How to
End the World Wide Wait
The first message to be sent over the Arpanet, the forerunner to the Internet, was neither
as eloquent as Samuel Morses "what hath God wrought" nor as practical as
Alexander Graham Bells "Watson, come here. I need you." Rather, it
consisted of two letters, "L-O." Apparently, the researchers testing the system
tried to send "log-in," but the network crashed before they could finish typing.
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By William Kennard
Chairman,
Federal
Communications
Commission |
From this inauspicious beginning 30 years ago, we now have more than 130
million people worldwide sending e-mail, surfing the Web, watching streaming video,
listening to music and even making phone calls over the Internet.
But as anyone who has ever gone on-line knows, the World Wide Web is too often the
World Wide Wait. To take full advantage of the Internet, we need "broadband"
connections fatter pipes to handle the crush of information and complex
applications now available.
A fierce battle has erupted over what to do with one of the possible broadband
connections: cable. Some fear that cable companies will get a lock on the broadband
market, dictating who can connect to the system and where users can go once on it. Calling
for "open access," they want the Federal Communications Commission to step in
and regulate the cable platform. Recently, local cable franchising authorities have
decided to make open access a condition of doing business in localities from Portland,
Ore., to Broward County, Fla.
The quest for openness in the Internet is in line with the history of this
mediums remarkable development. Indeed, the Internets open protocols as well
as FCC decisions not to regulate the Internet and to open up access to the phone network
are at the heart of the networks growth. E-mail, the Web and Internet radio are only
some of the applications that have been developed and deployed in this open environment.
What we need to remember now is that no one could have predicted these innovations. We
cannot regulate against problems that have yet to materialize in a market that has yet to
develop. Moreover, we cannot have 30,000 local cable communities trying to make their own
predictions and placing their own regulatory bets on the future.
Simply put, its in the national interest to have a national broadband policy.
That is why the FCC has filed a friend-of-the-court brief in a pending Ninth Circuit case
arguing that only the commission has nationwide authority over broadband providers. It is
also why the FCC has decided not to intervene in this nascent broadband market. In doing
so, we are following advice as old as Western civilization itself: First, do no harm
a high-tech Hippocratic Oath.
Instead, we are taking steps to ensure that there are many competitors in the
marketplace, not just cable. Weve made more spectrum available to wireless
operators. Weve made it easier for emerging competitive local phone companies to
plug into the existing phone network in order to provide high-speed Internet access using
a promising new technology known as digital subscriber lines. And weve decided to
allow the cable companies to go ahead with their efforts to deploy broadband access
without pre-emptive regulation, even as we closely monitor the marketplace for
anticompetitive behavior.
We believe that by giving all competitors the tools they need to compete, we can create
a robust broadband marketplace in which the American consumer will have many different
options at competitive prices. Already, we are seeing the fruits of this deregulatory
policy: In just the second quarter of this year, the number of DSL subscribers doubled.
Internet users want and expect choice, and they will not be satisfied unless they get
it. A national policy of openness and competition has brought it to them so far; it should
be our policy for the future as well.
Reprinted with permission
of The Wall Street Journal 1999 ©
Dow Jones & Co. Inc.
All rights reserved August 24, 1999
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