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Turning a Blind Eye to Wi-Fi

By Robert W. McChesney and John Podesta, Washington Monthly. Posted January 23, 2006.


Broadband internet is the electricity of the 21st century -- and the rest of the world is poised to leave America in the dark.
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Two decades ago, the chattering classes fretted about economic upheaval rising from Japan and the Asian Tigers. They feared an invasion of cars, microchips, and karaoke that would take away American jobs, take over U.S.-dominated industries, and shift cultural norms. In the 1990s, America responded with a boom in high technology and Hollywood exports. But a revolution is again brewing in places like Japan and South Korea. This time it's about "broadband" -- a technology that, in terms of powering economies, could be the 21st century equivalent of electricity. But rather than relive the jingoism of the 1980s, American policy makers would be wise to take a cue from the Asian innovators and implement new policies to close the digital divide at home and with the rest of the world.

Most people know broadband as an alternative to their old, slow dial-up Internet connection. These high-capacity data networks made of fiber-optic cables provide a constant, unbroken connection to the Internet. But broadband is about much more than checking your email or browsing on eBay. In the near future, telephone, television, radio and the web all will be delivered to your home via a single broadband connection. In the not-so-distant-future, broadband will be an indispensable part of economic, personal, and public life. Those countries that achieve universal broadband are going to hold significant advantages over those who don't. And so far, the United States is poised to be a follower -- not a leader -- in the broadband economy.

American residents and businesses now pay two to three times as much for slower and poorer quality service than countries like South Korea or Japan. Since 2001, according to the International Telecommunications Union, the United States has fallen from fourth to 16th in the world in broadband penetration. Thomas Bleha recently argued in Foreign Affairs that what passes for broadband in the United States is "the slowest, most expensive and least reliable in the developed world." While about 60 percent of U.S. households do not subscribe to broadband because it is either unavailable where they live or they cannot afford it, most Japanese citizens can access a high-speed connection that's more than 10 times faster than what's available here for just $22 a month. (Japan is now rolling out ultra-high speed access at more than 500 times what the Federal Communications Commission considers to be "broadband" in this country.)

The economic ramifications are profound. "Asians will have the first crack at developing the new commercial applications, products, services, and content of the high-speed-broadband era," writes Bleha. Already, South Korea, which leads the world in the percentage of its businesses and homes with broadband, is the number one developer of online video games -- perhaps the fastest-growing industry today. What's more, societies in which broadband use is near-universal will adapt to its uses much more quickly than those where access is available only to the well-to-do few.

The countries surpassing the United States in broadband deployment did so by using a combination of public entities and private firms. The Japanese built their world-class system by ensuring "open access" to residential telephone lines, meaning competitors paid the same wholesale price to use the wires. The country is also establishing a super-fast, nationwide fiber system via a combination of tax breaks, debt guarantees and subsidies. But of particular note, the Japanese government also encouraged municipalities to build their own networks, especially in rural areas. Towns and villages willing to set up their own ultra-high-speed fiber networks received government subsidies covering approximately one-third of their costs.

Unfortunately, the United States has pursued the opposite policy. President Bush has called for "universal, affordable access for broadband technology by the year 2007," and FCC Chairman Kevin Martin claims broadband deployment is his "highest priority." But they have made no progress toward these goals; in fact, they have rewarded their corporate cronies for maintaining high prices, low speeds and lackluster innovation. Federal policies have not merely failed to correct our broadband problems, they have made them worse. Instead of encouraging competition, the FCC has allowed DSL providers and cable companies to shut out competitors by denying access to their lines. And whereas the Japanese government encourages individual towns to set up their own "Community Internet," Washington has done nothing. Fourteen states in the United States now have laws on the books restricting cities and towns from building their own high-speed Internet networks. No wonder America is falling behind its Asian competitors.


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Robert W. McChesney is the founder and president of Free Press, a media-reform organization, and an award-winning author of eight books on media-reform issues. John Podesta is the president and CEO of the Center for American Progress, and former Chief of Staff to President William J. Clinton.

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Good and Bad
Posted by: underledge on Jan 23, 2006 2:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As I understand it, most if not all internet transmission goes through government facilities. They have programs that search for certain words and certainly correspondence directed to certain sites is monitored. With the current state of affairs, do we trust "Big Brother"?

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» RE: Good and Bad Posted by: sethx9
Advertising driving broadband
Posted by: anothername on Jan 23, 2006 4:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I use dial-up. The biggest problem I have is the graphic-heavy design of many websites, the use of animated inserts, and other items unconnected to content that eat up bandwidth, slow loading, and distract the eyes. Unlike HDTV, graphics, music, and other bandwidth-heavy web designs does make a difference to a person who doesn't have the latest equipment and services. If broadband were $15 a month, I might use it. Many Americans use computers and the Internet only at work, though, so home access does not matter.

I also am concerned Wi-Fi as a matter of health. It is just more energy being bounced around and through us, literally. Then there are the privacy and network security issues raised by broadband in every home, with firewalls not maintained by many people, and with who knows what tools used by the government and businesses spying on our use of computers.

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» RE: Advertising driving broadband Posted by: AlienSlave
Cleveland!
Posted by: FlightOfTheBumbleBees on Jan 23, 2006 5:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It seems the author forgot to note that CLEVELAND, Ohio was on the list of most connected/most 'intelligent'. Cleveland was the ONLY city in the USA to be on the list. Joke all you want about the mistake on the lake, but at least we're well connected!

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» RE: Cleveland! Posted by: ScottP
Gas & Municipal Ownership is the way to stop the badguys
Posted by: oekosjoe on Jan 23, 2006 8:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not just the WiFi option. In cities with municipal phone service there are often municipal internet services as well, as well as public ISP's. There's no reason whatsoever that arguments for competition dismiss municipal public competition as well. Most schools have deeply subsidized (e-rate) T1 or T3 lines, and are fine places for antennas or, alternatively, fiber optic networks; and most kids could or already do use a part time job managing websites.
As one congressman put it, "when I can read my phone bill and compare it to vendors' for cable-internet-phone, then there is competition." There sure isn't much of that going around now.

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You think that's bad. Try getting broadband out here in the praire heartlands
Posted by: SDres11 on Jan 23, 2006 8:57 AM   
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Most of the time the best we can afford is dialup and even with it, a rather limited speed. I have to go to a bar or library to even consider enjoying broadband.

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ungeifer unsterblich
Posted by: jimmyjoe on Jan 23, 2006 10:22 AM   
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people? wtf? if you arent doing anything illegal, who cares if big brother knows what you do on the internet, its not like it matters, and btw, bush doesnt assasinate ppl with websites opposing him, and i have broadband, and while its not the shiz, its fast enough for me to play my games and chat on msn at the same time

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ungeifer unsterblich(means immortal vermin in german)
Posted by: jimmyjoe on Jan 23, 2006 10:27 AM   
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and plus, why is it that everybody is always complaining about the us? for instance, i once heard a girl say that WE turned our backs on the jews, and thats why ww2 was so bad, because WE turned our back on them and hitler gassed em. now that is a load of bullshit, yall need to learn the term "patriotism" and SUPPORT our country... and no, patriotism doesnt involve insulting republicans

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ungiefer unsterblich again
Posted by: jimmyjoe on Jan 23, 2006 10:29 AM   
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and btw, you think that our country is bad? go into other countries governments, and if you see what they do as a matter of routine, u will probably puke... and also, if our government sucks? why do so many people come here and sneak across our borders?

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A crucial distinction
Posted by: bringbackthe70s on Jan 23, 2006 12:43 PM   
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You call the telecom's attitude toward government intervention contradictory, but you seem not to appreciate a crucial distinction. There's nothing inherently wrong with an intervention (say, a freeway interchange or a stadium) that works to the benefit of ONE or A FEW well-connected individuals or corporations. It's only when government starts trying to provide PUBLIC services, available to ANYONE, that free market principles are violated.

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Enough already
Posted by: veive on Jan 23, 2006 1:01 PM   
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There's already a tsunami of tsunamis of "information." We'd be far better off going back to smoke signal communications and learning how to really live. Modernity has us acting like spastic marionettes, lunging hither, tither and yon after the latest and greatest scam to hit our comm channels. Far as I'm concerned they can take their "progress" and shove it where the sun don't shine.

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the truth from overseas
Posted by: eddie666 on Jan 24, 2006 12:33 PM   
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Just to let you know how things are in Europe: Everybody that I know, everybody, has broadband. It is affordable and it is just assumed. I live in Vienna but it doesn´t matter if you live in a big city or a small farm town. Everyone has access and I literally have not come across a dial-up modem in 3 or 4 years in any european country that I have visited. I am also including the former communist countries like Hungary, Slovenia and Croatia. The only time I have to deal with snail-paced and unreliable connections is when I visit friends and relatives in the U.S. and try to surf the internet or send e-mails. The rest of the world is leaving America behind. But I suppose if you spend all your money on war, you don´t have money to spend on "unimportant" stuff like education, culture, national health care and infrastructure. By the way, "unsterblich" does mean immortal, but "ungeifer" doesn´t seem to be an actual word. "Geifer" is animal spittle or slobber so "un-geifer unsterblich would be literally translated as "non-animal spittle immortal" or maybe " no animal slobber forever". Maybe you meant "Ungeziefer" in which case immortal vermin would be correctly translated as: "unsterbliches Ungeziefer". I wonder if the other information or opinions you present are equally mis-informed.

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Health effects of wireless
Posted by: NowYogi on Jan 25, 2006 3:00 AM   
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When is someone going to mention all the bad health effects of wireless electromagnetic radiation? We zapping ourselves to death...

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» RE: Health effects of wireless Posted by: rivertree
The new boob tube
Posted by: metahope on Jan 25, 2006 11:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For most users the internet is a mindless activity to replace constant TV viewing. So what if we don't have faster connections? How will having access to more media make our lives better? Our lives haven't been improved by cable TV. We just have more mindless shows to waste our time and our minds on.

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