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- ############ ########## Volume 2 Number 6
- ############ ########## March 31, 1992
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-
- |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| EFFector
- | | ONline
- | PIONEER WINNERS HONORED AT CEREMONY |
- | IN WASHINGTON, D.C. | eff@eff.org
- | |
- | THE EFF ISDN PROJECT:AN INTERIM REPORT | 155 Second Street
- | | Cambridge, MA 02141
- | EFF INTERNATIONAL: | (617) 864-0665
- | E-Mail from John Perry Barlow in Japan |
- | | 666 Pennsylvania Ave.SE
- | | Washington, DC 20003
- | | (202) 544-9237
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-
- ENGELBART, KAHN, WARREN, JENNINGS AND SMERECZYNSKI
- HONORED WITH EFF PIONEER AWARDS
- AT SPECIAL WASHINGTON CEREMONY
-
- During a ceremony at the Second Conference on Computers, Freedom, and
- Privacy in Washington, DC this month the First Annual Pioneer Awards
- were given to five individuals judged to have made substantial
- contributions to the field of computer-based communications. The
- finalists were selected by six judges from a field of over 200 nominees.
- The winners were: Douglas C. Engelbart of Fremont, California; Robert
- Kahn of Reston, Virginia; Jim Warren of Woodside, California; Tom
- Jennings of San Francisco, California; and Andrzej Smereczynski of
- Warsaw, Poland.
-
- Nominations for the Pioneer Awards were carried out over national and
- international computer-communication systems from November, 1991 to
- February 1992. Many of the nominations came from people who read
- EFFector Online and the EFF would like to extend its thanks to all those
- on the Net who contributed to this effort.
-
- The Pioneer Winners
-
- Douglas Engelbart is one of the original moving forces in the personal
- computer revolution who is responsible for many ubiquitous features of
- today's computers such as the mouse, the technique of windowing, display
- editing,hypermedia, groupware and many other inventions and innovations.
- He holds more than 20 patents and is widely-recognized in his field as
- one of our era's true visionaries.
-
- Robert Kahn was an early advocate and prime mover in the creation of
- ARPANET which was the precursor of today's Internet. Since the late 60's
- and early 70's Mr. Kahn has constantly promoted and tirelessly pursued
- innovation and heightened connectivity in the world's computer networks.
-
- Tom Jennings started the Fidonet international network. Today it is a
- linked network of amateur electronic bulletin board systems (BBSs) with
- more than 13,000 nodes worldwide and still growing. He contributed to
- the technical backbone of this system by writing the FIDO BBS program,
- as well as to the culture of the net by pushing for development and
- expansion since the early days of BBSing. He is currently editor of
- FidoNews, the network's electronic newsletter.
-
- Jim Warren has been active in electronic networking for many years.
- Most recently he has organized the First Computers, Freedom and Privacy
- Conference, set-p the first online public dialogue link with the
- California legislature, and has been instrumental is assuring that
- rights common to older mediums and technologies are extended to computer
- networking.
-
- Andrzej Smereczynski is the Administrator of the PLEARN node of the
- Internet and responsible for the extension of the Internet into Poland
- and other east European countries. He is the person directly
- responsible for setting up the first connection to the West in post-
- Communist Middle Europe. A network "guru", Mr. Smereczynski has worked
- selflessly and tirelessly to extend the technology of networking as well
- as its implicit freedoms to Poland and neighboring countries.
-
- This year's judges for the Pioneer Awards were: Dave Farber of the
- University of Pennsylvania Computer Science Department; Howard
- Rheingold, editor of The Whole Earth Review; Vint Cerf, head of CNRI;
- Professor Dorothy Denning Chair of Georgetown University's Computer
- Science Department; Esther Dyson, editor of Release 1.0, Steve Cisler of
- Apple Computer, and John Gilmore of Cygnus Support.
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- REPORT TO THE NET:
- THE STATE OF THE EFF OPEN PLATFORM INITIATIVE
-
- The Vision and the Goal
-
- Until recently the nation's telecommunications policy debate has been a
- struggle among entrenched commercial interests. These interests have,
- for over a decade, been arguing over who will control and dominate
- markets such as information services, manufacturing, and long distance
- service. The Electronic Frontier Foundation, seeking to act from a
- perspective of what is in the public interest, believes it is time to
- table this argument. The EFF believes it is essential to move forward
- now and seek technological tools, an economic and regulatory climate,
- and legislative accord that, working in synergy, will create an
- information marketplace open to all. This new information marketplace
- will be one that will encourage the rapid development of diverse
- information services. It would be an online marketplace characterized by
- freedom, accessibility, and affordability. In the place of the current
- no-win tussle over who should dominate, we would substitute a more
- democratic vision: "Everybody's in. Nobody's out."
-
- For some month's now, the EFF has been developing a proposal which calls
- for the speedy deployment of Narrowband ISDN as the platform of choice
- to begin building a National Public Information Network today.
- Narrowband ISDN is a low-cost, digital, switched platform for delivery
- of information services over the public switched network.
-
- Narrowband ISDN, if offered nation-wide, and priced at mass-market
- rates, will serve as a transitional telecommunications platform until
- national switched broadband options become available early in the 21st
- century.
-
- With Narrowband ISDN in place, information entrepreneurs of all kinds
- large and small will be able to reach an ever expanding market in which
- to offer text, video, and interactive multimedia services. Public
- agencies, private communications services, computer companies,
- publishing firms and individuals will be able to access an inexpensive,
- widely available medium in which to publish and communicate
- electronically.
-
- Background
-
- In the Fall of 1991, the Electronic Frontier Foundation testified before
- the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and Finance on the subject
- of Bell company entry into the information services market. To maintain
- diversity of information services, EFF proposed the rapid deployment of
- a digital information platform, using existing technology and
- facilities, which could be made available to all on a ubiquitous,
- affordable, equitable basis. Our testimony to congress suggested that
- narrow band ISDN could be such a platform. Our task became to
- investigate whether or not this was actually the case.
-
- What We Have Learned Since November
-
- Following up on our initial proposal we have been exploring the
- technical and economic feasibility of implementing ISDN. In the course
- of these investigation, members of EFF in Cambridge and Washington have
- traveled throughout the United States and met with numerous individuals
- and companies in order to explore the feasibility of this platform. We
- have spoken with, met with, and corresponded with experts in the
- Regional Bell Operating Companies, Interexchange Carriers, Cable
- Systems, information providers, and state public service commissions.
- Based on these meetings and other research, the EFF has learned three
- things:
-
-
- 1. ISDN CAN BE DEPLOYED IN THE NEAR FUTURE AT AFFORDABLE, MASS-MARKET PRICES
-
- ISDN enables switched, digital, error-free information delivery over the
- *existing copper wiring* that makes up the overwhelming bulk of the
- nation's telecommunications network. No time or money is needed to
- replace distribution lines. Digital central office switches are required
- for ISDN, but with the Bell companies aggressive deployment of a full-
- digital switching and signaling system (Signaling System Seven), the
- bulk of the infrastructure necessary to support ISDN is already
- installed or planned. Some Bell companies such as Bell Atlantic and
- Ameritech plan to have over 75% of their subscriber lines ISDN-ready by
- the end of 1994. Other companies, however, project deployment rates as
- low as 17%. On a national level, 54% of all lines are expected to be
- capable of carrying ISDN calls by 1994.
-
- If ISDN is to be a platform that spurs growth and innovation in the
- information services market, it must be priced affordably for the
- average home and small business user. Therefore, the tariffs adopted by
- state public utility commissions are critical to the success or failure
- of ISDN. Some of the first residential ISDN tariffs filed by Bell
- companies are discouragingly high.
-
- To encourage widespread use of ISDN, it must be priced at or near the
- price levels already in place for basic voice services. ISDN line
- charges will be somewhat higher than analog voice services because there
- are some additional one-time capital costs associated with offering ISDN
- service, but basing prices on voice telephone rates is possible and
- rational from a regulatory standpoint.
-
- The digital switches which carry ISDN calls treat voice and data calls
- in exactly the same manner. A five minute data call uses no more or less
- switching resources than a five minute voice call, so their pricing
- should be equivalent. Where flat rates are in place for voice services,
- we believe that ISDN data service should also be priced at a flat rate.
- Since the average length of a data call may be longer than the average
- voice call, the flat rate for ISDN would have to be adjusted upward to
- reflect added load on central office switching systems. However, the
- mere fact that data lines may remain open longer does not preclude a
- flat rate.
-
- We are hopeful that Bell companies with more aggressive deployment plans
- will file such residential tariffs and set a precedent for progressive,
- mass-market pricing that will make ISDN affordable. Whether or not they
- do, legislative or regulatory action may be necessary to establish such
- a rate structure for ISDN nationally.
-
- Current prices for ISDN telephones, data links, and in-home network
- terminators are high. An ISDN telephone with voice and data interfaces
- costs roughly $1000. If these price levels persist, many small scale
- users will never enter the market. However, with increased demand, ISDN
- terminal appliance prices can be expected to follow the steep downward
- curve of VCRs and PCs prices. When first introduced, VCRs cost well over
- $1000, but now sell below $200 for a basic unit.
-
-
- 2. ISDN DESERVES A *SECOND LOOK* BECAUSE IT CAN MEET MANY OF THE
- INFORMATION NEEDS OF BOTH RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL USERS LONG
- BEFORE A BROADBAND NETWORK COULD BE DEPLOYED
-
- Some telecommunications cognoscenti view the promise of narrowband ISDN
- as quite limited. They are aware that ISDN has languished unimplemented
- for over ten years, and know that other copper-based transmission
- technologies offering much higher bandwidth are available. However, ISDN
- is the only *switched, digital* technology available *today* in the
- public network that can be implemented nationally in the near term. EFF
- believes that ISDN can meet many of the critical information needs of
- both residential and commercial users even without broadband capacity.
-
- EFF fully supports a broadband network in the future, when technology,
- capital and user demand make it possible. For now, ISDN is the critical
- technology that will jump-start an information revolution just like the
- computer revolution of the 1980s.
-
- For text-based data users and publishers, ISDN offers a dramatic
- advantage over data transmission technology currently used by
- individuals and small organizations. One of the two 64kbits/sec data
- channels available in the ISDN Basic Rate Interface can fax 30
- typewritten pages of text in one minute, and send a 1000-word newspaper
- article in less than one second. Dramatic advances in video compression
- make transmission of videoconference images possible today, and all
- indications are that new compression algorithms will allow real-time
- transmission of VCR-quality video images in the near future.
-
- The personal computer industry shows that raw power is not all that
- matters in a new technology. About 1980, corporations already had good
- access to massive computational facilities at the institutional level
- through their mainframes and minicomputers. But individual workers had
- no effective direct access to those facilities. Personal computers made
- a difference in the office and in the home, despite the fact that they
- were anemically under-powered, because they were directly under the
- control of the individual.
-
- Similarly, there may be high data capacity at the institutional data
- network level already, but if individuals and small organizations can't
- connect with it, its value is limited. We must make tapping into the
- digital, switched network as easy as ordering a phone line for a fax.
- Just as PCs enhanced individual productivity, ISDN can enhance
- individual connectivity.
-
- EFF has found that many segments of the telecommunications industry are
- engaged in a concerted effort to make nation-wide ISDN deployment a
- reality. Problems that haunted ISDN in the past, such as lack of
- standard hardware and software protocols and corresponding gaps in
- interoperability, are being addressed by National ISDN-1, a joint effort
- by Bell companies, interexchange carriers, and switch manufactures. By
- the end of 1992, a single hardware standard will make ISDN central
- office switches and customer premises equipment interoperable,
- regardless of which vendor made the equipment. Following National ISDN-
- 1, National ISDN-2 will address standards problems associated with ISDN
- Primary Rate Interface (PRI), a switched 1.5Mbit/sec service with 23
- separate 64kbit/sec data channels and one 64kbit/sec signaling channel.
-
- Additional interconnection problems remain to be solved before ISDN is
- truly ubiquitous. Among other things, business arrangements between
- local Bell companies and interexchange carriers must be finalized before
- ISDN calls can be passed seamlessly from the local exchange to long
- distance networks.
-
- 3. ISDN IS A CRITICAL TRANSITIONAL TECHNOLOGY ON THE ROAD TO A
- NATIONWIDE PUBLIC SWITCHED BROADBAND NETWORK
-
- ISDN is not a permanent substitute for a broadband network. It is a
- necessary transitional technology on the way to public broadband
- networking. Though some might like to leap directly to a broadband
- network, the entire telecommunications and information industry still
- has much to learn about designing a broadband digital network before it
- can be implemented. Broadband switching technology is at the basic
- research stage. Many questions still remain about the best network
- architecture for the broadband network of the future. These questions
- are impossible to answer without experience in the ways that people will
- use a public, digital switched network.
-
- Some are reluctant to make any investment in ISDN because it is
- perceived as old technology. But this is not an either/or choice. If
- implemented at prices that encourage diverse usage, ISDN will provide
- important new services to all segments of society, and offer vital
- perspectives on how to design the next generation of public, switched
- broadband networks.
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- EFF INTERNATIONAL:
- A Report from John Perry Barlow In Japan
- barlow@eff.org
-
- [ Late last month, our co-founder, John Perry Barlow, traveled to Japan
- on behalf of the EFF in order to extend our formal and informal
- relationships to this country. What follows is a letter to all of us
- shortly after his arrival.]
-
-
- Folks,
-
- Greetings from Mars.
-
- Well, actually it may be a little south of Mars. They have palm trees on
- the beach, but otherwise Beppu, Japan is about as foreign an environment
- as one might easily e-mail from.
-
- I feel like a huge and idiotic barbarian much of the time, but then that
- can happen in Wyoming.
-
- My trip so far has been very useful from the standpoint of EFF, I think.
- I met all afternoon day before yesterday with the board and staff of
- Glocom, which is, as I suspected, very much the Japanese EFF.
-
- They differ largely in their willingness to discuss these issues at a
- much higher level of abstraction.
-
- For example, they don't quibble around the margins of intellectual
- property, they ask if property is even applicable to the environment of
- Cyberspace, where they are more inclined to think that prestige (which
- is the other goal of economic activity besides survival) will probably
- be conveyed better by attunement to the process of information passage
- in time and density of interaction than by ownership.
-
- In discussing the things we might undertake together, there was a lot of
- talk about possibly setting up a project to see how the minds gathered
- around GLOCOM and the minds gathered around EFF could be as directly
- connected as possible. In other words, what are the barriers to directly
- connected thought and how can they be overcome?
-
- This would involve working through a lot of technical networking issues
- (on the easy end) and get into some really juicy and interesting
- challenges as we started working through the challenges making
- "gateways" between Japanese and English, trying to find a jointly
- congenial cultural environment, and really go about The Great Work.
-
- I am very eager to go on working with these folks. They have a very
- sophisticated grasp of the deep issues.
-
- Also had a very fruitful meeting yesterday with Koichiro Hayashi, V-P
- for Leased Circuits of NTT and soon to be president of NTT America (and
- based in New York). A clear, direct, and smart man. He could be a great
- asset in the future and I gave him a copy of the big book on the
- Communications Policy Forum with the not so foolish hope of involving
- NTT on several levels.
-
- As regards ISDN in Japan, there are only 12,500 total connections at
- this point and though the number of digitally switched phones is not
- public, he will get it for me. He says that NTT does not regard ISDN as
- being anything like a plain vanilla standard and that their first
- efforts to connect their ISDN lines with AT&T's failed.
-
- He also said that until someone could show NTT an online market they
- could bank on, they would continue on their present course of replacing
- analog switches with digital ones only when the former had depreciated
- out on a non-accelerated basis. I tried some encouraging poetics about
- the potential of unseen and unseeable markets on him. "I'm a
- businessman," he shrugged, with an engaging smile.
-
- Now I'm down at the Hypernetworking Conference in Beppu. The only other
- Gaijins here so far are Howard Rheingold and Peter and Trudy Johnson-
- Lenz from Awakening Technology.
-
- The utterly opaque language barrier is difficult. Very few people at
- this conference speak English. But the temperamental and even cultural
- openness here makes up for the sense of linguistic isolation. They make
- one feel very agreeably included.
-
- I'll let you know more about what I'm learning as things progress.
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- MEMBERSHIP IN THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION
-
- In order to continue the work already begun and to expand our efforts
- and activities into other realms of the electronic frontier, we need the
- financial support of individuals and organizations.
-
- If you support our goals and our work, you can show that support by
- becoming a member now. Members receive our quarterly newsletter,
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-
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-
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-
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-
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-
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- 155 Second St. #26
- Cambridge, MA 02141
-
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- =====================================================================
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