We live in a civil society - a
place where primary education is freely available to all, where anyone
can enjoy a walk through our public parks or down our sidewalks and
freely drive through the streets. Libraries across the country loan out
books for free - literature that you can read on a spring day in our
parks or beneath the streetlights on main street on a warm summer's
evening. You don't have to tip the firemen who show up at your house or
pay for police protection - in a civil society, public safety is freely
available to everyone.
We enjoy myriad services and resources
that we don't pay for each and every time we use them. Yet each of
these key facets of contemporary society was part of a new social
contract, often adopted only after years of battle and turmoil to
overcome a prior status quo (from private fire and educational services
to for-fee libraries and parks). Eventually, however, new models are
seen to provide such an enormous benefit to the entire population that
we're willing to invest in ideas that lift all boats. We realise that,
as a society, each of us is better off when certain basic services are
freely available to all.
At the dawn of the digital era, during this first decade of the 21st century, the most important new commodity is internet
access. A growing canon of research has documented the enormous
benefits that accrue to those with broadband access (and the increasing
detriments faced by those without it). Within many civil societies, in
much the same way the agrarian revolution helped eliminate famine, the
industrial revolution brought manufactured goods into everyone's lives
and the computer era integrated machines (from laptops to PDAs and cell
phones to iPods) into our daily regimes, connectivity is the currency
of the information age. A new social contract that includes
connectivity for all is not a particularly expensive endeavour - free
broadband for everyone for life would cost a tiny fraction of the cost
of the Wall Street bail-out and far less than the expense of one year
of our war in Iraq.
Today's politicians, from municipal
representatives to President-elect Barack Obama, are actively
supporting broadband buildouts. Current debates over the economic
stimulus package place nationwide internet infrastructure development
as a key component of the intervention. An optimal free broadband
system would include both wireless (for mobility and cost efficiency)
and wireline (for capacity and reliability) components. And, as it
turns out, two proposals are currently pending that could make free
broadband connectivity for life a reality.
The first is an
innovative public interest obligation on licensed spectrum. Since we
already own the public airwaves (over which everything from television
signals to FM radio is broadcast), as landlords, we can set the rental
conditions. Every time a mobile phone company, TV broadcaster or other
entity receives a license from the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) it comes with conditions. Earlier this year, the FCC auctioned
off a small portion of the 700 MHz spectrum for $19.6bn. Sadly, of that
sum, zero dollars went to support free broadband. But if a small
portion of spectrum auction revenues had been earmarked for free
broadband for all, we would already be well on our way toward universal
connectivity.
Currently, a small piece of spectrum (2155-2175
MHz) is up for license, and the conditions being proposed include
providing free broadband connectivity for everyone in the US. One
company in particular, M2Z Networks, has been vocally advocating to
license this piece of the public airwaves with this condition. However,
M2Z faces fierce competition from telecom incumbents like T-mobile, and
the plan is currently stalled at the FCC.
But financial support
and spectrum licensure reforms are not enough on their own. A
multi-faceted solution is needed. Fuel-efficiency and car-safety
standards have helped shape today's national transportation grid, but
the US had to make a major public investment in the infrastructure
itself. Broadband poses a similar opportunity.
Building the
21st-Century Information Superhighway is a proposal synthesised by the
New America Foundation in consultation with numerous interested parties
that would create a national information superhighway, providing fibre
capacity to cities, towns and rural areas throughout the US. At its
core, the idea is very simple: each time we rip up, repave or build a
road, we should also lay fibre infrastructure along that route that
anyone can use. Over the next half-decade, this initiative would create
a web of connectivity - a critical new infrastructure for the digital
age. Across the country, communities, internet service providers and
municipalities are engaging in demand-side aggregation, but lack entree
to affordable internet access, a bottleneck that this proposal solves.
Residents
in places like Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and St Cloud, Florida already
receive free broadband. Groups like Tribal Digital Village and the
CUWiN Foundation have been building free networks to serve local
communities for years. There are thousands of networks all around the
globe providing free connectivity to participants. In the US, we have
an opportunity to implement broadband solutions that dramatically
improve the lives of everyone living in the country. The question,
therefore, is whether this new administration has the gumption to
create a "broadband Apollo project" to maximise the potential and
possibility of the information age.
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