Click here to watch the video stream (it also provides an option to download
the audio as an MP3 too), select the 5/19/06 meeting (WMF)

http://sanfrancisco.granicus.com/ViewPublisher.php?view_id=16

(Below are two reports on the meeting - other aspects not addressed in the
summary include - significant complaints about the lack of a Needs
Assessment and Business Plan BEFORE the RFP, which would have addressed many
of the issues that are now arising including the lack of a clear Digital
Inclusion plan, minimal privacy standards or disaster tolerance
requirements.   Also the Fiber Study mentioned is long delayed -and even
last month DTIS was saying it would be complete in 4 months - now this
month, they are again saying it has not begun and it will still be 4 months.
Also there is talk about doing a WiFi proof of concept - that is good, but
Pilots of the technology should be done before a contract is signed - SF is
requiring 90% indoor coverage in exchange for access to city property - this
is a much higher bar than other Muni WiFi initiatives And why weren't the
Vendors required to provide a Proof of Concept during the RFP??? - Kimo)


http://www.cio.com/blog_view.html?CID=21339


May 22, 2006


San Francisco to Push Google on Privacy


MAY 22, 2006 02:52:44 PM | Add Comment
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9')>  (0) | Permalink <http://www.cio.com/blog_view.html?CID=21339>

San Francisco will push Google and EarthLink  for greater privacy
protections than the companies outlined in their proposal for a citywide
wireless Internet service, officials said Friday.

In negotiations with the companies, expected to begin soon, the city will
seek an "opt-in" system for users to share personal information,
notification of users when there are legal requests for their information
and a commitment from the operators on how long they will keep user data
they collect, said Brian Roberts, a senior policy analyst for the city's
Policy, Planning and Compliance Division. He spoke at the latest hearing by
the Local Agency Formation Committee, a utilities oversight body for the
combined City and County of San Francisco.

In a letter to the city last month, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
and two other groups slammed the Google-EarthLink plan for lacking those
commitments and others. Privacy is a central concern among critics of Google
and EarthLink's citywide network plan, which would include a free 300K bps
(bit-per-second) service supported by targeted advertising in addition to a
faster paid service.

Although it will push for those three conditions, the city wouldn't commit
itself to demanding them outright while negotiating a contract. It's risky
for the city to reveal what it considers non-negotiable, because the vendors
don't have to reveal the same information, Roberts said.

The EFF hopes the city will make its privacy criteria less negotiable rather
than more, said Seth Schoen, staff technologist at EFF. County Supervisor
Ross Mirkarimi gave a similar view and raised the specter of the city
changing direction.

"I don't know what the bottom line is for us in the city," Mirkarimi said.
"What is an acceptable standard? When ... do we decide that that's not an
acceptable agreement and that an RFP [request for proposals] potentially
should be provided for a municipally owned system?"

The city also appears ready to satisfy critics who had called for a
proof-of-concept network before committing itself to a full rollout.
Civitium LLC, a wireless consulting firm hired by the city, recommended the
deployment of a trial network and the city agreed, said Greg Richardson, a
managing partner at Civitium.

Mirkarimi also continued to call for more consideration of municipal
ownership, possibly as a second alternative if the city can't reach an
agreement with Google/EarthLink.

Meanwhile, the city may someday offer broadband over fiber, according to
Roberts. As part of a study of its optical fiber infrastructure, the city
will consider deploying fiber to every home in San Francisco, a technology
concept that has raised eyebrows for its enormous cost even when proposed by
giant Verizon Communications.

The city has 42 miles of fiber for uses such as public safety, and Roberts
estimated it would take 800 miles to reach all homes and businesses. Because
a fiber network involves massive infrastructure work and fixed assets, and
doesn't need to be upgraded often as a wireless network does, it's more
suited to city ownership, Roberts said. The study, expected to begin in
about two weeks, would take about four months, he said.

-Stephen Lawson, IDG News Service

(This below covers additional details of the meeting even though it was
written before it occured)


San Francisco Wi-Fi Plan to Face More Heat


MAY 22, 2006 08:31:40 AM | Add Comment
<javascript:createWindow('http://www.cio.com/comment_list_popup.html?ID=2131
8')>  (0) | Permalink <http://www.cio.com/blog_view.html?CID=21318>

Privacy advocates and activists for digital inclusion were set to raise
alarms about San Francisco's proposed wireless broadband service at a
hearing Friday afternoon before a city oversight body.

The winning proposal for the citywide network, made by Google and EarthLink,
would allow for invasion of users' privacy and doesn't include any funding
to help make digital technology and the Internet accessible to lower-income
people, critics have charged. The companies still need to negotiate a final
contract with the city, and the activists aim to affect what goes into that
deal-or make the city change course and adopt a municipally owned network.

The city sought proposals last year for a wireless network that would reach
most of the city for outdoor and some indoor use. Google and EarthLink's
response called for a free 300Kbps service supported by location-based
advertising and a faster paid service. In early April, it was the plan
picked to go forward into contract negotiations.

At a hearing last month before the Local Agency Formation Commission, an
oversight body for the combined city and county of San Francisco, city
activists and other speakers raised concerns about a lack of public input
and the technical effectiveness of the design. The group put off talk about
privacy and inclusion until Friday's meeting in order to have enough time
for input.

Privacy concerns have been raised since last year by the American Civil
Liberties Union of Northern California, the Electronic Frontier Foundation
and the Electronic Privacy Information Center, whose worries weren't eased
by the city's choice of Google and EarthLink. The companies' plan scored low
when the groups measured privacy aspects of all the proposed systems.

In an April 19 letter to the city, the groups charged that users of the free
service will have to give an e-mail address and sign in for every session,
which would allow Google and EarthLink to track individual users over time.
Google has committed to keeping user information for only 180 days or less,
but EarthLink has not, they said. The groups want both vendors to commit to
a data-retention schedule.

In addition, both companies would make users "opt out" of letting the
companies sell information about them. The groups want them to use an
"opt-in" system instead. They also said the city should demand Google and
EarthLink agree to fair procedures for answering requests for user
information by law enforcement and others, and keep tight controls on public
video-surveillance systems that are proposed to be connected to the network.

Advocates of closing the "digital divide" will also raise issues Friday that
they think should be included in the negotiations, said Sydney Levy, program
director at Media Alliance in nearby Oakland, Calif., who will be speaking
at the hearing. Media Alliance and other groups want commitments to future
upgrades to the 300Kbps free service as technology advances, as well as
funding for computers, training and ways to provide local information within
neighborhoods.

"There's no point in talking about it later; we need to talk while or before
they negotiate," Levy said. "Up until now, it's been very frustrating."

Representatives of Google and the city were not immediately available for
comment.

"Now's the time for these groups to state their concerns and have the folks
that we're going to negotiate with bring these issues up," said EarthLink
spokesman Jerry Grasso. Negotiations have not yet begun, he added.

-Stephen Lawson, IDG News Service

 <http://xpostmail.com/7a5a3daf5cdc925ca2f0b8b6b74eb4fbworker.jpg>
 <http://xpostmail.com/6b93cec9ffd5f8e584fe1a43dde0f2f3worker.jpg>
 <http://xpostmail.com/e4c1bc8d09fd32537eb30897f879faf1worker.jpg>
 <http://xpostmail.com/881d14c440f87f199652617a496dcd3fworker.jpg>

Eric,  the Addidas consultant is Greg Richardson, head of Civitium.com

Also there are serious questions about the ability for an outdoor Municipal
WiFi solution to work well indoors above the 2nd floor and in interior rooms

________________________________

From: Kimo Crossman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 2006 May 22 14:05
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: SF Techconnect Muni WiFi Franchise: 5/19 hearing now online and
Analysis - hearing on Privacy, Digital Inclusion, (Lack of) Needs Assessment
and Business Plan, indoor coverage, interference, Fiber?



Friday 5/19 there was a hearing on Privacy, Digital Inclusion, Lack of Needs
Assessment and Business Plan

Click here to watch the video stream (it also provides an option to download
the audio as an MP3 too), select the 5/19/06 meeting (WMF)

http://sanfrancisco.granicus.com/ViewPublisher.php?view_id=16

(Below are two reports on the meeting - other aspects not addressed in the
summary include - significant complaints about the lack of a Needs
Assessment and Business Plan BEFORE the RFP, which would have addressed many
of the issues that are now arising including the lack of a clear Digital
Inclusion plan, minimal privacy standards or disaster tolerance
requirements.   Also the Fiber Study mentioned is long delayed -and even
last month DTIS was saying it would be complete in 4 months - now this
month, they are again saying it has not begun and it will still be 4 months.
Also there is talk about doing a WiFi proof of concept - that is good, but
Pilots of the technology should be done before a contract is signed - SF is
requiring 90% indoor coverage in exchange for access to city property - this
is a much higher bar than other Muni WiFi initiatives And why weren't the
Vendors required to provide a Proof of Concept during the RFP??? - Kimo)


http://www.cio.com/blog_view.html?CID=21339


May 22, 2006


San Francisco to Push Google on Privacy


MAY 22, 2006 02:52:44 PM | Add Comment
<javascript:createWindow('http://www.cio.com/comment_list_popup.html?ID=2133
9')>  (0) | Permalink <http://www.cio.com/blog_view.html?CID=21339>

San Francisco will push Google and EarthLink  for greater privacy
protections than the companies outlined in their proposal for a citywide
wireless Internet service, officials said Friday.

In negotiations with the companies, expected to begin soon, the city will
seek an "opt-in" system for users to share personal information,
notification of users when there are legal requests for their information
and a commitment from the operators on how long they will keep user data
they collect, said Brian Roberts, a senior policy analyst for the city's
Policy, Planning and Compliance Division. He spoke at the latest hearing by
the Local Agency Formation Committee, a utilities oversight body for the
combined City and County of San Francisco.

In a letter to the city last month, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
and two other groups slammed the Google-EarthLink plan for lacking those
commitments and others. Privacy is a central concern among critics of Google
and EarthLink's citywide network plan, which would include a free 300K bps
(bit-per-second) service supported by targeted advertising in addition to a
faster paid service.

Although it will push for those three conditions, the city wouldn't commit
itself to demanding them outright while negotiating a contract. It's risky
for the city to reveal what it considers non-negotiable, because the vendors
don't have to reveal the same information, Roberts said.

The EFF hopes the city will make its privacy criteria less negotiable rather
than more, said Seth Schoen, staff technologist at EFF. County Supervisor
Ross Mirkarimi gave a similar view and raised the specter of the city
changing direction.

"I don't know what the bottom line is for us in the city," Mirkarimi said.
"What is an acceptable standard? When ... do we decide that that's not an
acceptable agreement and that an RFP [request for proposals] potentially
should be provided for a municipally owned system?"

The city also appears ready to satisfy critics who had called for a
proof-of-concept network before committing itself to a full rollout.
Civitium LLC, a wireless consulting firm hired by the city, recommended the
deployment of a trial network and the city agreed, said Greg Richardson, a
managing partner at Civitium.

Mirkarimi also continued to call for more consideration of municipal
ownership, possibly as a second alternative if the city can't reach an
agreement with Google/EarthLink.

Meanwhile, the city may someday offer broadband over fiber, according to
Roberts. As part of a study of its optical fiber infrastructure, the city
will consider deploying fiber to every home in San Francisco, a technology
concept that has raised eyebrows for its enormous cost even when proposed by
giant Verizon Communications.

The city has 42 miles of fiber for uses such as public safety, and Roberts
estimated it would take 800 miles to reach all homes and businesses. Because
a fiber network involves massive infrastructure work and fixed assets, and
doesn't need to be upgraded often as a wireless network does, it's more
suited to city ownership, Roberts said. The study, expected to begin in
about two weeks, would take about four months, he said.

-Stephen Lawson, IDG News Service

(This below covers additional details of the meeting even though it was
written before it occured)


San Francisco Wi-Fi Plan to Face More Heat


MAY 22, 2006 08:31:40 AM | Add Comment
<javascript:createWindow('http://www.cio.com/comment_list_popup.html?ID=2131
8')>  (0) | Permalink <http://www.cio.com/blog_view.html?CID=21318>

Privacy advocates and activists for digital inclusion were set to raise
alarms about San Francisco's proposed wireless broadband service at a
hearing Friday afternoon before a city oversight body.

The winning proposal for the citywide network, made by Google and EarthLink,
would allow for invasion of users' privacy and doesn't include any funding
to help make digital technology and the Internet accessible to lower-income
people, critics have charged. The companies still need to negotiate a final
contract with the city, and the activists aim to affect what goes into that
deal-or make the city change course and adopt a municipally owned network.

The city sought proposals last year for a wireless network that would reach
most of the city for outdoor and some indoor use. Google and EarthLink's
response called for a free 300Kbps service supported by location-based
advertising and a faster paid service. In early April, it was the plan
picked to go forward into contract negotiations.

At a hearing last month before the Local Agency Formation Commission, an
oversight body for the combined city and county of San Francisco, city
activists and other speakers raised concerns about a lack of public input
and the technical effectiveness of the design. The group put off talk about
privacy and inclusion until Friday's meeting in order to have enough time
for input.

Privacy concerns have been raised since last year by the American Civil
Liberties Union of Northern California, the Electronic Frontier Foundation
and the Electronic Privacy Information Center, whose worries weren't eased
by the city's choice of Google and EarthLink. The companies' plan scored low
when the groups measured privacy aspects of all the proposed systems.

In an April 19 letter to the city, the groups charged that users of the free
service will have to give an e-mail address and sign in for every session,
which would allow Google and EarthLink to track individual users over time.
Google has committed to keeping user information for only 180 days or less,
but EarthLink has not, they said. The groups want both vendors to commit to
a data-retention schedule.

In addition, both companies would make users "opt out" of letting the
companies sell information about them. The groups want them to use an
"opt-in" system instead. They also said the city should demand Google and
EarthLink agree to fair procedures for answering requests for user
information by law enforcement and others, and keep tight controls on public
video-surveillance systems that are proposed to be connected to the network.

Advocates of closing the "digital divide" will also raise issues Friday that
they think should be included in the negotiations, said Sydney Levy, program
director at Media Alliance in nearby Oakland, Calif., who will be speaking
at the hearing. Media Alliance and other groups want commitments to future
upgrades to the 300Kbps free service as technology advances, as well as
funding for computers, training and ways to provide local information within
neighborhoods.

"There's no point in talking about it later; we need to talk while or before
they negotiate," Levy said. "Up until now, it's been very frustrating."

Representatives of Google and the city were not immediately available for
comment.

"Now's the time for these groups to state their concerns and have the folks
that we're going to negotiate with bring these issues up," said EarthLink
spokesman Jerry Grasso. Negotiations have not yet begun, he added.

-Stephen Lawson, IDG News Service

 <http://xpostmail.com/7a5a3daf5cdc925ca2f0b8b6b74eb4fbworker.jpg>
 <http://xpostmail.com/6b93cec9ffd5f8e584fe1a43dde0f2f3worker.jpg>
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  <http://xpostmail.com/5ae3222a2ceb9d4668e3c32fd16d4553worker.jpg> 
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