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Knock Down the Silos
A lawyer for MCI presented a common sense framework for internet
regulation at the Freedom To Connect conference. It's about getting rid of old
ideas and seeing the internet as it really is.
Adam Theirer's decision to not show up for the Freedom
To Connect conference's "great debate" on the regulation of the internet
was probably a good one, as he would not have been guaranteed a friendly reception.
Conference founder David Isenberg had already dissected the tone
and rhetorical strategies in Thierer's latest missive, Howard
Dean's Plan for the Internet: Collectivism In, Property Rights Out from
the CATO Institute.
The paper advances arguments similar to those we examined in our
review of the book he co-wrote called "What's Yours Is Mine: Open Access
and the Rise of Infrastructure Socialism".
It's an argument that gets repeated over and over again in telco filings to
the FCC, but the facts support the opposite conclusion, that access promotes
a free market and innovation. At ISP-Planet, we believe that monopolies are
appropriate to feudal, communist, and fascist regimes but a free market is appropriate
to a democracy. When the regulators actually examine the facts, they find that
the monopolies do not innovate and do not deploy, and sometimes nevertheless
make decisions that go against the facts they've learned, as in The
FCC's Fiber Failure. See also this
history lesson from Rep. Ed Markey (D-MA) and this complaint
from a significant investor.
Within the confines of an informal debate format, in which each side trades
barbs and innuendos, the facts were not fleshed out. The pro-monopoly side quibbled
frequently over semantics and argued accepted points (partial transcript here).
For example, they argued that the layers model of the internet is "complicated"
and not flexible, even though it's survived the entire history of the internet.
A wit to remember
Luckily, however, MCI's Richard S. Whitt, vice president for federal law and
policy, had brought some facts along in the form of a powerpoint presentation
(preprinted in handout form but available
here in .pdf) and a link to a voluminous and exhaustive white paper, A Horizontal
Leap Forward: Formulating a New Communications Public Policy Framework Based
on the Network Layers Model [.pdf].
MCI has been arguing for some time that the internet should be regulated according
to the layers that make up its architecture (whether it will continue to advance
this argument after being acquired by an RBOC is an open question).
The regulation of the internet and of telecommunications should follow the
structure of the internet. The internet is built in layers: a physical layer
connects one piece to another, a transport layer establishes connections between
one piece of software on one computer and a piece of software on another computer,
and an application layer utilizes the connection. Over time, more complex versions
of the model have been developed.
The form of the law should follow the function of the
element
But the fundamental point is that each layer should be regulated in the same
way because its function is the same. You want to ensure competition at the
same layer no matter what business is moving the IP, whether it's cable, DSL,
wireless, fiber, or anything else.
You want to prevent control at one layer from inhibiting competition at another.
You want to allow people to access their service anytime anywhere. You want
to get out of the way and let innovation and competition happen, stepping in
only to protect free markets from monopolies.
Whitt cites the ideas of many who support this theory: Larry
Lessig, Yochai Benkler, Kevin
Werbach, Lawrence Solum, Robert
Entman, Douglas
Sicker, David Isenberg, Vint
Cerf, Timothy
Wu, Michael Katz,
Philip Weiser,
Rob Frieden, Craig
McTaggart, John
Nakahata, Scott Marcus,
and maybe even Michael Powell.
Once you create a common sense framework for looking at policy issues, Whitt
says, the problems themselves fall into place. He contrasts the layer framework
with the current policy framework, which he calls "silos". In the current framework,
policy for fiber is separate from policy for DSL which is separate from wireless
which is separate from cable.
A competitive, healthy internet needs reasonable, light governance. More than
that, though, the internet needs certainty in regulation. The layers framework
is the first step on the road to health.
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