About Scott Cleland
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You are hereAmazonWhy the public interest groups are "Google's Poodles"Submitted by Scott Cleland on Tue, 2007-05-22 18:30Nick Carr wrote a dead-on column in the Gaurdian: "The net is being carved up into information plantations." His thesis is the irony that as the web adds more and more destinations on line, fewer people seem to be visiting them.
What's my point? You know I always have a tie in. This hyper-media concentration that is occurring on the web is much much greater than has occurred in traditional media. SaveTheInternet effectively endorses "digital socialism"Submitted by Scott Cleland on Tue, 2007-05-22 13:57SaveTheInternet and net neutrality proponents are losing their populist message discipline, and starting to show their true philosphical colors in blatantly calling for what is effectively "digital socialism." Andrew Rasiej, the founder of The Personal Democracy Forum, challenged Presidential candidates to become the next "Tech President" in a recent blogpost. It's important to note that his views are mainstream in the net neutrality movement as evidenced by the hearty endorsement they received by SaveTheInternet and by Wired Magazine Blog. Broadband mapping is a transparent pro-regulation policy schemeSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Fri, 2007-05-18 11:05I personally think the Markey proposal to spend $36 million for a "national broadband map" is a monumental waste of taxpayer money and really bad "policy".
However, there is a not so hidden agenda lurking here.
The reason they want a national broadband policy is that they want a one-size-fits-all national policy like net neutrality which ensures everyone gets the same broadband service regardless of different needs, wants or means.
It still amazes me how Chairman Markey and his fellow Big Government/net neutrality proponents can not see that competition and not regulating the Internet has been a fabulous, albeit imperfect success for the United States. Broadband mapping is trojan horse for Big Govt. net regulationSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Thu, 2007-05-17 18:04Calls by House Telecom Chairman Ed Markey and other Big Government proponents for better "broadband mapping" is simply a "trojan horse" for regulating the Internet. and more government intervention in the marketplace. Mr. Markey knows that calling for better data is generally an easy way to build consensus around an issue while staying "under the radar."
Make no mistake about it, this is Chairman Markey's first step in a grander scheme to have Big government play a much bigger role in the Internet and the digital economy. Outstanding FTTH council video on Net Neutrality/Internet ExafloodSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Wed, 2007-05-16 14:06I just rewatched the outstanding Fiber to the Home Council's video on the Internet Exaflood.
If SaveTheInternet and FreePress was truly interested in a free and open debate on net neutrality they would want to send this outstanding informational video out to their email blast list. Frontline's Hundt thinks US wireless is too monopolized!Submitted by Scott Cleland on Mon, 2007-05-14 13:10I was shaking my head in disbelief when I read Comm Daily on Reed Hundt's interview on CSPAN's The Communicators series. Key quotes:
Excuse me? wireless monopolies? Moveon/FreePress are now whining about US postal rates too!Submitted by Scott Cleland on Fri, 2007-05-11 18:18I stumbled upon some more powerful evidence that the SaveTheInternet coalition of 800+ organizations who back net neutrality -- are just special interests looking for a self-serving subsidy handout from the government. I previously blogged on my theory that the 800+ organizations backing SaveTheInternet cynically know that their members are not really at risk on the Internet from "blocking" etc., but that their organization's cost structures are at risk because they have become addicted to subsidized cheap blast emails.
I suspect the other 800+ organizations in SaveTheInternet coalition have made the same self serving calculus, but love to hide behind the populist "human shield" of supposedly looking out for the American consumer. Like any other special interest, these SaveTheInternet organizational supporters are lobbying for net neutrality for self-serving reasons, i.e. a law/regulation that would ensure their cost of email distribution would never go up. What a deal! NAACP official slams net neutrality effect on low-income consumersSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Fri, 2007-05-11 10:42I wanted to be sure folks saw what Greg Moore, Executive Director of the National NAACP Voter Fund said recently on net neutrality in a commentary piece in the Asbury Park Press:
Extremely well said! Welcome NextGenWeb.org to the free market blogoshpereSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Thu, 2007-05-10 15:40Welcome to Portia Krebs a new blogger at NextGenWeb.org for USTelecom! I am delighted their will be another blogging voice in the debate promoting the continuation of a free market Internet that remains free of net regulation. I encourage other people to blog and enter the debate who understand that "Internet freedom" means much more than so called "net neutrality" and free speech, but also means: free market, free enterprise, freedom to be different, freedom of ownership, freedom to choose, freedom of diversity, and freedom of opportunity -- essentially economic freedoms that naturally flow from America's political freedoms! "National" broadband policy a stalking horse for regulating InternetSubmitted by Scott Cleland on Thu, 2007-05-10 12:03Watch out when Big Government advocates call for a "national" anything!
Egads! A "national broadband plan" is a codeword for a 1970's-style government "industrial policy" where the government decides what technologies consumers get and which companies will succeed of fail.
My first big problem with this "national" thinking is that there is no national broadband problem.
My second big problem is Senator Rockefeller's call for a new "national" goal of 10Mbps broadband by 2010 and 100 Mbps by 2015. Pages |