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FCC Commissioner Michael Copps on Keeping Broadband Open and Competitive

Phillip Dampier April 29, 2010 Competition, Net Neutrality, Public Policy & Gov't, Video 1 Comment

[flv width=”480″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/PBS Bill Moyers Michael Copps Interview About Net Neutrality 4-23-10.flv[/flv]

Last Friday, Federal Communications Commissioner Michael Copps appeared on PBS’ Bill Moyers’ Journal.  He discussed the current state of America’s broadband industry, the implications of not having Net Neutrality protections, and how the Internet is transforming public debate and citizen-powered democracy across the country.  (4/23/2010 — 23 minutes)

BILL MOYERS: The industry wrote a letter to the commission and said that advocates of an open Net who are coming to the FCC and asking you to reclassify what you do as telecommunications want to steer the debate, and I’m quoting from the letter, “in a radical new way.” I mean, they’re calling you extremists and they’re calling you radical.

MICHAEL COPPS: Because I want to call telecommunications, “telecommunications” and go back to the openness that has characterized the net since it was first invented in the laboratories of the Department of Defense. That’s not extreme. That’s not radical. That’s called going back to basics. That’s called consumer protection 101.

BILL MOYERS: How threatened is the whole idea of an open Net?

MICHAEL COPPS: Oh, I think very. I think very. I think there are powerful players that are opposed to it. Are in a position to make their influence felt. None of these things are going to come easy. We’ve just been through the health insurance debate. We’ve got the financial debacle. None of this stuff gets solved without taking on taking on a fight. The government doesn’t work that way. You’ve studied this history, I’ve studied this history. It’s painful, it needs movements, it needs grassroots support, it needs the people.

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Brion
Editor
13 years ago

It also needs protections. In order for people to start the grassroots movements needed to overthrow the big players, the big players need to be disallowed from choking off the competition. If a start-up can get the VC to lay lines because the incumbent will sell access wholesale but loads that access with miles of stipulations and a pricetag guaranteed to either put the competitor out of business or make their product less cost-effective for the customer, then that start-up should be allowed to compete fairly. Someday someone will break through the barrier to entry and upset the status quo.… Read more »

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