On 10/24/07, Dave Kumar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> This is, admittedly, focused on the US regulatory world, but it includes
> some discussion of the tension between wireless network operators and
> software applications like Skype. This debate may be entirely different in
> other countries.


If I may shamelessly respond to my own post, here's a more accessible column
on this general topic from Walt Mossberg, who writes about consumer
technology for the Wall Street Journal.

http://mossblog.allthingsd.com/20071021/free-my-phone/

"Suppose you own a Dell computer, and you decide to replace it with a Sony.
You don't have to get the permission of your Internet service provider to do
so, or even tell the provider about it. You can just pack up the old machine
and set up the new one.

Now, suppose your new computer came with a particular Web browser or online
music service, but you'd prefer a different one. You can just download and
install the new software, and uninstall the old one. You can sign up for a
new music service and cancel the old one. And, once again, you don't need to
even notify your Internet provider, let alone seek its permission.

Oh, and the developers of such computers, software and services can offer
you their products directly, without going through the Internet provider,
without getting the provider's approval, and without giving the provider a
penny. The Internet provider gets paid simply for its contribution to the
mix: providing your Internet connection. But, for all practical purposes, it
doesn't control what is connected to the network, or carried over the
network.

This is the way digital capitalism should work, and, in the case of the
mass-market personal-computer industry, and the modern Internet, it has
created one of the greatest technological revolutions in human history, as
well as one of the greatest spurts of wealth creation and of consumer
empowerment.

So, it's intolerable that the same country that produced all this has
trapped its citizens in a backward, stifling system when it comes to the
next great technology platform, the cellphone.

A shortsighted and often just plain stupid federal government has allowed
itself to be bullied and fooled by a handful of big wireless phone operators
for decades now. And the result has been a mobile phone system that is the
direct opposite of the PC model. It severely limits consumer choice, stifles
innovation, crushes entrepreneurship, and has made the U.S. the
laughingstock of the mobile-technology world, just as the cellphone is
morphing into a powerful hand-held computer.

Whether you are a consumer, a hardware maker, a software developer or a
provider of cool new services, it's hard to make a move in the American
cellphone world without the permission of the companies that own the pipes.
While power in other technology sectors flows to consumers and nimble
entrepreneurs, in the cellphone arena it remains squarely in the hands of
the giant carriers."

[snip]

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