Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
July 24, 2008, 02:35:13 PM

Login with username, password and session length

News   ·    Gas Prices   ·    Weather   ·    Auctions   ·    Dating
Real Estate   ·    WebCams   ·    Traffic   ·    Hotels   ·    Jobs
Wouldn't it be nice to have all of your Sacramento, CA area news in one place? Click here!
3,700 Posts in 1,606 Topics by 952 Members
Latest Member: teriincali
Search: Advanced search
View Your Startpage | Forum Rules | Advertising | Sacramento, California Online Community feed  

The Sacramento, CA Online Community | Sacramento, CA Discussion | Politics | National | Topic: The Govt Must Protect Our Airwaves!
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. « previous next »

 
Pages: [1] Print
Author Topic: The Govt Must Protect Our Airwaves!  (Read 218 times)
TonySinclair
Full Member
***

Karma: 4
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 183


Socialite extraordinaire


View Profile
« on: May 29, 2007, 04:36:34 PM »

The federal government is on the verge of turning over a huge portion of our public airwaves to companies like AT&T, Verizon, and Comcast—who will use them for private gain instead of the public good.

These newly available airwaves are a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to revolutionize Internet access—beaming high-speed Internet signals to every park bench, coffee shop, workplace, and home in America at more affordable prices than current Internet service. Phone and cable companies don't want this competition to their Internet service—they'd rather purchase the airwaves at auction and sit on them.1

In June, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will make a major decision: Use the public airwaves for the public good, or turn them over to big companies who will stifle competition, innovation, and the wireless Internet revolution.

The FCC is only accepting public comments for a few more days. Can you sign this petition to them today, and send it to your friends?

"The public airwaves should be used for the public good. The government must protect our airwaves from corporate gatekeepers who would stifle innovation and competition in the wireless Internet market."
Sign here:
http://www.civic.moveon.org/airwaves/

We'll deliver your petition signature and any accompanying note directly to the FCC's public comment record, which FCC Commissioners use to guide their decisions.

There are many innovative companies jumping at the opportunity to forge ahead with the wireless Internet revolution—bringing us high-speed wireless networks from coast to coast and all sorts of innovative wireless devices. But the old phone and cable companies are aggressively trying to block this progress. They've spent billions laying wires, and they enjoy having their customers locked in with few alternatives.

Without access to the public airwaves, wireless innovators can't enter the marketplace. So the strategy of companies like AT&T, Verizon, and Comcast is to buy the administrative rights of our airwaves at auction—and then use those rights to block competition. They also stifle the development of new wireless devices by only letting their own endorsed products work on their networks.

We're urging the FCC to protect the public good by setting auction rules that prohibit this anti-competitive behavior. If the government auctioned off the right to maintain a public highway to Ford, we would certainly not let Ford block Toyotas from the roads.  Likewise, big phone and cable should not be able to keep innovative companies off our airwaves.

They also shouldn't be able to tell their wireless Internet customers which websites they can access—as they do now. And just as phone companies can't tell customers what phones can be plugged into a wall jack, cell and wireless companies should not be able to dictate which phones or wireless devices people use on their networks.

The opportunity to revolutionize the Internet and wireless world is at our fingertips. The only question is whether our government will embrace it, and whether regular people will fight for it.

The FCC is only accepting public comments for a few more days. Can you sign the petition to them today, and send it to your friends?
Sign here:
http://www.civic.moveon.org/airwaves/

Thanks for all you do.
–Adam Green, MoveOn.org Civic Action
  Tuesday, May 29th, 2007 

PS—Most people haven't heard about this critical issue yet—so it's really important that we spread the word and get others involved. As you consider who else to tell about this issue, here's what innovation and competition in the wireless world means for regular people:

    * Families would no longer be forced to choose solely between high-priced phone and cable Internet. A new wireless market—including lots of competition within that market—would mean more affordable Internet access for families.
    * Poor and rural communities which phone and cable companies never bothered to wire with high-speed Internet access could now have high-speed Internet signals beamed directly into their homes.
    * Blackberry and other handheld wireless users are currently blocked by phone companies from accessing Internet-based phone service and other innovative services.2 The FCC could stop these anti-competitive, anti-consumer practices by mandating wireless Net Neutrality.
    * Socially responsible buyers could someday go to a store, scan the bar codes of products with an Internet-equipped cell phone, and find out which items are socially responsible. Phone companies can currently block such innovations from working with their devices (they often try to shake down innovators into giving them a massive cut of their profits)—but the FCC can prohibit such practices on these newly available airwaves.
    * Technology consumers in America are currently denied all sorts of cutting-edge technology that people in other countries have—like using Internet-equipped cell phones to buy products, transfer money, or give to charity. By opening the doors to competition and innovation, the FCC can change that.
Logged

I'm Tony Sinclair.
Ready to Tanqueray?
attagirl
Full Member
***

Karma: -1
Offline Offline

Posts: 100


View Profile
« Reply #1 on: June 02, 2007, 10:03:47 AM »

very interesting. I will have to take a look at this more thoroughly and make a decision as to what I want to do next. thanks for the information you have definitively opened my eyes to something I was not aware of.
Logged
Pages: [1] Print 
The Sacramento, CA Online Community | Sacramento, CA Discussion | Politics | National | Topic: The Govt Must Protect Our Airwaves! « previous next »
Jump to:  


SacRatings.com
Vote for the Sacramento, CA Online Community!
Humor Times - Funniest Paper on the Planet!





Sacramento News | Sacramento Gas Prices | Sacramento Weather | Sacramento Auctions | Sacramento Dating
Sacramento Real Estate | Sacramento Web Cams | Sacramento Traffic | Sacramento Hotels | Sacramento Jobs


Add To Favorites (ctrl+D) | Set As Startpage | Tell A Friend | Help Promote | Link To Us

Home | Sacramento Forums | Forum Rules | Information | Links | Sponsors | Advertising | Contact Us | Site Map

All Content Copyright © 2007 SacForums.com - All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy

Sacramento, CA Online Community Feed Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
Powered by SMF 1.1.2 | SMF © 2006-2007, Simple Machines LLC
Seo4Smf v0.2 © Webmaster's Talks
Design by 7dana.com