- More porn sneaks onto the iPhone
- 'Swatting' case shows need to ban caller-ID spoofing
- Why the iPhone can't be "killed"
- Nortel enterprise chief wants to bring back Bay
- US sets final emergency responder wireless pilot
The new national administration in January will have the opportunity to set the direction on many fronts. Here are the top 10 technology-related areas where I think a new direction is needed. The Barack Obama campaign addressed some of these in its technology position paper, but others are issues I've covered in this column in the past.
Regulations are generally the worst way to help technology development because they tend to trip over dependence on the technology of the moment rather than dealing with the underlying principles, but sometimes there is no choice.
1. Ensure a neutral Internet (at least in the United States). This was the top goal in Obama's technology position paper. Here is a case where regulations are needed to codify a less conditional version of the FCC's four principles.
2. Reconsider link and equipment-sharing requirements for monopoly carriers. Once upon a time we had real competition for services to residential users because monopoly phone carriers were required to wholesale parts of their infrastructure to competitive local access providers. The FCC killed this a few years ago and Internet service quality and value has suffered.
3. Reevaluate the 10-year-old Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The safe harbor part of the DMCA is very good but too much of the act is an attempt to preserve an old business model for content owners and the anti-circumvention provisions cause the United States real harm. These parts should be repealed.
4. Mandate privacy protection. Move away from the current U.S. model where anyone can collect and sell information about individuals without their knowledge or consent. Pass a federal law that empowers individuals to control the obtaining, retention and distribution of information about them and mandates the protection of any such information. There should be real criminal and civil penalties, which can be invoked by individuals, for the failure to meet the requirements.
5. Mandate proper procedures for law enforcement. Require that law enforcement at all levels follow proper constitutional processes when obtaining information about individuals. There should be criminal penalties for individuals that fail to follow proper procedures and for any organization that assists them.
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Comments (5)
USFBy Anonymous on November 17, 2008, 11:17 pmScott, Remember the USF came in under Clinton. I am advocating E-Rate be used to enable access to schools and libraries. imho it could get quick consensus. Kind...
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Lost me on #6By Anonymous on November 8, 2008, 8:18 pm"Let the market decide"? Seems we already tried that, and the market failed us all. Until every home has a choice of more than 2 carriers (local monopoly cable and...
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ArticleBy sarahoneill on November 7, 2008, 1:20 amBringing in a new member of the cabinet is an exciting development. About time! So much could improve if someone in the executive branch actually understood the...
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hopefully they won't put Ted Stevens internet regulatory commissBy Anonymous on November 6, 2008, 3:21 pmhopefully they won't put Ted Stevens internet regulatory commission, (series of tube), i still can't belief he got re-elected in Alaska
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Lets hope he reads as well as listensBy Mark on November 6, 2008, 1:30 pmYour points have been stated before and in the Bush administration were not heard.\ These are points that everyone says "Of course", but get stepped on or ignored. We...
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