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Free Bandwidth
Jesse Hirsh
pdf (12 Kb)
The public interest and the social good are things often referred
to yet not always pursued. We usually recognize that humans have
rights, and that those rights include housing, food, and a general
quality of life.
The public Internet is something that is also assumed, and similarly
rarely pursued. We recognize that the public uses the Internet,
but is the Internet in anyway public? Do we and can we recognize
that communication is also a right?
If we want to have a social good or public interest in our network
society, than we need the Internet to be "public", in
the same way we think of the airwaves as being in the public domain
and subject to regulation.
In order for the Internet to be public, bandwidth must be free.
Free as in subsidized. Costs still exist, and its important to
account for these costs, but its also crucial to create an environment
in which the public (interest) can exist, let alone flourish.
We talk about the erosion of sovereignty and the encroachment
of culture, but what are we doing about it? Creating a public
Internet (itself an extension of public space) by subsidizing
broadband connections is one step in that direction.
The catalytic element in this equation is literacy. The reason
we subsidize education (at all levels from kindergarten on up)
is because we want meaningful members in our society. Now mind
you, at times school does seem and feel like its purpose is to
produce cogs for the working world, but in essence, at least in
its mandate, its role is to create responsible (literate) members
of our society.
However, present reality what it is, we live in a network society.
Media makes everything (especially reality) and those who have
media literacy are those who are generally able to do well.
In fact, lets be more precise, those who have Internet literacy,
even know how to run their own Internet server, and say know what
a "root" account is, those people tend to be more empowered
in our current world. They tend to know where they are, and how
to get where they want to go. Informational power in our society
can lead directly to cultural, economic, and even political power.
That's why maybe the solution is to give it out, hook them up,
spend the dough to get everyone online and literate when it comes
to media. Note I keep using the world "literacy". The
point is not to create spammers or brain-dead online consumers.
Rather the issue is about teaching people who they can create,
how they can communicate, how they can do business with people
far away.
Perhaps then its not unresonable to suggest, even demand, that
the ability to communicatie is an inherent and inalienable right
that all humans must possess.
So how does such a telecommunications regime that provides free
bandwidth come about? On the supply (money) side, you'd probably
have to have taxes.
As a means of beginning to address global warming, increase taxes
on private and fossil-fueled transportation to subsidize bandwidth.
Gasoline, oil, automobiles, roadways, all forms of private polluting
transportation. Then take that money and use it to subsidize bandwidth
and public transportation.
Another approach, which is articulated in a parrallel discussion
paper, would be a tax on Intellectual Property. The combination
of these two policies could create a new regulatory regime. [1]
A regime that rather than sit on its hands while big business
plunders and commits accounting fraud, instead seeks to empower
communities and foster a genuine competitive market environment.
This regulatory regime might have two halfs, one focused on facilitating,
the other on enforcement. And in both roles, the "agency"
that carries out this mandate, can be community-based, distributed,
and based on peer-review, in a similar manner as to how the Internet
operates itself.
Whether limiting the intrusiveness of spam and other unsolicited
commercial requests, or helping young and old learn to use the
media and its environment, a distributed community regulatory
agency could play a role in protecting and providing a public
(interest) Internet.
Similarly, one would not want to see existing privately-held
telecommunication monopolies get bigger on the backs of the taxpayer.
Maybe a voucher system, that let each user (re: citizen) decide
where their bandwidth would be supplied from and by whom, making
it more feasable for there to be smaller players, and then add
to that an additional "infrastructure" fund that encourages
people to develop alternative (for example wireless) infrastructure.
Clearly all of this is going to cost a lot of money, but the
payback is worth it. Think of it as an investment in the future,
as its an investment in users (citizens), who are the defining
characteristic of the system (society). If managed correctly instead
of sticking with the monopolies we've always had, smaller and
more agile outfits could emerge and prosper.
Ironically one only has to look towards radio and television
for models of public resources which have operated as a result
of subsidization. In these media both public and private broadcasters
have effectively allowed either the taxpayer or advertisers to
subsdize what appears to the consumer as relatively free information.
Of course all of this began with the premise that the airwaves
are themselves in the public domain, and with that assumption
has come heavy regulation (of radio and television).
The Internet however has had a different course. While also having
its start in government funded initiatives, it was much more rapidly
handed over to the private sector, and from a very early stage
its entire infrastructure was in private hands. Governments, led
by politicians elected by television and newspapers, allowed the
private sector to run rampant, and build all sorts of crazy schemes,
most larger than life, and most resulting in bankruptcies and
investigations of accounting fraud.
Certainly two truisms that have come out of the great Internet
bubble of the late 1990s are that online advertisments do not
subsidize the medium, and that left to the private sector, the
Internet will be nothing more than a grand, in-your-face-pop-up-porn
stip mall.
Then of course there is the peer-to-peer phenomena which flies
in the face of all corporate logic when it comes to the Internet.
Rather than go to central distributors for high-priced products,
users would rather share freely amongst themselves, computer to
computer, with minimal commercial activity, and explosive cultural
effects. Music, Videos, Software, Texts, and Images spread as
rapidly as they can across all the computers on the net. One can't
imagine the spread of culture working at a faster pace.
And yet the telecommunications costs are huge. Largely due to
the existing hierarchical design of the Internet. Nonetheless,
when the peer-to-peer explosion happened, starting with Napster,
the bills for bandwidth started hitting ISPs and other telecom
firms who had not anticipated such a large increase in what is
essentially unprofitable traffic.
That's where the model fell apart: telecommunication companies
are either going bankrupt, or taking extreme cost-cutting measures
to survive, and the regulatory regime itself is in a crisis of
legitimacy as it appears powerless to engage or influence the
economic and social forces that are changing our world.
So comes a time when ludicrous ideas are considered, and alternate
models are entertained. Those cash-strapped companies that are
still around will inevitably start charging more money for Internet
connections, and further pro-rate usage, so that the more you
do, the more you pay. A pay-per-usage system that equates economic
status with communications ability.
Yet it is at times like this that we can step back and see the
consequences of such actions. We are still at an early stage in
the development of the Internet, and to exclude persons from it,
or restrict what can be done with it, seems to be the type of
crippling mistake that it would take a lifetime to recover from.
The erosion of the public sphere must be stopped and reversed.
What we need from our public institutions is the leadership to
chart a new regulatory regime that serves the interest of our
entire society, i.e. the social good.
One way to catalyze this process would be to introduce a system
of public-subsidization of bandwidth that would allow members
of our society to freely explore and create their space in this
emerging media environment. Doing so would go a long way in helping
to revive the democracy we desire in our political system and
our world.
Notes
1) http://news.openflows.org/article.pl?sid=02/04/23/1523232&mode=nested
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[Written in Toronto over the Summer of 2002]
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