[IP] How Government Can Bring New Communications to All Americans: Six Lessons from History Discovered by a Libertarian.
Delivered-To: dfarber+@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 2004 07:57:33 -0500
From: John Berresford <John.Berresford@xxxxxxx>
Subject: New Berresford Article
To: dave@xxxxxxxxxx
Dear Dave:
You may remember me from the FCC, especially the IM issue in the AOL-Time
Warner merger. You were kind enough to include an article I wrote on
Universal Broadband in your Interesting People site.
I have just had a new draft article published, on the web page of the
Harvard Program for Information Resources Policy. It's titled "How
Government Can Bring New Communications to All Americans: Six Lessons from
History Discovered by a Libertarian." It recounts the history of (a) how
telephone service got into every home, (b) how government 'cleaned up'
radio in the late 20s and early 30s, (c) how government set up over-the-air
tv and stunted cable tv, and (d) the causes and effects of the Bell System
Break-Up. It examines, in each case, what government did (and refrained
from doing) that sped or slowed new technology getting to all
Americans. It then draws six lessons, which may be of use to people
planning the next generation of the Internet and HDTV.
I thought it might be of interest --
<http://www.pirp.harvard.edu/publications/pdf-blurb.asp?id=594>http://www.pirp.harvard.edu/publications/pdf-blurb.asp?id=594.
Whether or not, I hope you're well and Happy New Year.
John Berresford
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