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1124 lines
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[Both sections of this issue have been concatenated into one file for this
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archive.]
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Date: Mon, 19 Sep 1994 11:27:04 -0600 (MDT)
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From: richard bryant <rbryant@unm.edu>
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Subject: COM NET NEWS V1.6 Part 1 September 1994
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COM NET NEWS
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Vol. 1 No. 6 September
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Part 1--Original and Other News
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>From the Editor
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As indicated in the last issue of COM NET NEWS, I am requesting donations
|
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from readers to help defer the costs of production of this newsletter. I am
|
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|
requesting a donation of $35 per year for individuals and $75 per year for
|
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|
companies and organizations. Non-U.S. subscribers, please send
|
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|
donation in U.S. currency. But, please note that this is a request--you will not
|
||
|
be dropped from the subscription list if you don't contribute. A number of
|
||
|
readers requested to unsubscribe because of the donation. Please don't feel
|
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|
that you have to pay. If you can't afford it or have too many other paid
|
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|
subscriptions, or whatever, don't worry, you will still receive COM NET NEWS.
|
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Also, I will continue to post COM NET NEWS on various listservs and the it
|
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|
may be freely distributed among groups for noncommercial purposes.
|
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|
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The request for donations is due to the time and other costs incurred in
|
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|
putting together COM NET NEWS. It is hoped that you feel that it is of value
|
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to you, and you can be assured that I will continue to better COM NET NEWS.
|
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Back issues of COM NET NEWS are archived in the Well gopher
|
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|
(gopher.well.sf.ca.us) under "Community/"
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As a reminder, this issue of COM NET NEWS reflects the suggestions of
|
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several subscribers. COM NET NEWS now contains a Table of Contents,
|
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and, the newsletter is broken down into two parts--Part 1--Original and Other
|
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News; and Part 2--News from Other Newsletter Sources, e.g., Edupage. The
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two parts will be emailed to you as separate messages.
|
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|
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Richard W. Bryant, Editor
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RW Bryant Associates
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Advanced Technology Market Research & Com Net Consultants
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|
P.O. Box 1828
|
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El Prado, NM 87529
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|
Tel/fax: 505-758-1919
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rbryant@hydra.unm.edu
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******************************************************************
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******************************************************************
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ORIGINAL AND OTHER NEWS
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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La Plaza/Fielding Institute Rountable, Taos, NM
|
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|
URISA '94 Annual Conference & Exposition in Milwaukee, WI
|
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|
PAVNET Gopher Server
|
||
|
OTANEWS Listserv Now Available
|
||
|
Selected OTA publications Available Via FTP
|
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|
Politicians Have It Wrong: Universal Service for the Infobahn Isn't a
|
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|
Reform, It's a Problem.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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LA PLAZA/FIELDING INSTITUTE ROUNDTABLE, TAOS, NM
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La Plaza and the Fielding Institute held a jointly sponsored roundtable over the
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weekend of 9-11 September 1994 in Taos, New Mexico. The purpose of the
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roundtable was to discuss and "brainstorm" ideas concerning the development
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of community networks--particularly the La Plaza Telecommunity.
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Approximately 25 attendees from around the U.S. convened to discuss issues
|
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|
in four main topic areas: education, community outreach, technology, and
|
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business/economic development.
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|
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|
Working documents were generated at the end of the Roundtable which may
|
||
|
eventually bainable community networks.
|
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|
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The proceedings of this conference is being completed now and a more complete
|
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|
account will be presented in the October issue of COM NET NEWS.
|
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|
|
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URISA '94 ANNUAL CONFERENCE & EXPOSITION IN MILWAUKEE
|
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>From 5-11 August 1994, some 3000 Conferees from 50 States, 11 Provinces
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and 23 Countries representing public & private sector administrators,
|
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|
managers,technicians and users of data viewed the wide range of available
|
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|
applications, experience, success and failures. Randy Gschwind,
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Conference Chair, and URISA have brought together the public and private
|
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sector by providing a forum for the exchange of ideas that foster enhanced
|
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|
quality, asset maximization and reduced cost through the productive use of
|
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|
available, organized information detail. URISA has encouraged the
|
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|
effective interaction of technology with urban & regional data since 1963
|
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|
to assist development expressing the interdependence of people, data &
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|
technology. Nine tracks covered such diverse, but
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related subjects as demographics, dollars/$ense, industry,
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infrastructures/transportation, integration, land/resource management,
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public safety, research/technology, and standards. Keynote speakers -
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Monday - Professor James B. Quinn, Chair U. S. National Research
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Council Committee, emphasized the importance of the service industry,
|
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|
showing dramatic results, but no means of measurement, other than the
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knowledge that critical data was made available to make knowledgeable
|
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|
decisions impacting the bottom line. Tuesday - Robert J. Woods, Manager
|
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|
Federal Telecommunications System (FTS2000), expressed the government
|
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focus on service to the citizen initiative. The fundamental shift in government
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systems design from inner agency workings to customer access needs of
|
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|
integrated voice, data and video telecommunications. Thursday luncheon
|
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Michael W. Dobson, VP for Industry Affairs at Rand McNally Publishing
|
||
|
Group, espoused the critical need for friendly interfaces and software
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|
structuring to make information easily available to users through
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interoperability of technologies. "nobody is born dumb, but information
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technology can make them think they are......". Special events Student
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|
Presentation "think-tank" for educational outreach in geography,
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|
mathematics, social studies, and science impact on real world problems
|
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|
using spatial information systems (SIT:UPSS) with Project Showcase;
|
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|
Mapping Lead Exposure; Citizen Access; Direct Marketing; Federal
|
||
|
Geographic Data Committee including National Spatial Data
|
||
|
Clearinghouse & Metadata Standard Training, FGDC Geospatial Data
|
||
|
Partnerships Forum, Tiger Enhancement Technical Working Group; ESRI
|
||
|
User Group Meeting; INTERGRAPH User Group Meeting; Exemplary
|
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Systems In Government Awards were made to Wilson Automated
|
||
|
Government Enhancement System for Small Municipal Systems; Presidio
|
||
|
Graphic Management Information System, National Park Service at the
|
||
|
Presidio, S.F., Ca. , for Operations Automation Systems Award;
|
||
|
NeighborLINE, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, Pa., Honorable
|
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Mention; Executive Information System, City of Missauga, On. , Canada,
|
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|
Corporate Systems Award; City of Providence, R. I. , Providence Plan,
|
||
|
Honorable Mention. The Workshops, Technical Tours and Social Events
|
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|
were all linked together in a Network that enchanced and encouraged the
|
||
|
exchange of information with technology methods between technicians,
|
||
|
exhibitors, users, public and attendees. Next years conference will be in
|
||
|
San Antonio, July 16-20.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Further information may be obtained from:
|
||
|
|
||
|
URISA at 202.289-1685. ______ksipos@pacs.pha.pa.us for Philadelphia Area
|
||
|
Computer Society...
|
||
|
|
||
|
Source:
|
||
|
Daniel A. Updegrove University of Pennsylvania
|
||
|
Associate Vice Provost 3401 Walnut, Suite 221A
|
||
|
Information Systems and Computing Phila, PA 19104-6228
|
||
|
Executive Director 215 898-2883
|
||
|
Data Communications & Computing Service fax 898-9348
|
||
|
|
||
|
=====================================
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
PAVNET-ONLINE GOPHER SERVER
|
||
|
|
||
|
Currently, promising programs around issues of community, youth, and
|
||
|
family violence, substance abuse, and victims rights are listed on PAVNET.
|
||
|
Sub-categories of Prevention, Enforcement, and Treatment/Rehab hold
|
||
|
descriptions and contact sources. Foundation and federal funding sources
|
||
|
are also listed under seperate directories. PAVNET is still under
|
||
|
construction and evaluation so only a sample of these sources are available.
|
||
|
|
||
|
PAVNET's gopher server can be accessed under the CYFERNET directory
|
||
|
under USDA in Federal Government gophers. PAVNET has not established a
|
||
|
domain name of its own since it is still under construction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
PAVNET-Online is a free service that is part of a federal initiative
|
||
|
among the U.S. Departments of Justice, Education, Agriculture, Health and
|
||
|
Human Services. Labor, and Defense.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Access via telnet by commercial or free-net system is supported currently, but
|
||
|
we soon it will have email access using Almanac software.
|
||
|
|
||
|
PAVNET will establish links to other federal agencies with similar data as
|
||
|
well as to private gophers and BBSs nationwide. The organization hopes to get
|
||
|
a grantsmanship tutorial and discussion list up by the Fall and is waiting
|
||
|
for evaluations for over 500 effective programs to be returned and
|
||
|
typeset before posting the rest of its resource database.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Source: John Gladstone <jgladsto@nalusda.gov> 301/504-5462; NAL, 10301
|
||
|
Balt. Blvd., Beltsville Md 20705-2351
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
*************************************
|
||
|
OTANEWS LISTSERV NOW AVAILABLE
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Congressional Office of Technology Assessment is the research arm of the
|
||
|
U.S. Congress. It publishes reports covering a very wide range of industries,
|
||
|
topics, and areas of interest to most all. The OTA has a well deserved
|
||
|
reputation of excellent research work. (They do their homework. Editor)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Office of Technology Assessment of the United States Congress
|
||
|
has introduced an electronic mailing service to provide news
|
||
|
about recently released OTA publications to those with access to
|
||
|
Internet e-mail.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When an OTA publication is released to the public, OTA will
|
||
|
distribute an electronic version of the report brief or news
|
||
|
release to readers who subscribe to OTANEWS.
|
||
|
|
||
|
HOW TO SUBSCRIBE
|
||
|
|
||
|
To subscribe to OTA's electronic mailing list, you must have e-
|
||
|
mail access to the Internet. Then follow these steps:
|
||
|
|
||
|
1) Address an e-mail message to listserv@ota.gov
|
||
|
|
||
|
2) Leave "subject" blank. Go to the body of the message.
|
||
|
|
||
|
3) In the message space, type subscribe OTANEWS your e-mail
|
||
|
address. For example:
|
||
|
|
||
|
subscribe OTANEWS mdexter@ota.gov
|
||
|
|
||
|
4) Send the message.
|
||
|
|
||
|
5) You will get a confirmation that your subscription has been
|
||
|
entered. If you encounter difficulties, send an e-mail message
|
||
|
to postmaster@ota.gov
|
||
|
|
||
|
The information you receive about newly released OTA publications
|
||
|
will include order information as well as instructions for
|
||
|
downloading the publication via ftp from OTA if it is available
|
||
|
electronically.
|
||
|
|
||
|
OTA is a nonpartisan analytical agency that serves the U.S.
|
||
|
Congress. Its purpose is to aid Congress with the complex and
|
||
|
often highly technical issues that increasingly affect our
|
||
|
society.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Source:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Martha Dexter mdexter@ota.gov
|
||
|
Director, Information Management (202) 228-6233
|
||
|
Office of Technology Assessment fax (202) 228-6098
|
||
|
U.S. Congress
|
||
|
Washington, DC 20510-8025
|
||
|
***********************************************************
|
||
|
|
||
|
SELECTED OTA PUBLICATIONS AVAILABLE VIA FTP
|
||
|
|
||
|
Selected OTA publications are now available via FTP. The following address
|
||
|
information will connect you to the ftp server at OTA:
|
||
|
|
||
|
* ftp to otabbs.ota.gov (152.63.20.13)
|
||
|
* login as anonymous
|
||
|
* password is your e-mail address
|
||
|
* all of the publications are in the /pub directory
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some of the most recent OTA publications available which are relevant to the
|
||
|
Net community are indictated below.
|
||
|
|
||
|
NOTE: Each publication has a designated subdirectory under
|
||
|
the /pub directory, and each publication is divided into
|
||
|
separate files by chapter. All of the files are ASCII text
|
||
|
files. The following publications are available in the
|
||
|
subdirectories indicated:
|
||
|
|
||
|
****************
|
||
|
September 1993
|
||
|
****************
|
||
|
Making Government Work: Electronic Delivery of Federal
|
||
|
Services, 188 p.
|
||
|
/pub/making.government.work
|
||
|
|
||
|
Protecting Privacy in Computerized Medical Information, 168p.
|
||
|
/pub/protecting.privacy.medical.info
|
||
|
|
||
|
***************
|
||
|
April 1994
|
||
|
***************
|
||
|
The Social Security Administration's Decentralized Computer
|
||
|
Strategy: Issues and Options, 96 p.
|
||
|
/pub/soc.sec
|
||
|
|
||
|
***************
|
||
|
May 1994
|
||
|
***************
|
||
|
Electronic Enterprises: Looking to the Future, 188 p.
|
||
|
/pub/elenter
|
||
|
|
||
|
General Publications
|
||
|
|
||
|
OTA Catalog of Publications, March 1994, 64 p., updated
|
||
|
regularly
|
||
|
/pub/catalog
|
||
|
|
||
|
Health Care Reform Brochure, June 1994, 10 p.
|
||
|
/pub/healthref
|
||
|
|
||
|
********************
|
||
|
Contact Information
|
||
|
********************
|
||
|
OTA Congressional and Public Affairs
|
||
|
(202) 224-9241
|
||
|
cpa@ota.gov
|
||
|
|
||
|
OTA Publications Distribution
|
||
|
(202) 224-8996
|
||
|
pubsrequest@ota.gov
|
||
|
=====================================================
|
||
|
|
||
|
POLITCICANS HAVE IT WRONG: UNIVERSAL SERVICE FOR THE
|
||
|
INFOBAHN ISN'T A REFORM, ITS A PROBLEM
|
||
|
|
||
|
The magazine "Wired" recently published what it called "...an essential primer
|
||
|
on a crucial aspect of telecommunications reform legislation currently before
|
||
|
Congress." The following is a press release received over the net.
|
||
|
|
||
|
15 August 1994, San Francisco - As Wired's John Browning points out in a
|
||
|
seminal overview in the September issue, politicians love to give universal
|
||
|
service lip service, but this hallmark of 1930's telecommunications
|
||
|
legislation is an obsolete policy for the networked world of the
|
||
|
information age. The real problem for the 21st century is a surplus, not
|
||
|
shortage, of bandwidth, and the solution is universal access.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Because of the extremely timely nature of this story, the editors
|
||
|
of Wired pre-released it to members of the US House and Senate as they
|
||
|
deliberate three telecommunications bills.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The principle behind the old policy of universal service is that
|
||
|
everyone should have the right to telephone service at an affordable price.
|
||
|
Politicians, regulators, and so-called citizens' advocates are now arguing
|
||
|
that this model should be applied to the pricing and distribution of
|
||
|
information services. The three reform bills currently before Congress all
|
||
|
call for one form of universal service or another.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Unfortunately, this model is obsolete. Formulated at a time when
|
||
|
there was a shortage of bandwidth (in other words, a total lack of
|
||
|
connection to the telecommuniations grid), it is irrelevant in an era when
|
||
|
there will be at least six different technologies competing to bring
|
||
|
telecommunications services to consumers (phone, cable, cellular,
|
||
|
satellite, wireless, and power company).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Browning argues that the focus should instead be on insuring
|
||
|
maximum access to content providers, to guarantee that the pipes are full
|
||
|
for competitors. Open access regulation focuses on opportunity rather than
|
||
|
duty. Instead of saying what services networks should provide at what
|
||
|
price, the point of access regulation is simply to require big network
|
||
|
operators to make available to everybody, on a non-discriminatory basis,
|
||
|
whatever services they do provide - and, more importantly, to offer the
|
||
|
same access to the underlying technologies from which those services are
|
||
|
constructed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This is not blind de-regulation. On the contrary, open access
|
||
|
requires the government to intervene vigorously - particularly to ensure
|
||
|
that small, new competitors get to use the existing telecom infrastructure
|
||
|
on the same terms as the entrenched (soon-to-be-former) monopolies that
|
||
|
built it. It also forces companies to offer services to all customers -
|
||
|
without, for example, requiring that somebody buy their telephone service
|
||
|
in order to watch their movies on cable TV.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Unlike mandated services," Browning explains, "mandated access
|
||
|
promises to break open entrenched cable-television and telephone monopolies
|
||
|
so that competition and choice can begin in earnest."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Browning's piece gives a summary of the telecom-reform legislation
|
||
|
that has surfaced in 1994 - each bill containing a mixture of subsidies,
|
||
|
service regulation, and competition. Both the Markey-Fields bill and the
|
||
|
Brooks-Dingell bill passed in the US House of Representatives in late June.
|
||
|
These serve to create competition in telecom markets where previously only
|
||
|
monopolies existed, and lift restrictions on the seven RBOCs created by
|
||
|
AT&T's breakup.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The third key piece of legislation, the Communications Act of 1994,
|
||
|
encourages competition in telecom and cable industries, gives the FCC more
|
||
|
regulatory flexibility, and ensures the preservation of universal services.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Browning concludes that "by pushing companies to offer network
|
||
|
services at something like the cost of providing them - instead of a
|
||
|
fictional price contrived for social convenience - regulators can put
|
||
|
networks on sound economic footing and make them independent of the whims
|
||
|
of politics and subsidy."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Universal excess
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fact that universal service is difficult to administer is not by itself
|
||
|
a compelling argument for burying it - even slowly and with great respect.
|
||
|
But many of the same changes that complicate the practice of universal
|
||
|
service also undermine its moral foundation. Since the Post Roads Act of
|
||
|
1866 - which in return for the right to string wires along public roads
|
||
|
required telegraph operators to carry, without discrimination, the messages
|
||
|
of anybody who wanted to use those wires - America's government has based
|
||
|
its regulation of electronic media on the assumption of shortage. The Post
|
||
|
Roads Act was in large part inspired by a nearly successful attempt by
|
||
|
telegraph operators to put the fledgling Associated Press out of business
|
||
|
by refusing to carry its messages, which competed with their own news
|
||
|
services. To prevent other such abuses of power, the regulation of radio,
|
||
|
television, and telephones has been based on the idea that those scarce
|
||
|
resources must be regulated for the public good. Technology and
|
||
|
competition, however, now promise to turn shortage to glut.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yet, all of the proposals to bring competition to network markets are
|
||
|
predicated on the idea that technology will create, if not excess, at least
|
||
|
an adequate supply of bandwidth and electronic expression so that new
|
||
|
information services will be freely available. Rep. Ed Markey, chairman of
|
||
|
the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and Finance, says
|
||
|
"someday,
|
||
|
choosing which network to use will be no different from choosing which
|
||
|
kiosk on Harvard Square to buy your newspaper from." Russ Neuman of
|
||
|
MIT's Media Lab argues that someday soonish most homes will have a choice
|
||
|
of connecting to five high-capacity networks: one built on the telephone
|
||
|
system, one built on cable television, one built on the electric power
|
||
|
network, a wireless network for personal communications devices, and
|
||
|
another wireless network built from the spaces freed up in the radio
|
||
|
spectrum as today's analog television signals go digital.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the advent of real choice, the moral bargain underlying universal
|
||
|
service - that in return for the use of scarce public resources, telecom
|
||
|
companies must give service back to the community - becomes largely void.
|
||
|
If the resources are not scarce, then the moral duties owed the community
|
||
|
by telecom providers are no greater - and no less - than those owed by
|
||
|
other firms. The way to recognize that change, and to eliminate many of the
|
||
|
innovation-crushing practical difficulties in administering universal
|
||
|
service, is to change emphasis from regulation based on service to
|
||
|
regulation based on access.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Open access regulation focuses on opportunity rather than duty. Instead of
|
||
|
saying what services networks should provide at what price, the point of
|
||
|
access regulation is simply to require big network operators to make
|
||
|
available to everybody, on a non-discriminatory basis, whatever services
|
||
|
they do provide - and, importantly, the underlying technologies from which
|
||
|
those services are constructed. It lets customers decide what services they
|
||
|
want. Better, unlike mandated services, mandated access promises to break
|
||
|
open entrenched cable-television and telephone monopolies so that
|
||
|
competition and choice can begin in earnest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
An easy way to see the difference between access regulation and service
|
||
|
regulation is to consider the "set-top box," the computer on the TV which
|
||
|
will provide brains for interactive multimedia entertainment.
|
||
|
Service regulation is when the government specifies a minimum level of
|
||
|
service, and sets rates for those minimum services - as cable regulators do
|
||
|
now. In set-top-box terms, the regulations might require, say, 200 channels
|
||
|
for $25 a month. Access regulation would set neither rates nor service
|
||
|
requirements; the assumption is that competition will keep pressure on
|
||
|
price and quality. Instead, access regulations force companies to offer
|
||
|
services to all customers - without, for example, requiring that somebody
|
||
|
buy its telephone service in order to watch its movies on cable television.
|
||
|
More important, access regulations also require big, entrenched companies
|
||
|
to make available to competitors the components from which their services
|
||
|
are constructed. In set-top-box terms, this means that customers gain the
|
||
|
right to buy, say, cable programming from Time Warner, a set-top box from
|
||
|
Ted Turner, and intelligent agents from General Magic - or whichever
|
||
|
company offers the best services (whether it be the firm who laid the wire
|
||
|
to the door or not). Time Warner, for its part, has to offer an interface
|
||
|
from its cables to Ted Turner's set-top box with the same price and
|
||
|
performance as that offered for its own boxes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Access regulations thus boost choice and competition at two levels. First,
|
||
|
they eliminate the possibility that existing companies can use their huge
|
||
|
investments in infrastructure to squeeze out new competitors. The
|
||
|
regulations would enable anybody and everybody to have access to, say,
|
||
|
installed coaxial cable at roughly the same price at which the cable
|
||
|
companies' accountants charge the costs of that cable to their own
|
||
|
businesses. Second, they enable customers to mix and match various
|
||
|
offerings from a variety of companies to create services they want.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Universal access works successfully in long-distance telecommunications -
|
||
|
where competition fueled by access regulation has improved quality and
|
||
|
choice even as it has reduced prices. So legislators have incorporated an
|
||
|
ambitious variety of access regulation into legislation - particularly into
|
||
|
the Markey-Fields bill. Not only does the bill require big companies to
|
||
|
give competitors intimate access to their networks, it also requires them
|
||
|
to keep expanding those networks so that lack of capacity cannot itself
|
||
|
become a constraint on access. Telephone companies venturing into cable
|
||
|
would be required by Markey-Fields to build as much cable capacity as there
|
||
|
was demand for channels - with the FCC to define "demand for channels" -
|
||
|
and to make it available to all on equal terms. The hope, at least, is that
|
||
|
electronic innovation and electronic bandwidth will become the printing
|
||
|
press of the next millennium - and that cheap, easy-to-produce video 'zines
|
||
|
will surge alongside the paper ones as technology's contribution to the
|
||
|
ability of all the artists, college students, political activists,
|
||
|
lunatics, and sports fanatics to express themselves.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Abandoning universal service need not mean abandoning equality. On the
|
||
|
contary. If information services are essential and high cost is denying
|
||
|
these services to the poor, government can give the disadvantaged the means
|
||
|
to buy some minimum level of service - as it does now with Medicare and
|
||
|
food stamps. (After all, nobody is suggesting that restaurants should pay
|
||
|
more for food and supermarket prices should be regulated to provide
|
||
|
cross-subsidies for universal service of nutrition among the poor.)
|
||
|
Equally, instead of requiring cable operators and other information-service
|
||
|
providers to set aside capacity for free (or at least below cost) community
|
||
|
broadcasting, government can encourage the growth of capacity and provide
|
||
|
grants for those whose voices it reckons should be heard - as it now does
|
||
|
for artists. There are already interesting experiments along these lines.
|
||
|
Both the Commerce Department and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
|
||
|
have recently created grants for community-oriented networks. New York
|
||
|
state has experimented with novel ways of financing telecoms for the very
|
||
|
poorest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But in order to take these experiments further, politicians throughout
|
||
|
Washington - and particularly Al Gore - will have to indulge in an
|
||
|
uncomfortable honesty. To imply, as Gore now does when he "challenges"
|
||
|
network providers to wire every school, hospital, and library in America by
|
||
|
2000, that it is possible to provide ubiquitous, high-bandwidth networks
|
||
|
without either new taxes or high prices for some new services. Universal
|
||
|
service cross-subsidies are a tax - albeit a tax buried in the price of
|
||
|
services and beneath layers of obscure cost allocation and pricing
|
||
|
regulations. They are a particularly inefficient and wasteful tax. And,
|
||
|
worst of all, they are a deceptive and distorting tax, a tax that makes it
|
||
|
hard to see the real costs of the building blocks of tomorrow's networks
|
||
|
and thus the real opportunities in building the networks that will change
|
||
|
the world. That is no foundation on which to build the future. If networks
|
||
|
are indeed the future of America, at least the nation should begin building
|
||
|
them as it would speak over them - with honesty at all times, even when the
|
||
|
honest message is not the one people want to hear.
|
||
|
|
||
|
More important, honesty underlies the sort of regulatory system in which
|
||
|
networks can realize their potential. By pushing companies to offer network
|
||
|
services at something like the cost of providing them - instead of a
|
||
|
fictional price connived for social convenience - regulators can put
|
||
|
networks on a sound economic footing, and so make them independent of the
|
||
|
whims of politics and subsidy. By requiring entrenched giants to provide
|
||
|
basic technology to others as they provide it unto themselves, regulators
|
||
|
can set free the vast investments already made in telecom infrastructure
|
||
|
for expansion and innovation, and so fulfill the public trust that built
|
||
|
them. By allowing innovation to rise or fall on its own merits - rather
|
||
|
than because of lobbyists' pressure - regulators can enable Americans to
|
||
|
choose for themselves the way they would like to communicate, to learn, and
|
||
|
to use the vast potential of the new technology they are creating. Building
|
||
|
upon the sound foundations of real competition and honest pricing, people
|
||
|
can begin to build for themselves the sorts of networks they want - rather
|
||
|
than waiting to be served.
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Browning is a writer and consultant living in London and a
|
||
|
contibutor to The Economist, and wrote "Power PC: Reengineering
|
||
|
Regulation" for Wired 2.07. Wired 2.09 is currently available on
|
||
|
newsstands for US$4.95 or by sending e-mail to subscriptions@wired.com.
|
||
|
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
|
||
|
Will.Kreth HotWired +1.415.222.6345 [vox]
|
||
|
Online.Ambassador 510 3rd.St. +1.415.904.0669 [fax]
|
||
|
info@wired.com SF.CA.94107.USA http://www.wired.com/
|
||
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||
|
The "Information Hypeway" doesn't exist.
|
||
|
The "Information Ecology" does. Check it out.
|
||
|
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
=-=-=-=-=Copyright 1993,4 Wired Ventures Ltd. All Rights Reserved=-=-=-=-=
|
||
|
-=-=For complete copyright information, please see the end of this file=-=-
|
||
|
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Date: Mon, 19 Sep 1994 11:28:11 -0600 (MDT)
|
||
|
From: richard bryant <rbryant@unm.edu>
|
||
|
Subject: COM NET NEWS V1.6 Part 2 September 1994
|
||
|
|
||
|
COM NET NEWS
|
||
|
Vol. 1 No. 6 September
|
||
|
|
||
|
Part 2--News from Other Newsletter Sources
|
||
|
|
||
|
>From the Editor
|
||
|
|
||
|
As indicated in the last issue of COM NET NEWS, I am requesting donations
|
||
|
from readers to help defer the costs of production of this newsletter. I am
|
||
|
requesting a donation of $35 per year for individuals and $75 per year for
|
||
|
companies and organizations. Non-U.S. subscribers, please send
|
||
|
donation in U.S. currency. But, please note that this is a request--you will not
|
||
|
be dropped from the subscription list if you don't contribute. A number of
|
||
|
readers requested to unsubscribe because of the donation. Please don't feel
|
||
|
that you have to pay. If you can't afford it or have too many other paid
|
||
|
subscriptions, or whatever, don't worry, you will still receive COM NET NEWS.
|
||
|
Also, I will continue to post COM NET NEWS on various listservs and the it
|
||
|
may be freely distributed among groups for noncommercial purposes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The request for donations is due to the time and other costs incurred in
|
||
|
putting together COM NET NEWS. It is hoped that you feel that it is of value
|
||
|
to you, and you can be assured that I will continue to better COM NET NEWS.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Back issues of COM NET NEWS are archived in the Well gopher
|
||
|
(gopher.well.sf.ca.us) under "Community/"
|
||
|
|
||
|
As a reminder, this issue of COM NET NEWS reflects the suggestions of
|
||
|
several subscribers. COM NET NEWS now contains a Table of Contents,
|
||
|
and, the newsletter is broken down into two parts--Part 1--Original and Other
|
||
|
News; and Part 2--News from Other Newsletter Sources, e.g., Edupage. The
|
||
|
two parts will be emailed to you as separate messages.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Richard W. Bryant, Editor
|
||
|
RW Bryant Associates
|
||
|
Advanced Technology Market Research & Com Net Consultants
|
||
|
P.O. Box 1828
|
||
|
El Prado, NM 87529
|
||
|
Tel/fax: 505-758-1919
|
||
|
rbryant@hydra.unm.edu
|
||
|
|
||
|
****************************************************************
|
||
|
****************************************************************
|
||
|
NEWS FROM OTHER NEWSLETTER SOURCES
|
||
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
Educom
|
||
|
|
||
|
Pizza on the Internet (California always does it first ed.)
|
||
|
Internet Backbone Set for Techno-Overhaul
|
||
|
Telemedicine Faces Obstacles
|
||
|
Maryland Gets Online
|
||
|
Internet Travel Connection
|
||
|
Digital Announces Dectalk Express Speech Synthesizer
|
||
|
Internet Tidbits
|
||
|
E-Forms At Your Fingertips
|
||
|
Internet Keeps on Growing and Growing
|
||
|
Internet Access Providers
|
||
|
CIA Plans One-Way Mirror on the Internet
|
||
|
Citizen Database
|
||
|
A Lull in Info Highway Traffic
|
||
|
Privacy Commissioner Seeks Rules for Info Highway
|
||
|
Advance in Network Security
|
||
|
What's Hot & What's Not
|
||
|
Commerce on the Net
|
||
|
Organizing Chaos with a Universal Mailbox
|
||
|
Data-Mining is the Next Big Thing for Supercomputers
|
||
|
Online Services Have Data Mines, Too
|
||
|
Telecommunity Spurs Demand for ISDN
|
||
|
Mergers and Acquisitions Update
|
||
|
Japan Wants Private Sector To Build Network
|
||
|
Latin America is PC Boomtown
|
||
|
Ferraris or Edsels on the I-Way?
|
||
|
America Online To Compete with the Internet
|
||
|
Delta and AT&T Form Alliance (an interesting partnership, ed.)
|
||
|
LDDS Acquires WIltel
|
||
|
Wireless Forecast
|
||
|
Cloning Apples
|
||
|
|
||
|
Electronic Public Information Newsletter
|
||
|
|
||
|
DOE Moves To Establish an Electron Grants Submission System
|
||
|
|
||
|
International Free Press, Vol. 1, No. 1, 1994
|
||
|
|
||
|
Belize Online Connects to the INTERNET
|
||
|
Computers in Education in Belize
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
=============================================================
|
||
|
FROM EDUCOM
|
||
|
|
||
|
************************************************************************
|
||
|
EDUPAGE is what you've just finished reading. To subscribe to Edupage: send
|
||
|
a message to: listproc@educom.edu and in the BODY of the message type: sub
|
||
|
edupage Ralph Roister Doister (assuming that your name is Ralph Roister
|
||
|
Doister; if it isn't, substitute your own name). ... To cancel
|
||
|
subscription to Edupage: send a message to: listproc@educom.edu and in the
|
||
|
BODY of the message type: unsub edupage. [Edupage is also available in
|
||
|
Portuguese and Spanish; to subscribe, send mail to edunews@nc-rj.rnp.br.]
|
||
|
|
||
|
EDUCOM REVIEW is our bimonthly print magazine on learning, communica-
|
||
|
tions, and information technology. Introductory subscriptions are $18 a year in
|
||
|
the U.S.; call 800-254-4770, or send mail to offer@educom.edu. You've
|
||
|
procrastinated long enough. Just do it, and get it over with.
|
||
|
|
||
|
EDUCOM UPDATE is our twice-a-month electronic summary of
|
||
|
organizational news and events. To subscribe to the Update: send a message
|
||
|
to: listproc@educom.edu and in the BODY of the message type:
|
||
|
sub update Arthur Scratchpenny (assuming that your name is Arthur
|
||
|
Scratchpenny; if it isn't, you should substitute your own name). ... To
|
||
|
cancel subscription to the Update: you should send a message to:
|
||
|
listproc@educom.edu and in the BODY of the message type: unsub update.
|
||
|
|
||
|
ARCHIVES. For archive copies of Edupage or Update, gopher to educom.edu
|
||
|
or look at our WWW server: URL: http://educom.edu/. To communicate with
|
||
|
Edupage or Educom, send mail to comments@educom.edu or info@educom.edu.
|
||
|
***********************************************************************
|
||
|
|
||
|
PIZZA ON THE INTERNET (California always does it first ed.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
For users who are too absorbed to get off the 'Net to order supper, Pizza
|
||
|
Hut and software publisher Santa Cruz Operation are offering PizzaNet. The
|
||
|
service, now being tested in Santa Cruz, requires customers have access to
|
||
|
the Internet and Mosaic to view the menu provided by the PizzaNet server in
|
||
|
Wichita, Kansas. The order is then sent to the SCO Open Server system at the
|
||
|
customer's nearest Pizza Hut. (Miami Herald 8/23/94 C1)
|
||
|
|
||
|
INTERNET BACKBONE SET FOR TECHNO-OVERHAUL
|
||
|
|
||
|
The old NSFNet, the backbone of the Internet, will be taken out of
|
||
|
commission this month as new equipment is phased in. Some users fear the
|
||
|
changeover could cause technical glitches, but business users are hopeful
|
||
|
that many of the stringent limits on advertising will not apply as forcibly
|
||
|
on the new network. (The Internet Letter 8/1/94)
|
||
|
|
||
|
TELEMEDICINE FACES OBSTACLES
|
||
|
|
||
|
The use of digital compression to send high-quality video images
|
||
|
from rural areas to big-city hospitals for diagnosis has been instrumental
|
||
|
in bringing specialized care to rural America. But support for telemedicine
|
||
|
is far from universal, and doctors trained in conventional diagnostic
|
||
|
methods are uncomfortable with the high-tech approach. In addition, fewer
|
||
|
than 1,000 genuine teleconsultations were performed in North America last
|
||
|
year, resulting in a lack of data on the subject. Finally the
|
||
|
cost-effectiveness of equipping telemedical centers has yet to be proven,
|
||
|
and the licensing and reimbursement issues involved in performing medicine
|
||
|
across state and national borders must be resolved. (Investor's Business
|
||
|
Daily 8/17/94 A4)
|
||
|
|
||
|
MARYLAND GETS ONLINE
|
||
|
|
||
|
Maryland now offers residents Internet access for $35 a year for e-mail,
|
||
|
$100 a year for other services such as FTP and Gopher, plus the cost of a
|
||
|
local phone call. The project is funded partially by a $2 million
|
||
|
government grant and is run by the state's public library system. (Internet
|
||
|
World 10/94 p.10)
|
||
|
|
||
|
INTERNET TRAVEL CONNECTION
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ontario's Ministry of Culture, Tourism and Recreation wants to set up a
|
||
|
central reservation registry linked to the Internet. (Toronto Globe & Mail
|
||
|
8/22/94 B4)
|
||
|
|
||
|
DIGITAL ANNOUNCES DECTALK EXPRESS SPEECH SYNTHESIZER
|
||
|
|
||
|
In an effort to strengthen its commitment to physically challenged customers,
|
||
|
Digital Equipment Corporation has announced DECtalk Express Speech
|
||
|
Synthesizer, a lightweight, portable speech synthesis product providing
|
||
|
expanded PC capabilities for individuals who are blind, visually impaired, or
|
||
|
have learning disabilities. The Speech Synthesizer converts ASCII text to
|
||
|
synthesized speech output, allowing users to hear computer monitor screen
|
||
|
contents and other text communicated via natural-sounding DECtalk speech.
|
||
|
Contact: 800-722-9332 for technical assistance or 800-344-4825 to order.
|
||
|
|
||
|
INTERNET TIDBITS
|
||
|
|
||
|
Did you know that: There are 106 books in the Unofficial Internet
|
||
|
Book List, with an average page length of 335. Out of 200,000 e-mail
|
||
|
messages received by the White House since last summer, only one contained
|
||
|
a death threat. In June 1969 there were three ARPAnet hosts, compared with
|
||
|
2.3 million Internet hosts in June 1994. There are 1600 copies of Mosaic
|
||
|
downloaded from NCSA each day. For more info on these and other Internet
|
||
|
tidbits, see:
|
||
|
http://www.openmarket.com/info/internet-index/current.html. (Internet
|
||
|
Index 8/2/94)
|
||
|
|
||
|
E-FORMS AT YOUR FINGERTIPS
|
||
|
|
||
|
Companies with more than 500 employees typically spend between $94
|
||
|
billion and $120 billion per year on some 1,210 different paper forms.
|
||
|
Fortunately, electronic forms -- accessed, filled out, and filed online --
|
||
|
are making a dent in the paper chase, and BIS Strategic Decisions predicts
|
||
|
a 118% increase in the average number of e-forms processed each month
|
||
|
between 1993 and 1996 (compared with 4% for paper). (Information Week
|
||
|
8/8/94 p.42)
|
||
|
|
||
|
INTERNET KEEPS ON GROWING AND GROWING
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Internet Society says there are now 3.2 million reachable
|
||
|
machines on the Internet, and 1 million new hosts were added during the
|
||
|
first six months of 1994, with much of the growth attributable to growth
|
||
|
outside the world in more than 80 countries. For more info:
|
||
|
http://info.isoc.org. (ISOC Release 8/4/94)
|
||
|
|
||
|
INTERNET ACCESS PROVIDERS
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Maloff Company estimates the following ranking of Internet
|
||
|
access providers, with approximate percentage of the total U.S. IP
|
||
|
marketplace, based on revenue, as of March 1994: PSI, 13%; UUNet/Alternet,
|
||
|
12%; Sprint, 12%; IP Resellers, 10%; Nonspecified Regional Nets, 10%; ANS,
|
||
|
9%; NETCOM, 7%; CERFnet, 4%; Colorado Supernet, 4%; NEARnet, 3%;
|
||
|
World, 3%. (Internet Business Journal, July-August 94, p.8)
|
||
|
|
||
|
CIA PLANS ONE-WAY MIRROR ON THE INTERNET
|
||
|
|
||
|
The CIA plans to start using the Internet for gathering
|
||
|
information, but will configure its systems to prevent file transfers in
|
||
|
the opposite direction, because the agency is "keenly aware" that by
|
||
|
connecting to the net it increases the danger of security breaches by
|
||
|
hackers. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution 8/11/94 D2)
|
||
|
|
||
|
CITIZEN DATABASE
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Commission for Immigration Reform has recommended a national
|
||
|
computer database containing the names of every citizen or legal alien with a
|
||
|
Social Security number or a green card. Prospective employers could then
|
||
|
check the database to verify job applicants' information. The proposal has
|
||
|
bipartisan support in Congress, but has alarmed many privacy experts.
|
||
|
(InformationWeek 8/22/94 p.20)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
A LULL IN INFO HIGHWAY TRAFFIC
|
||
|
|
||
|
Due to poor public response to meetings, Canada's Federal Advisory
|
||
|
Council on the Information Highway may pack up its plans to have
|
||
|
high-profile cable and phone executives go on a seven-city tour of public
|
||
|
hearings. (Montreal Gazette 8/11/94 D7)
|
||
|
|
||
|
PRIVACY COMMISSIONER SEEKS RULES FOR INFO HIGHWAY
|
||
|
|
||
|
Canada's Privacy Commissioner warns that privacy will be the first
|
||
|
roadkill on the info highway as consumers use technology more in their
|
||
|
everyday lives. He urges the federal government to introduce legislation
|
||
|
to protect misuse of personal data processed by communications systems.
|
||
|
(Ottawa Citizen 8/10/94 A3)
|
||
|
|
||
|
ADVANCE IN NETWORK SECURITY
|
||
|
|
||
|
The New Hampshire-based Net Market Company says it has a system
|
||
|
that offers online credit card shopping in total privacy, based on the PGP
|
||
|
(Pretty Good Privacy) data encryption software, which is free on the
|
||
|
Internet and uses the same RSA Data Security algorithms used by
|
||
|
CommerceNet. (New York Times 8/12/94 C1)
|
||
|
|
||
|
WHAT'S HOT & WHAT'S NOT
|
||
|
|
||
|
A Deloitte & Touche report concludes that movies on demand, home
|
||
|
shopping, video games, interactive TV, living room gambling and education
|
||
|
will be highly popular but that government services and pesky infomercials
|
||
|
may not be. The study found that most people are willing to pay a total of
|
||
|
$25 monthly to ride the info highway. (Ottawa Citizen 8/13/94 D2)
|
||
|
|
||
|
COMMERCE ON THE NET
|
||
|
|
||
|
A new WWW page (http://pass.wayne.edu/business.html) describes
|
||
|
about 70 sites related to doing business on the Internet.
|
||
|
|
||
|
ORGANIZING CHAOS WITH A UNIVERSAL MAILBOX
|
||
|
|
||
|
Software known as "universal mailbox" applications can help you
|
||
|
sort out all the voice mail, e-mail and faxed messages that have managed to
|
||
|
clutter your electronic in-box over the weekend. The software displays all
|
||
|
messages on your PC screen, including the time it came in, who sent it, and
|
||
|
how long it is. Then by clicking on a voice message, for instance, your
|
||
|
computer automatically dials the sender. Universal mailbox software has yet
|
||
|
to catch on widely due to the lack of standardized switching equipment used
|
||
|
in corporate phone networks and voice mail systems. "Telephone systems are
|
||
|
the last remaining closed computers in the world," says one universal
|
||
|
mailbox fan. (St. Petersburg Times 8/14/94 H8)
|
||
|
|
||
|
(How about this for an interesting juxtaposition of articles--Thinking Machines
|
||
|
and Data-Mining)
|
||
|
|
||
|
DATA-MINING IS THE NEXT BIG THING FOR SUPERCOMPUTERS
|
||
|
|
||
|
Big credit card companies, banks, airlines and insurers have
|
||
|
discovered massively parallel processing in an effort to divine which
|
||
|
consumers are likely to buy what products and when. A Gartner Group VP
|
||
|
predicts sales of parallel systems could expand tenfold to $5 billion by
|
||
|
1998 as a result of this new application. While marketing folks are waxing
|
||
|
euphoric, one business professor warns the fallout could be nasty if
|
||
|
companies start abusing their newfound info: "The companies doing this have
|
||
|
a big responsibility. Otherwise there will be an information Chernobyl."
|
||
|
(Wall Street Journal 8/16/94 B1)
|
||
|
|
||
|
ONLINE SERVICES HAVE DATA MINES, TOO
|
||
|
|
||
|
The online service you use has been compiling data on you too,
|
||
|
including your social security number, credit card number, demography and
|
||
|
interest areas. Using this and other data, CompuServe offers a service
|
||
|
called CompuTrace, which offers the last known address for any person in
|
||
|
the U.S. A similar service will tell you how long someone has had a
|
||
|
particular phone number or lived at a particular address and who else lives
|
||
|
there, and yet another service provides information on how to obtain
|
||
|
driving records, state by state. A bill was passed by the House last month
|
||
|
that would require all telecommunications companies, including online
|
||
|
services, to tell consumers what information is being collected, how it's
|
||
|
being used, and provide an opportunity to opt out. (Tampa Tribune 8/15/94
|
||
|
B&F 3)
|
||
|
|
||
|
TELECOMMUTING SPURS DEMAND FOR ISDN
|
||
|
|
||
|
Integrated services digital network is finally coming into its own,
|
||
|
as telecommuters snap up the high-speed data connections necessary to
|
||
|
access many corporate networks. Dataquest estimates the number of ISDN
|
||
|
lines using a basic rate interface will reach 226.4 million by the end of
|
||
|
this year, almost double from 1993. That number will hit 335 million lines
|
||
|
by the end of 1995. (Investor's Business Daily 8/15/94 A4)
|
||
|
|
||
|
MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS UPDATE
|
||
|
|
||
|
Despite appearances, the number of mergers and acquisitions in the
|
||
|
information technology industry in the first half of 1994 remained about
|
||
|
the same as in the same period last year (291 vs. 296). The value of the
|
||
|
transactions rose 12% , however, to $14.2 billion. The software sector came
|
||
|
out on top, with the value of transactions doubling from $2.7 billion to
|
||
|
$5.4 billion, including eight transactions worth more than $100 million
|
||
|
each. (Wall Street Journal 8/16/94 B5)
|
||
|
|
||
|
JAPAN WANTS PRIVATE SECTOR TO BUILD NETWORK
|
||
|
|
||
|
Japan's Ministry of International Trade and Industry wants the
|
||
|
private sector to take the lead in building a $750-billion national
|
||
|
fiber-optic network that would link all Japanese homes and businesses by
|
||
|
2010. MITI's position is an about-face from its usual pro-active stance on
|
||
|
government/industry technology projects, and U.S. companies are eager to
|
||
|
play a major role in constructing the Japanese Infobahn. (Wall Street
|
||
|
Journal 8/15/94 A1)
|
||
|
|
||
|
LATIN AMERICA IS PC BOOMTOWN
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sales of personal computers in Latin America totaled $2.4 billion
|
||
|
in 1993, and are expected to more than double over the next five years.
|
||
|
Brazil was the largest national market last year, increasing more than 34%
|
||
|
over the previous year. Sales in Argentina and Chile grew by 40% last year,
|
||
|
while Mexico's sales declined by 5% due to the uncertainties of NAFTA and
|
||
|
pre-election jitters. Nevertheless, Mexican sales accounted for 30% of all
|
||
|
sales in the region. (Miami Herald 8/15/94 p.14)
|
||
|
|
||
|
FERRARIS OR EDSELS ON THE I-WAY?
|
||
|
|
||
|
A Wall Street Journal editorial deplores the over-regulation
|
||
|
contained in S. 1822, sponsored by Sen. Fritz Hollings, and comes out in
|
||
|
favor of a draft bill being circulated by Sen. Bob Dole. On the Hollings
|
||
|
bill: "The worst restrictions have to do with `universal service,' which is
|
||
|
so generously defined that companies may be forced to provide
|
||
|
video-on-demand and other entertainment options free to impoverished
|
||
|
customers." On the Dole bill: "His draft legislation would even repeal the
|
||
|
1992 Cable Act. Such sweeping deregulation is surely the only way the I-Way
|
||
|
is likely to get built." (Wall Street Journal 8/17/94 A12)
|
||
|
|
||
|
AMERICA ONLINE TO COMPETE WITH THE INTERNET
|
||
|
|
||
|
America Online has formed an alliance with publishing giant Simon &
|
||
|
Schuster to form the "College Online" interactive computer service which
|
||
|
would seek to become a commercial alternative to the Internet. AOL also
|
||
|
announced that its subscriber base has passed the 1-million mark. (New York
|
||
|
Times 8/17/94 C4)Pacific Telesis Group has decided to forego the trial stage
|
||
|
and will move directly into commercial deployment of its interactive video
|
||
|
network in California. The company cited the looming prospect of
|
||
|
competition from cable in the local phone market as the impetus for jumping
|
||
|
the gun on its planned $16 billion statewide network. (Wall Street Journal
|
||
|
8/17/94 B6)
|
||
|
|
||
|
DELTA AND AT&T FORM ALLIANCE (an interesting partnership ed.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The information technologies division of Delta Air Lines is being spun off
|
||
|
to form a new Atlanta-based computer services company in partnership with
|
||
|
AT&T. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution 8/23/94 D1)
|
||
|
|
||
|
LDDS ACQUIRES WILTEL
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jackson, Mississippi-based LDDS Communications is acquiring Houston-
|
||
|
basted WilTel to become the fourth-largest long-distance carrier (after AT&T,
|
||
|
MCI, and Sprint), with 5% of the $65 billion a year long-distance telephone
|
||
|
market. WilTel was created in the mid-eighties by a Williams pipeline unit
|
||
|
that put fiber optic cable through an unused pipeline. (New York Times
|
||
|
8/23/94 C1)
|
||
|
|
||
|
WIRELESS FORECAST
|
||
|
|
||
|
The number of cellular subscribers was 16 million in 1993 and is expected
|
||
|
to increase to 33 million by 1998. Paging subscribers numbered 19 million
|
||
|
in 1993, growing to 37 million by 1998. In mobile radio-dispatch, there
|
||
|
were 1.5 million subscribers in 1993, expected to reach 5.2 million by
|
||
|
1998. (Washington Post 8/22/94 p.29)
|
||
|
|
||
|
CLONING APPLES
|
||
|
|
||
|
Apple's strategy is to license selectively to "complementary" partners who
|
||
|
can help the company's marketing efforts without engaging in direct
|
||
|
competition. Potential partners? In Japan, NEC and Fujitsu; in Germany,
|
||
|
Vobis; in Italy and South America, Ing.C.Olivetti; in the U.S., Motorola
|
||
|
and IBM. Apple's executive VP says, "If we had licensed earlier, we would
|
||
|
be the Microsoft of today." (Newsweek 8/29/94 p.40)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FROM EPIN
|
||
|
|
||
|
SUMMARY OF ELECTRONIC PUBLIC INFORMATION NEWSLETTER
|
||
|
VOL. 4, NO. 16; August 12, 1994
|
||
|
|
||
|
DOE MOVES TO ESTABLISH AN ELECTRONIC GRANTS SUBMISSION
|
||
|
SYSTEM
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Department of Energy (DOE) has entered into an agreement with
|
||
|
Federal Information Exchange (F.I.E.), Inc., to establish a pilot
|
||
|
project for the electronic transmission and processing of grant
|
||
|
proposals for the nation's colleges and universities. The purpose
|
||
|
of the two-year project is to establish the system whereby an
|
||
|
academic advisor can receive, process and submit an application for
|
||
|
federal funds, and whereby DOE can process and ultimately award (or
|
||
|
reject) the grant electronically. F.I.E., based in Gaithersburg,
|
||
|
MD., calls the process "Electronic Research Administration," to
|
||
|
describe both the submission and the processing of the grant
|
||
|
application.
|
||
|
|
||
|
EPIN: For more information on the complete ELECTRONIC PUBLIC
|
||
|
INFORMATION NEWSLETTER and subscription rates contact:
|
||
|
|
||
|
James McDonough
|
||
|
Electronic Public Information Newsletter
|
||
|
epin@access.digex.net
|
||
|
Tel:/Fax: (301) 365-3621
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
FROM INTERNATIONAL FREE PRESS Vol. 1, No. 1, 1994
|
||
|
|
||
|
David Hosten Publishing Editor ao826@freenet.carleton.ca
|
||
|
|
||
|
BELIZE ONLINE CONNECTS TO THE INTERNET
|
||
|
|
||
|
Belmopan, Belize 21 July 1994 - Belize Online Information
|
||
|
Services has announced the introduction of INTERNET service
|
||
|
with effect from August 1st 1994. The INTERNET allows users to
|
||
|
access a wealth of information sources and exchange electronic
|
||
|
mail and files with more than 25 million people in more than 100
|
||
|
countries around the world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Belize Online is the first community access online information
|
||
|
service established in our country and was featured as the cover
|
||
|
story in the July issue of the BIS publication Belize Today. An
|
||
|
online service allows anyone with a computer and a telephone
|
||
|
modem to dial into the service and access software libraries,
|
||
|
information databases or exchange mail with others. Under an
|
||
|
agreement with government, Belize Online provides free access
|
||
|
to news and information on Belize through a special area called
|
||
|
Forums on Belize. In this area callers can find news, information,
|
||
|
background material, statistics and several government
|
||
|
publications useful for research, homework assignments or for
|
||
|
other applications.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Free users also have limited access to BOL's software libraries
|
||
|
which currently hold more than 10 thousand programs including
|
||
|
applications for education, science, business, personal
|
||
|
productivity and recreation. Added-value services, including
|
||
|
INTERNET access and larger download volumes for software are
|
||
|
available for a small fee.
|
||
|
|
||
|
BOL director Manolo Romero says that INTERNET access had
|
||
|
been planned for later this year, but "Demand from existing users
|
||
|
compelled us to accelerate our link-up to this world-wide system".
|
||
|
The INTERNET, now known as the Information Super Highway is
|
||
|
growing at an astonishing rate as more and more people realize
|
||
|
the benefits of economical access to communication and
|
||
|
information sources. Romero said that Belizeans should be proud
|
||
|
to know that Belize is now connected to the Information Super
|
||
|
Highway and that this will open the door to the more rapid
|
||
|
integration of the latest information technology in our schools,
|
||
|
businesses and even the home. Belize Online has expressed its
|
||
|
appreciation to the UCB BELINET distance education project and
|
||
|
its director Mr. Brian Candler who assisted in obtaining an
|
||
|
INTERNET feed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One of the first benefits of Belize Online's link with the INTERNET
|
||
|
will be the creation of a Belize News Mailing List. This is a special
|
||
|
feature that will hold all the news and information bulletins
|
||
|
generated by the Belize Information Service. Anyone in any pa r
|
||
|
of the world will be able to subscribe to this list free of cost merely
|
||
|
by sending an E-mail message to the list via a local phone call in
|
||
|
their country. Thereafter they will receive in their local E-mail box,
|
||
|
all information posted on the Belize News List every day.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"This will certainly make it easier for Belizeans, news
|
||
|
organizations, governments and friends of Belize to access
|
||
|
information on our country quickly, efficiently and economically,"
|
||
|
says Romero, adding that the mailing list will of course be
|
||
|
available free of cost to educational institutions, businesses or any
|
||
|
individual with access to E-mail within Belize. "In a time when it is
|
||
|
important to maintain a profile on the international scene and keep
|
||
|
our friends informed on the latest developments in our country,
|
||
|
Belize's presence on the INTERNET will be highly advantageous",
|
||
|
he concludes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
By Manolo Romero
|
||
|
sysop@online.com.bz
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
COMPUTERS IN EDUCATION IN BELIZE
|
||
|
|
||
|
Belize has joined the race to utilize the latest information technology to
|
||
|
jump-start computer education in our education system. Many schools have
|
||
|
been putting in computer systems in recent years, but the Ashcroft
|
||
|
Foundation recently pumped in more than BZ $500,000. as part of its
|
||
|
Information Technology Programme for the Children of Belize. This is an
|
||
|
ambitious project to ensure that computer education is rapidly incorporated
|
||
|
into the school curriculum. In its initial stage the project has provided
|
||
|
modern computer suites for the Belize Teachers College and seven high
|
||
|
schools,
|
||
|
including the Anglican Cathedral College, Edward P. York High School, Orange
|
||
|
Walk Technical High School, Stann Creek Ecumenical, Toledo Community
|
||
|
College, the Corozal Community College and the Independence High School.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In an age where computer skills are now required for many jobs, Belize has
|
||
|
distinct advantages over many of its neighbors in Central America and the
|
||
|
Caribbean. For one, Belize has joined many developed countries where
|
||
|
computers are duty free. Not regarded as luxury items but rather as
|
||
|
essential tools for a country's development and competitive edge. The rapid
|
||
|
evolution in manufacturing techniques where computers can literally be
|
||
|
assembled in a garage from freely available components has also led to
|
||
|
a growth of in-country computer factories, like Syscomp and Business
|
||
|
Compute Systems. Syscomp, part of Belize Holdings, assembles computers
|
||
|
and peripherals in Belize at prices as good as computers imported from the US.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Recent market studies show that job applicants who are computer illiterate
|
||
|
have markedly diminished possibilities of landing the job they desire - especially
|
||
|
in the private sector. The public service moves more slowly and typewriters
|
||
|
are still held in higher regard by some managers, but this is changing.
|
||
|
Part of the process is the natural attrition of older employees who retire
|
||
|
or leave the service, and the corresponding inflow of young blood with new
|
||
|
skills and innovative ideas. But a corresponding part of the equation lies
|
||
|
with many public officers actively seeking computer training from the slew
|
||
|
of training centres now operating in Belize.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The future belongs to those who equip themselves with information
|
||
|
technology skills today", says Belize Teachers College Vice-Principal for
|
||
|
administration Erlindo Pech. "We need to move away from a scenario where
|
||
|
many computers are used merely as glorified typewriters. Computers are
|
||
|
becoming essential tools in the schools and the workplace. Our objective is
|
||
|
to imbue our children with the necessary skills by linking as many schools
|
||
|
as possible via computer networks to share ideas, projects, assignments
|
||
|
and even lecturers."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The University College of Belize is doing its part by actively promoting the
|
||
|
BELINET project which already operates an Electronic Mail services and
|
||
|
plans to allow students in remote areas take lessons using interactive
|
||
|
distance education technology. UCB computer specialist Brian Candler says
|
||
|
that the biggest drawback in Belize continues to be the high cost of
|
||
|
telecommunication. BELINET is trying to have Belize gain full time access
|
||
|
to the INTERNET - the global computer network in part funded by the US
|
||
|
government.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The INTERNET is available for free to teachers, students and researchers in
|
||
|
many countries but since Belize still retains a telephone monopoly,
|
||
|
negotiations to achieve this goal must be carried out with BTL. BELINET
|
||
|
currently offers intermittent access to the INTERNET with which it links
|
||
|
twice a day, but the communications costs and the lack of
|
||
|
live, interactive service limit it usefulness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Belizeans are entitled to free INTERNET access to allow our students and
|
||
|
people to tap in to the vast wealth of information, news groups, mailing
|
||
|
lists and software," he says. "Given the difficulty of obtaining up to date
|
||
|
information in Belize by other means, not having access to this system
|
||
|
places a serious handicap on our students, teachers, decision-makers and
|
||
|
others seeking information,' he adds.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Belize Online is also interested in offering INTERNET access through
|
||
|
BELINET but the communications costs are prohibitive at this time,
|
||
|
especially for a system that operates as a community access service.
|
||
|
|
||
|
By Manolo Romero
|
||
|
sysop@online.com.bz
|
||
|
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
|