This story appeared on Network
World at
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2007/120407-bradner.html
FCC: regulating
through 3D glasses
By Scott Bradner
Network World , 12/04/2007
I was going to lay off the FCC for
a while but the events of Nov. 27 make that really hard to do.
We were treated to the
embarrassing spectacle of a meeting delayed more than 12 hours such that it
finished around midnight and had a number of FCC commissioners accusing the FCC
chairman of suppressing data that did not support the conclusion the chairman
wanted. Hardly a way to run a professional regulatory organization.
It was not just the Keystone
Cops-like ambiance of that meeting that caused me to want to talk about the FCC
again. I find the FCC very frustrating – it seems to have surrounded too
many topics with common sense-deflector screens. Its continued insistence on
using a totally bogus measure of broadband penetration and its definition of
broadband as 200Kbps in a single direction in spite of widespread condemnation
paints the FCC as being in its own fantasy world. There are many other example
of the same removed-from-reality nature of FCC pronouncements.
That frustration aside, whatÕs got
me grousing about the FCC again was the sudden realization that parts of the
FCC, extending at least to the chairman, just do not see the same thing when
looking at the same conditions in the business of telephone companies and the
business of cable companies. This is something that, in retrospect for me
anyway, has been the case for quite a while.
The chairman seems rather bent out
of shape by the cable companies and seems to want to do whatever he can to
limit their viability and growth. For example, the day after the meeting
fiasco, stories started circulating that the chairman was going to again
propose that a single cable company be limited to a maximum of 30% of the cable
business.
I'm not a big fan of monopolies,
nor am I a big fan of the cable TV networks. (I dropped mine and moved to
satellite when they raised the price and dropped the main extra channel I
wanted to watch - Speed TV.) I might even be in favor of some kind of limit on
the percent of the business any one cable TV company could amass, but I'm a
technology-neutral kinda anti-monopolist. I find monopolies a real problem when
they are tied into physical distribution networks in a way that makes it
economically infeasible for another company to deploy any sort of new direct
competition. Thus I found it a problem when the same FCC with this same
chairman had no problem at all approving a merger that resulted in splitting
the physical line-based telephone business into two parts. I also found it a
problem when the FCC dropped all pretense of mandating the same kind of equal
access to facilities that it is now proposing for cable companies, which now
must carry certain broadband channels in certain regions and could be forced to
lower what they charge for access "spare channels."
Somehow the FCC, or at least this
chairman, cannot see the same thing when he looks at essentially identical
situations in telephone companies and cable companies. It is almost like he is
wearing those polarized 3D glasses where only vertically polarized light is
seen by one eye and only horizontally polarized light is seen by the other. For
3D movies the brain blends together the disparate pictures into something that
makes sense - something that does not seem to be happening at the FCC these
days.
Disclaimer: I was shown 3D glasses
at the Harvard Psychology Department close to 40 years ago but I've seen no
analysis of the FCC's fuzzy vision from that department or from the university,
so the above observation is mine alone.
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