Interesting People mailing list archives

Re: Former FCC Chairman Reed Hundt: Internet Trumps TV


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Sat, 13 Mar 2010 21:39:05 -0500



Begin forwarded message:

From: "Bob Frankston" <bob2-39 () bobf frankston com>
Date: March 13, 2010 11:02:02 AM EST
To: <dave () farber net>, "'ip'" <ip () v2 listbox com>
Cc: "'Dewayne Hendricks'" <dewayne () warpspeed com>
Subject: RE: [IP] Former FCC Chairman Reed Hundt: Internet Trumps TV

What makes this especially interesting is that it is posted on a site that views the Internet as the enemy because it 
wants to preserved the classic broadcasting model. There is no sense of the Internet as a general medium. Note that 
Reed is talking about the Internet as a parallel to television that is simply a richer medium – no sense of 
infrastructure.
 
How can we have a rational debate when we have two “sides” that are both off to the side?
 
-----Original Message-----
From: David Farber [mailto:dave () farber net] 
Sent: Saturday, March 13, 2010 09:57
To: ip
Subject: [IP] Former FCC Chairman Reed Hundt: Internet Trumps TV
 
 
 
Begin forwarded message:
 
From: dewayne () warpspeed com (Dewayne Hendricks)
Date: March 12, 2010 5:17:22 PM EST
To: Dewayne-Net Technology List <xyzzy () warpspeed com>
Subject: [Dewayne-Net] Former FCC Chairman Reed Hundt: Internet Trumps TV
 
Former FCC Chairman Reed Hundt: Internet Trumps TV
 
In a speech at Columbus University, former Federal Communications Commission Chairman Reed Hundt candidly talked about 
his decision to promote the Internet over broadcasting as the one and only "common medium" for the United States while 
he was chairman of the FCC between 1994 and 1997, and how his work then will culminate next week when the current FCC 
under his protégé Julius Genachowski unveils the National Broadband Plan.
 
"The broadband plan that will be published on March 17 actually will reflect ... the end of the era of trying to 
maintain over-the-air broadcast as the common medium and the beginning of a very detailed, quite substantive, 
commitment to having broadband, the son of narrowband, be the common medium," Hundt said in the speech that he 
describes as a "confession or admission." Among other things, he said, the "broadband plan will have in it a specific 
pathway to shrinking the amount of spectrum that broadcast will be able to use. In all previous eras, the government 
has expanded the spectrum for broadcast so as to give it a chance to thrive as it moved from analog to digital. Now, 
it's going to be moving in reverse." Hundt said that his decision to favor broadband over broadcast was made in 1994, 
when his first days as FCC chairman coincided with the introduction of the Mosaic browser and the emergence of the 
Internet as a commercial medium.
 
<http://www.tvnewscheck.com/articles/2010/03/12/daily.4/>
 
Courtesy of the Benton Foundation <http://www.benton.org>RSS Feed: <http://www.warpspeed.com/wordpress>
 
 
 
 
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