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- Newsgroups: comp.org.eff.talk
- Path: sparky!uunet!hela.iti.org!cs.widener.edu!eff!usenet
- From: Danny Weitzner <djw@eff.org>
- Subject: Re: Ending subsidized services?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan28.024356.16614@eff.org>
- X-Xxdate: Wed, 27 Jan 93 02:47:55 GMT
- Sender: usenet@eff.org (NNTP News Poster)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: j-q-adams.eff.org
- Organization: Electronic Frontier Foundation
- X-Useragent: Nuntius v1.1.1d7
- References: <C1E4n3.2E2@wolves.Durham.NC.US>
- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1993 02:43:56 GMT
- Lines: 118
-
- In article <C1E4n3.2E2@wolves.Durham.NC.US> Gregory G. Woodbury,
- ggw@wolves.Durham.NC.US writes:
-
- >Ok. I'm sufficiently confuse by the arguments and counter-arguments as
- >to have lost track of something. I thought I understood the Open
- >Platform initiative, but it seems that I can't quite get a handle on
- >some of the points.
- >
- >Here is a "hypothetical" situation to deal with.
- >
- [to paraphrase: A hypothetical netnews devotee has a netnews feed to her
- home from a friendly university, via an expensive telebit modem which she
- is lucky and rich enough to have. Then, for some unspecified reason, the
- feed is cut off.]
- >
- >THE QUESTIONS:
-
- Before delving into the specific questions, here is a quick reprise of
- both the principles at the heart of the Open Platform proposal (see
- ftp.eff for full proposal), and a bit about what's happening right now:
-
- The goal of the Open Platform campaign is to encourage the development of
- the nation's telecommunications infrastructure so that it is an Open
- Platform which
-
- * makes end-to-end digital service widely available at affordable rates;
-
- * promotes First Amendment free expression by reaffirming the principles
- of common carriage;
-
- * ensures competition in local exchange services;
-
- * fosters innovations that make networks and information services easy to
- use;
-
- * protects personal privacy; and
-
- * preserves and enhances equitable access to communications media for all
- segments of society.
-
- At present, we are working to have Congress give ISDN deployment a
- gentle, but firm nudge forward in order to achieve the first goal,
- affordable, widespread digital access. There's lots of interest in this
- proposal at both the federal and state level. In Congress it is being
- championed by Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass), chair of the House
- Telecommunications and Finance Subcommittee. Once he and his committee
- have put legislation together, we plan a major online, grassroots
- campaign in support of Markey's plan. (Our most recent Congressional
- testimony should be in the eff ftp site real soon.)
-
- >
- > How does the Open Platform initiative provide this person (and
- >the sites dependent on that site) relief (i.e. access)?
-
- First, affordable digital access such as ISDN (if tariffed reasonably)
- would make it a lot easier to distribute netnews around to those who want
- it, and eliminate the need to buy a pricey telebit. If ISDN takes off,
- an ISDN adapter ought to cost the same as a cheap modem does today. So,
- this is not a direct guaranty of access to netnets, but it should create
- an environment where the netnews adict would have other sources to turn
- to.
- >
- > Does this change significantly if the person makes the feed into
- >a small information provider service business? (Which will raise costs
- >considerably - given the current phone regulatory environment.)
- No.
- >
- > Suppose the person can get NetNews via a sattelite downlink, and
- >uses a lower cost option to get email and outbound news connectivity.
- >Does the situation change in terms of the OPI? Does it change in other
- >ways?
- Again, OP seeks to make all of these services more widely accessible and
- cheaper by expanding the potential market and making access arrangments
- more economical.
- >
- >Bonus Questions:
- >
- > Should this sort of situation be encouraged? subsidized?
- >mandated? regulated?
-
- Making digital access available is a key to increasing the diversity of
- information sources, both public and private, free and fee-based. But
- not everyones needs will be served by the market. In some cases because
- the users don't have the money to buy services that they need, and in
- other cases because a whole community of users with a need do have the
- income to make development of such a service attractive to market
- participants. So, subsidies will be needed. We already subsidize voice
- phone service for low-income people, and we direct public money to public
- libraries. All of these subsidies will have to be redirect to meet
- people's electronic information needs. (The subsidy question also becomes
- more complicated with competitive local telephone providers, but that's
- another story.)
- >
- > What if the site and its dependents are serving as connections
- >to a growing, thriving community of non-technical BBS user folk who have
- >become used to having the low-cost/no-cost connectivity to the world?
-
- I sense a red herring in this question. There is a lot of concern about
- what will happen to free internet access as the National Science
- Foundation withdraws it financial support for the NSFNET backbone. Some
- people interpret this move as a catastrophe for free net access. It's
- really important to realize here that the NSF money that goes into
- supporting the NSFNET backbone is a MINISCULE share of the cost of
- maintaining all of the local campus networks and regional networks. No
- matter what the NSF does, local and state institutions bear the vast
- majority of the cost of connectivity. Universities might, but hopefully
- won't, start to cut back on net access in the wake of the NSF's funding
- shifts. But if they do, it won't be because any giant gap in funding has
- appeared. I hope I've hit on what you mean here.
- >
- I hope this is helpful.
- <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
- >>>>
- Daniel J. Weitzner 202-544-3077 (voice)
- Senior Staff Counsel 202-547-5481 (fax)
- Electronic Frontier Foundation djw@eff.org
- 666 Pennsylvania Ave, SE
- Washington, DC 20003
-