geert lovink on Mon, 28 Jul 2003 09:09:02 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Citizen's Guide To The Airwaves |
Now Available! Citizen's Guide To The Airwaves New America Foundation July 1, 2003 The Citizen's Guide to the Airwaves is the New America Foundation’s attempt to educate the public about the tremendous value, government mismanagement, and impending giveaway of the nation’s airwaves - the most valuable natural resource of the information economy. The publications frame the spectrum debate in a language new to the policy world, using clear, graphic illustrations to depict the economic, social and political facets of spectrum policy. The Citizen's Guide (viewable thumbnails below) includes a two-sided, 11” x 38” color poster and a 52-page Explanation Report. The poster’s front side is a visual “map” of the spectrum; the backside is a nine-panel overview of the U.S. spectrum policy debate. Downloadable PDF versions of the Citizen’s Guide poster and report are available free of charge. Printed versions of the poster are available in two formats, either accordion-folded for easy reading ($10) or flat for hanging ($12). Additional copies may be ordered for a reduced price. The explanatory report, printed and bound on heavy stock, glossy paper, accompanies the poster at no additional charge. SPECTRUM POLICY PROGRAM, NEW AMERICA FOUNDATION <www.spectrumpolicy.org> In the emerging information economy, the most valuable publicly owned asset may well be the electromagnetic spectrum – or the “airwaves.” Indeed, recent auctions suggest that the spectrum has a market value exceeding $500 billion. Yet our nation’s antiquated spectrum policies sacrifice significant public revenues and inhibit the rapid deployment of wireless broadband access. To promote a more fair and efficient allocation of the airwaves, New America’s Spectrum Policy Program advocates requiring commercial licensees to pay fair market value for their use of the spectrum, and opposes efforts to privatize the airwaves. The revenues from such auctions can best be used to meet civic and educational needs. The Program also promotes greater shared citizen access to the airwaves – particularly for wireless broadband networking with unlicensed consumer devices – and the protection of the Internet’s open and unmediated end-to-end architecture. In these and other ways, New America seeks to help preserve, update, and expand the public interest obligations of our nation’s communications infrastructure in the digital era. New America’s Spectrum Policy Program currently has three primary components: Spectrum Policy Reform. Our nation’s current spectrum allocation policies – based on rigid regulation and zero-cost use by most incumbent license holders – have created the worst possible situation: an artificial spectrum scarcity that inhibits the rapid deployment of wireless broadband services, the sacrifice of tens of billions of dollars in public revenue, reduced innovation and competition, constrained citizen access to the airwaves, and a steady erosion of the civic, educational, and other public interest obligations of broadcasters and other licensees. To overcome these vexing problems, New America develops and promotes a range of market-based policies that ensure that all commercial users compensate the public for their exclusive and limited-term licenses, while simultaneously opening more of the spectrum to sharing by individuals using Wi-Fi and other unlicensed wireless devices. The Program also puts forth innovative proposals for earmarking spectrum revenues for new public investments to fulfill the public interest obligations of broadcasters. These unmet needs include free airtime for federal candidates, quality non-commercial programming, and innovative educational content and software. Since its inception in January 2001, New America’s Spectrum Policy Program has produced four major reports and more than a dozen working papers and issue briefs; published numerous articles in the mainstream press; organized over 15 high-profile public events; and published a major book. In addition, Program Director Michael Calabrese has testified frequently on Capitol Hill and before the FCC and the Commerce Department on a wide range of spectrum-related issues. A Citizen's Chart of the Spectrum. Spectrum politics is a classic case of special interest politics. Rights to use spectrum are worth hundreds of billions of dollars, yet the press, public, and even most lawmakers have only a vague understanding of how spectrum allocation policy works and of the full potential of emerging wireless technologies. Nor does the majority of the public understand the tremendous “opportunity loss” resulting from the current mismanagement of the airwaves - for taxpayers and consumers alike. Indeed, the U.S. government’s official spectrum chart is virtually indecipherable to the average citizen. To remedy this problem, New America Senior Research Fellow J.H. Snider - working with a team of leading graphic designers and policy experts - produced a “Citizen’s Chart of the Spectrum” that graphically illustrates the most important dimensions of spectrum policy and allocation. It will be released in May 2003. Protecting the Information Commons. New America also works to ensure that the Internet’s architecture and intellectual property laws continue to protect the public’s interest in free speech, consumer rights, privacy, and open competitive access. A critical issue is whether the public spaces made possible by the Internet will be re-regulated to maximize the commercial interests of dominant intellectual property owners – or whether they will protect and expand the vital “information commons” that enables individual citizens to freely communicate, create, and control content. Current attempts to privatize the nation’s public communications infrastructure and its content include the removal of common carrier obligations for Internet access and encroachments upon traditional copyright principles of fair use. Among the policy initiatives aimed at expanding the information commons, the Program advocates universal broadband access premised on common carriage and a choice of Internet service providers. The Program also advocates new limits on copyright and trademark law so that the public domain and creativity may continue to flourish in the digital future. In 2002 the Program published a series of reports on the information commons and a major book – Silent Theft, by David Bollier – that popularized the fact that the American people are the rightful owners of a wide range of public assets, and that highlighted new policies for safeguarding the public’s rights to these assets. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net