From: Dave Banisar <banisar@washofc.cpsr.org>
To: CYPHERPUNKS <CYPHERPUNKS@toad.com>
Message Hash: 98533b978844ddde5ca1e01f519ac4df1c5f071c4d2f47caeba31ea65952e775
Message ID: <00541.2834429212.263@washofc.cpsr.org>
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UTC Datetime: 1993-10-26 01:50:42 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 25 Oct 93 18:50:42 PDT
From: Dave Banisar <banisar@washofc.cpsr.org>
Date: Mon, 25 Oct 93 18:50:42 PDT
To: CYPHERPUNKS <CYPHERPUNKS@toad.com>
Subject: CPSR NII Paper
Message-ID: <00541.2834429212.263@washofc.cpsr.org>
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CPSR NII Paper
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Todd Newman (CA) 415-390-1614
Eric Roberts (CA) 415-723-3642
Coralee Whitcomb (MA) 617-356-4309
Marc Rotenberg (D.C.) 202-544-9240
COMPUTER SCIENTISTS RAISE SOCIAL AND DESIGN CONCERNS
ABOUT THE INFORMATION HIGHWAY
Palo Alto, Calif., October 25, 1993 -- In the wake of sudden
corporate mergers and rapid technological developments, Computer
Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR) today voiced concern
that the planned information superhighway will not realize its full
potential. The public interest organization put forward specific
guidelines for the National Information Infrastructure (NII) in a
paper titled, "Serving the Community: A Public-Interest Vision of
the National Information Infrastructure." Urging the Clinton
Administration to move quickly to adopt these principles, CPSR
President Eric Roberts said, "Although there is widespread agreement
on general goals, there is no specific plan to ensure that these goals
are met."
"It is much easier to state a vision than to achieve it, " said Dr.
Roberts, who is also Associate Chair of the Computer Science
department at Stanford University. "And there are many dangers on
the horizon that threaten to compromise the value of the NII as a
resource for the public.
"For example, if a small number of companies dominate the market,
we're in danger of stifling competition and innovation on the
network. If those same companies control the programming, then
open and diverse speech is limited. If pricing structures do not cover
universal service, the average person and the poor will be struggling
to use the backroads of the information highway. If privacy isn't
protected, your TV could keep more detailed records of your finances
than the IRS. And, if the NII is not designed to allow everyone to
communicate freely and to publish their own contributions, it could
become nothing more than a medium for delivering 500-channel
television, with interactivity limited to home-shopping and trying to
guess the next play during sporting events."
CPSR's paper expands on these dangers and makes specific policy and
technical recommendations for the newly formed Information
Infrastructure Task Force. The Task Force is expected to coordinate
network policy for the Clinton Administration.
"In its 'Agenda for Action' document, the Administration has set forth
a positive vision of what the NII can be," said Dr. Roberts. "To
achieve that vision, however, the government must play a major role
in the design, development, and regulation of the network." CPSR
recommends that the Administration adopt the following policies:
o Promote widespread economic benefits by evaluating the NII's
economic success using measures that reflect its impact on the
society as a whole, not merely the profits of NII investors and
service providers.
o Evaluate the social impact of the NII by conducting periodic
reviews as the NII is implemented and used to guarantee that it
continues to serve the public interest.
o Guarantee equitable and universal access through an appropriate
mix of legislation, regulation, taxation, and direct subsidies.
o Promote the development of a vital civic sector by ensuring
resources, training, and support for public spaces within the NII
where citizens can pursue noncommercial activities.
o Promote a diverse and competitive marketplace in terms of the
content carried over the NII.
o Provide access to government services and information over the
NII.
o Encourage democratic participation by ensuring full public
disclosure, and actively promoting democratic decision-making
and public participation in all stages of the development process.
o Actively facilitate the seamless connection of America's NII with
the information infrastructures of other nations by working to
resolve such issues as security, censorship, tariffs, and privacy.
o Guarantee the functional integrity of the NII by establishing
critical technical requirements including ease of use, widespread
availability, full functionality, high reliability, adequate privacy
protection, and evolutionary expansion.
The recommendations follow from a yearlong review of the NII
conducted by CPSR. The process included collecting more than 1,200
suggestions for NII policy from network users across the country,
drafting a report, holding special chapter meetings on the NII in
Berkeley, Boston, Seattle, and Washington, D.C., and having a
multiple-draft review process by the membership. Final changes
to the report were made at the annual meeting of CPSR, where the
report was adopted unanimously by the CPSR Board of Directors.
Dr. Roberts noted that he was very pleased by the level of
participation in the NII report. "The computer community knows
that the NII is the critical technological issue facing the United States
today. Our members were extremely responsive when we asked
them to participate in this project, because they understand from
their own experience how much the NII has to offer."
CPSR also worked closely with the Telecommunications Policy
Roundtable (TPR), a coalition of more than sixty nonprofit, consumer,
labor and civil rights organizations based in Washington, DC. CPSR's
paper endorses the principles set forth by TPR. TPR will unveil its
founding principles in a press conference, Tuesday, October 26th at
10:00 a.m. at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.
CPSR is planning a conference next April in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, on the future of the NII, The Directions and
Implications of Advanced Computing. The conference will
investigate at a more specific level how to achieve the principles
in the CPSR report.
Founded in 1981, CPSR is a national, nonprofit, public interest
organization of computer professionals and others concerned with
the impact of computer technology on society. With offices in Palo
Alto, California, and Washington D.C., and 22 chapters across the
country, CPSR works to encourage public discussion of decisions
involving the use of computers in systems critical to society and to
challenge the assumption that technology alone can solve political
and social problems.
CPSR's NII paper is available electronically by sending email to
listserv@cpsr.org. In the message write the command
"GET CPSR NII_POLICY" The paper will automatically be mailed to
you. You can also FTP/WAIS/Gopher cpsr.org/nii/cpsr_nii_policy.txt.
For a hard copy of the paper or for more information about CPSR,
call 415-322-3778 or write to cpsr@cpsr.org. For information about
the Telecommunications Policy Roundtable, contact Jeff Chester at
202-628-2620 or cme@access.digex.net.
- END -
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1993-10-26 (Mon, 25 Oct 93 18:50:42 PDT) - CPSR NII Paper - Dave Banisar <banisar@washofc.cpsr.org>