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- ########## ########## ########## | BUILD THE NATIONAL PUBLIC NETWORK:|
- ########## ########## ########## | An Open Letter to the Internet|
- #### #### #### | |
- ######## ######## ######## | EFF TESTIFIES IN WASHINGTON:|
- ######## ######## ######## | Excerpts from the EFF proposal|
- #### #### #### | to the House Sub-committee on|
- ########## #### #### | Telecommunications and Finance|
- ########## #### #### | |
- =====================================================================|
- EFFector Online November 6, 1991 Volume 2, Number 1|
- =====================================================================|
-
- THE NATIONAL PUBLIC NETWORK BEGINS NOW,
- AND YOU CAN HELP BUILD IT:
- An Open Letter from
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- Dear Friends of EFF:
-
- Telecommunications in the United States is at a crucial turning point.
- With the Regional Bell Operating Companies (the RBOCS) now free to provide
- content as well as conveyance, the push for dominant shares of the market
- for information services will begin with a vengeance. How to shape and
- control this burgeoning market is a problem that has been thrown from the
- courts into the lap of Congress. But, for the past decade, Congress has
- been hearing only two voices in the debate over telecommunications policy.
-
- To widen this circle the EFF has joined the debate between the Regional
- Bell Operating Companies (the RBOCs) and their opponents over the future of
- telecommunications. We have done so to break the deadlock that has kept
- this nation from developing an affordable, open, and accessible information
- network; a system we call the National Public Network (the NPN). Creating
- this network is one the EFF's main missions. We would now like to urge the
- entire Internet community to join us in helping to implement a technology
- on which we can begin to build the National Public Network.
-
- Last week, in testimony before the House Sub-committee on Telecommunications
- and Finance of the Energy and Commerce Committee, the EFF proposed that
- Congress act to deploy a ubiquitous, affordable communications platform,
- based on the extant technology of the Integrated Services Digital Network
- (ISDN), to every home, office, and school in the country. In outline, our
- proposal asks:
-
- 1) that the nation employ existing ISDN technology to give the
- ability to telecommunicate affordably, ubiquitously, and
- easily to all those with a copper-wired telephone connection;
- 2) that we use the existing technology and infrastructure of ISDN
- to begin building of the National Public Network now;
- 3) that we stop waiting for the nation to spend hundreds of
- billions of dollars and decades to rewire with fiber optics;
- 4) that we act now to reap the benefits of affordable connectivity
- for all;
- 5) that we use existing technology in order to gain experience
- in the human uses and benefits of networking;
- 6) that this technology be priced like local voice service.
-
-
- The Telecommunications Standoff
-
- The main reason that the U.S. has stalled in the development and and
- deployment of information technology is that the two-sided debate over
- policy is so polarized that compromise is exceedingly difficult to reach.
-
- One side is formed by the RBOCs. The other side is a coalition of print
- and electronic publishers, long-distance carriers and the cable television
- industry. This coalition fears that if the RBOCS are allowed to provide
- content as well as conveyance, the market will never become truly
- competitive.
-
- The RBOCs, as described by their opponents, have vast sources of capital.
- The RBOCs can control local exchanges and services critical to marketing
- and distributing information services. In sum, according to the opposition,
- the RBOCs are seen as regional monopolies in search of yet more arenas to
- monopolize.
-
- In their defense, the RBOCs assert that they no longer have monopoly
- control over local exchange facilities. They also assert that the benefits
- of the information age will only reach the mass consumer market when they
- are allowed to bring their special resources and expertise to the medium.
- They claim that their opponents fears are overstated; that they can be the
- message as well as the medium.
-
- Everyone now involved in the debate agrees on the need for legislative
- safeguards. If the RBOCs are to provide information services over their
- own common carrier networks, we need to take steps to ensure a level
- playing field for all. Proposed safeguards include a requirement that the
- RBOCs create subsidiaries to produce and market information services at
- arms' length from the network carriage divisions. Other safeguards include
- pricing rules which would ensure that affiliated information providers pay
- the same rates for information transmission services as are charged to
- unaffiliated providers.
-
- The EFF agrees that many of the proposed safeguards are necessary. But it
- also knows that the central issue is to create a network that is open,
- free, and accessible to all, not just one that works for an association of
- business interests. The EFF believes that what has been lost in this
- debate is a concrete focus on how best to meet the telecommunications needs
- of the American public. The EFF feels that this should be the primary goal
- of a national network. With our current draft proposal we also think that
- there is a way out of the current standoff through a blend of politics and
- intelligently applied existing ISDN technology.
-
- Over the last year and a half, the EFF has, with the support and hard work
- of many individuals and organizations, become a voice that is heard and
- respected in the legislative and policy arenas. With the continued help and
- support of the Internet, we can build on this work and make "the voice of
- the Internet" a significant force in shaping the communications
- infrastructure in this country.
-
- We believe that those with Internet experience should be part of the
- process that determined the shape, cost, and future of information
- technology in the coming decade.
-
- At the conclusion of our testimony in Washington last week, the
- Sub-committee expressed keen interest in our ISDN concept, and encouraged
- us to develop the proposal in detail. When we mentioned that much of the
- proposal originated with our friends and members, the committee asked for
- more detailed input from the networking community and computer industry.
- We are appending excerpts from the testimony to this letter.
-
-
- What You Can Do
-
- Based on this positive response from Congress, members of the EFF and the
- Internet now have the opportunity to break the deadlock that has hamstrung
- the development and widespread use of information technologies for years.
- In the coming months the EFF will be working, with the help of our members
- and concerned networking constituents, on a fully detailed proposal to
- bring this about. We are calling this effort "The Internet Brain Trust."
- We would like to ask you to join us in this effort, whose progress we will
- continue to describe in this publication.
-
- First, we urge you to join the EFF if you are not already a member. This
- implies a minimum of financial support as well as the willingness to stand
- up and be counted as an active supporter. While the financial consideration
- is important to us, we'd like to stress that it is *much more* important in
- political terms for us to have as many members as possible. We need to be
- able to show not only the efficacy of our proposals, but the extent of our
- constituency.
-
- Second, if you only wish to monitor the progress of this project over the
- coming months you may, from time to time, send an email request to
- npn-info@eff.org. All you have to do is include the line "Send documents
- braintrust" in either the subject line or the body of your letter and you
- will receive the latest documents via return email in a short time.
-
- Third, it is essential for us to have the benefit of the distributed mind
- and experience of the Internet in forging the details of the proposal we
- will ultimately submit to Congress. If you wish to be an active
- participant in contributing to the shaping of our detailed proposal,
- *especially* its technological aspects, please join our new, moderated
- mailing list ibt (Internet Brain Trust) mailing list by sending mail to
- ibt-request@eff.org.
-
- Sincerely,
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
-
- TESTIMONY OF MITCHELL KAPOR,PRESIDENT,
- ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION,BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE
- ON TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND FINANCE
-
- OCTOBER 24, 1991
-
-
- [EXCERPTS]
-
- The Infrastructure Challenge
-
- Mr Chairman, I view the lifting of the information services restrictions by
- Judge Green as a pivotal moment for our nation's communications future.
-
- If Congress is to address these issues effectively, it must first re-frame
- the current debate. While the entry of the seven Regional Bell Operating
- Companies into the information services market poses serious dangers of
- anti-competitive behavior -- because of their bottleneck control over the
- local phone loop -- erecting appropriate safeguards must not be the
- overarching goal of communications policy. Neither should "lifting the
- restrictions" on information services or manufacturing be the goal of
- public policy as the RBOCs advocate.
-
- Public policy must be guided by an overarching social vision of what I call
- the National Public Network, a vibrant web of information links to serve as
- the main channels for commerce learning, education, politics, and
- entertainment in the future. This network will include the voice telephone
- service that we are already so familiar with, along with video images,
- sound, and hybrid forms of communication.
-
- To build the National Public Network will require more than safeguards,
- entry level tests or new telephone company investment in information
- services and fiber optics. It will require Congress to establish in
- legislation basic standards, requirements, regulatory mechanisms and
- incentives that will:
-
- -- establish an open platform for information services by speedy
- deployment of "Personal ISDN" nation-wide --ensure competition
- in local exchange services --promote First Amendment free
- expression by reaffirming the principles of common carriage
- --foster innovations that make networks and information services
- easy to use
- --protect personal privacy
- --preserve and enhance equitable access to communications media.
-
-
- Recommendation
-
- Create an open platform for innovation in information services by speedily
- deploying a nation-wide "Personal ISDN" which offers an affordable,
- end-to-end digital service platform capable of reaching into every home,
- business, and school in the U.S.
-
- In the evolution of the NPN, information entrepreneurship can best be
- promoted by building with open standards and by making the network
- attractive to as many information service providers and developers as
- possible.
-
- The most valuable contribution of the computer industry in the past
- generation is not a machine, but an idea--the principle of open
- architecture. Typically, a hardware company (an Apple or IBM, for
- instance) neither designs its own applications software nor requires
- licenses of its application vendors. Both practices were the norm in the
- mainframe era of computing. Instead, in the personal computer market, the
- hardware company creates a "platform"--a common set of specifications,
- published openly so that other, often smaller, independent firms can
- develop their own products (like the spreadsheet program) to work with it.
- In this way, the host company takes advantage of the smaller companies'
- ingenuity and creativity.
-
- In the early stages of development of an industry, low barriers to entry
- stimulate competition. It should be as easy to provide an information
- service as to order a business telephone. Large and small information
- providers will probably coexist as they do in book publishing, where the
- players range from multi-billion-dollar international conglomerates to
- firms whose head office is a kitchen table. Large and small publishers can
- coexist because everyone has access to production and distribution
- facilities--printing presses, typography, and the U.S. mails and delivery
- services--on a non-discriminatory basis.
-
- To achieve the information diversity currently available in print in the
- new electronic forum, we must guarantee widespread accessibility to a
- platform of basic services necessary for creating information services of
- all kinds. The platform of services offered must: (1) have a critical mass
- of features and capabilities; (2) be ubiquitous; (3) be affordable.
-
- Some suggest that the technology necessary to offer such a platform is far
- off and would require billions of dollars of investment in fiber optics.
-
- Actually, we have a platform that meets these criteria within our reach
- right now. Personal ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network) could make
- voice, data, video, high-speed fax, video, and multimedia services
- available TODAY to telephone subscribers all around the country. ISDN as a
- key information services technology is well-known in the communications
- industry, but its potential as a universal platform is not properly
- appreciated, nor has it been properly positioned by the RBOCs as a service
- for everyone.
-
- The personal computer transformed the image of the computer from that of
- hulking mainframes imprisoned in glass-walled temples to friendly desktop
- machines capable of performing a wide variety of useful tasks. Just as the
- desktop personal computer represented the revolutionary platform for
- innovation of the 1980's, it is my belief that ubiquitous digital
- communications media, such as are enabled by ISDN, represent the hope of
- the 1990's.
-
- Personal ISDN can enable the citizen's access into the Information Age.
- The key attributes of a Personal ISDN are that, as a platform, it possess a
- critical mass of enabling features and capabilities for individual use;
- and, as a service, that it be positioned, priced, and marketed to be of
- interest to and within the reach of everyone. ISDN must be re-positioned
- as a basic service, available to consumers and small businesses. This
- service can be the test bed for a whole new generation of information
- services which could benefit the American public.
-
-
- A Critical Mass of Features and ISDN
-
- Many of the capabilities once thought to be possible only on an all-fiber
- network, such as interactive full-motion video can be achieved to a
- significant degree over Personal ISDN. This is due to continuing
- revolutions in microelectronics and software which enable compression of
- video signals by a factor of 100 without significant loss of quality.
- Given this, it is possible to use copper wire-based ISDN to carry video
- signals to their destination, at which point they are uncompressed through
- use of increasingly inexpensive processors, which are built-in to
- computers, televisions, and other consumer electronic equipment. If
- uncompressed, carriage of these video signals would require hundreds of
- billions of dollars of replacement of existing wiring in the local loop.
-
- Ultimately, there is a crucial role for an end-to-end fiber optic network.
- While we have not yet reached the limits of what can be done with video
- compression, in the end there will be some services, such as
- high-definition television, which will require the bandwidth of fiber
- optics. It would be a huge mistake, however, to commit the enormous funds
- required to build such a network and to wait until the next century for its
- deployment without accumulating a generation of experience based on lessons
- of the marketplace which can be achieved through a Personal ISDN-based
- platform.
-
- We have reached an effective limit to the usability of the current
- voice-grade telephone network for information services. Current bulletin
- boards and on-line services use existing voice-grade telephone lines for
- user access. These include 30,000 computer bulletin board systems (BBSes)
- with millions of users, in addition to the millions of Prodigy, Compuserve,
- and other commercial services. It's a healthy start, but expansion is
- hampered by inadequate infrastructure imposed by trying to overlay computer
- use on top of a network designed for voice telephony. Problems include
- lack of standardization; slow speeds; noisy, error-filled channels; and the
- difficulties of use and barriers created by these factors. As a result of
- these barriers, the vast benefits of new information technologies are
- denied to all but the computer-literate -- those who have the technical
- skills to navigate the complexities of today's information services.
-
- What is needed is to raise the floor by creating a new standard, minimum
- platform for information exchange. ISDN, repositioned as Personal ISDN,
- can provide a faster, cleaner digital platform for information users around
- the country. It will be easier to use, and allow information entrepreneurs
- to offer a vast array of services to a broader user base.
-
-
- Ubiquity and ISDN
-
- To create a market for information services, everyone must be able to reach
- the platform. We must build the new public network by making it easy for
- people to connect to it with a few simple decisions. Again, an analogy to
- the personal computer market is helpful. Minicomputers and mainframes were
- marketed to companies. Microcomputers (PC's) were marketed to individuals.
- We need to build a platform that can reach into individual households and
- small businesses in order to stimulate the development of information
- services that will meet the needs of those users.
-
- Personal ISDN-- which can be provided over the existing copper plant that
- comprises today's public switched network -- can reach into every home and
- every small business without laying a single mile of fiber optic cable.
- Telephone company data indicates that over the next three years majority of
- central office switches will be upgraded to requisite digital capability.
-
- Affordability and ISDN
-
- Platform services, even if they are ubiquitous, are useless unless they are
- also affordable to American consumers. Just as the voice telephone network
- would be of little value if only a small fraction of the country could
- afford to have a telephone in their home, a national information platform
- will only achieve its full potential when a large majority of Americans can
- buy access to it. We need an information platform that is priced as a
- basic service, on par with voice services, so that a choice to sign up is
- no more or less burdensome than subscribing to basic telephone service or
- cable television.
-
- All available information indicates that ISDN can be priced as a basic
- service. The cost of carrying a digital ISDN call from the customer to the
- local switch is just the same as an analog voice call in the digital
- switching regime that ISDN pre-supposes. There are some fixed investment
- costs still to be incurred to upgrade the nation's central office switches
- in order to handle ISDN traffic, but commitments to these investments are
- already largely made.
-
-
- ISDN as the Platform for the NPN Today
-
- For all of the reasons I have cited, ISDN would be an ideal platform for
- the creation of a variety of new information services. Yet it is not being
- made available to the American public. Today, even in Washington, DC -- a
- city that is one of the major information hubs of the country -- it is
- impossible to order standard ISDN service from the local phone company.
-
- Progress towards realizing the vision of the National Public Network will
- best be achieved through a series of incremental steps as our society
- learns how to use digital media. No one can guarantee when an application
- as useful as the spreadsheet will emerge for the NPN (as it did for
- personal computers), but open architecture based on a Personal ISDN is the
- best way for it to happen and let it spread when it does.
-
- The next incremental step should be the deployment of a medium-speed
- digital infrastructure based on ISDN which can be readily adapted for use
- by information entrepreneurs today. It will not require large capital
- investment, which could drive up basic rates. It can be leveraged by use
- of computer technology of desktops, laptops, and palmtops. In years to
- come every home and office may be attached to the National Public Network
- with a fiber optic link. But this is hundred of billions of dollars and
- years away. We have to crawl before we can run to the field of dreams.
-
- Summation and First Principles
-
- Much of the current debate about the future of the telephone network is
- defined by the opposition of two sets of large forces - the local Bell
- Operating Companies, on one side, and other carriers and publishers on the
- other. But often as not, the creation and emergence of new industries
- depends more on outsiders and new entrants who rely more on ingenuity than
- capital to develop the breakthrough concepts and systems which result in
- explosive growth. The personal computer industry was sparked by the
- contributions of industry outsiders like Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, and myself
- to grow from nothing to $100 billion in just over a decade. A personal
- ISDN platform would give a new generation of information entrepreneurs a
- chance to show what they can do. To the extent we can open up the process
- from one dominated exclusively by well-fortified corporate interests to one
- in which entrepreneurs have a chance, we improve the chances of another
- entrepreneurial revolution. If we build the right platform and we lower
- the barriers to entry to invite in all who want to play, I am convinced the
- entrepreneurs will find it, and, with the sure, invisible hand of market
- feedback, will help realize the vision of the information age.
-
- In addition to the fundamental value of openness, the platform that we
- propose should also be governed by the following principles:
-
- Ensure Competition in Local Exchange Services
- To reduce the threat of bottleneck control over local exchange facilities
- by the Bell companies, Congress must act now to ensure competition in local
- exchange services. Competition will promote innovation in these services
- on which information providers rely, and help guarantee equal access to all
- local exchange facilities.
-
- Promote First Amendment Free Expression by Affirming the Principles of
- Common Carriage
- In a society which relies more and more on electronic communications media
- as its primary conduit for expression, full support for First Amendment
- values requires extension of the common carrier principle to these new
- media. Common carriage principles would require that public communications
- carriers offer their conduit services on a non-discriminatory basis, at a
- fair price, and interconnect with other communications carriers.
-
- Make the Network Simple to Use
- Today's public switched telephone network is easy to use and adaptable for
- use by people with special needs. Information services that become part of
- this network should reflect this same ease-of-use and accessibility.
-
- Protect Personal Privacy
- The infrastructure of the National Public Network should include mechanisms
- that support the privacy of personal information and personal communication.
-
- Preserve and Enhance Equitable Access to Communications Media
- The principle of equitable, universal access to basic services is an
- integral part of today's public switched telephone network. We must ensure
- that all Americans have access to the growing information services market
- now and in the future.
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- NEW CORPORATE/ORGANIZATION MEMBERSHIP AVAILABLE AT EFF
-
- After a number of requests and much discussion, we have created a new
- membership category for EFF. This membership allows organizations to join.
- This membership fee is $100.00 annually. The sponsoring organization can,
- if it wishes designate up to five individuals as active members in the
- organization. Five copies of EFFECTOR and all other materials produced by
- or made available by the EFF will be sent to the organization or the
- designated members.
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- MEMBERSHIP IN THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION
-
- In order to continue the work already begun and to expand our efforts and
- activities into other realms of the electronic frontier, we need the
- financial support of individuals and organizations.
-
- If you support our goals and our work, you can show that support by
- becoming a member now. Members receive our quarterly newsletter, EFFECTOR,
- our bi-weekly electronic newsletter, EFFector Online (if you have an
- electronic address that can be reached through the Net), and special
- releases and other notices on our activities. But because we believe that
- support should be freely given, you can receive these things even if you do
- not elect to become a member.
-
- Your membership/donation is fully tax deductible.
-
- Our memberships are $20.00 per year for students, $40.00 per year for
- regular members. You may, of course, donate more if you wish.
-
- Our privacy policy: The Electronic Frontier Foundation will never, under
- any circumstances, sell any part of its membership list. We will, from
- time to time, share this list with other non-profit organizations whose
- work we determine to be in line with our goals. But with us, member
- privacy is the default. This means that you must actively grant us
- permission to share your name with other groups. If you do not grant
- explicit permission, we assume that you do not wish your membership
- disclosed to any group for any reason.
-
- >>>---------------- EFF@eff.org MEMBERSHIP FORM ---------------<<<
-
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- 155 Second St. #21
- Cambridge, MA 02141
-
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- "You've got to stand for something,
- Or you'll fall for anything."
-