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-- By DanielHarris - 14 Feb 2008
Just as media matters for the politicians, it matters for voters. In the 21st century, will you be able to speak effectively without self-publishing? The Internet is the new public square, or at least the new private-public shopping center (in which, under California law, speech is protected). The public square always had geographical restrictions, but now we have technology to overcome them. People in poorer or rural areas are being left out of the new public square and part of our culture.
Television and radio provide content for consumption. The government has subsidized their expansion partly out of self-interest--radio, for instance, was a critical part of the civil defense planning of the mid-20th century. Government services could be provided more efficiently over the Internet, too. However, the Internet, sold as just another content delivery network, is a two-way communications network with low barriers to entry. One does not need electronics knowledge, license, and spectrum to reach a wide audience over the Internet.
If everyone has a server in the home (IPv6 can provide the addresses we need for this to happen), or even if everyone has access to free blog providers, we can give everyone a soapbox without buying 300 million printing presses. Universal reachability and addressability over an always-on connection enables myriad futuristic fantasies, economic development, and technological innovations--a policy argument--but I argue from principle that equal (or at least high baseline) access to the predominant form of speech is critical to the success of society.
Widespread Internet access enables new categories of speech. Political campaigns have so far failed to capture the advantages Kennedy took from television because they rely on the Internet to distribute existing media: text, photographs, and video. They (and the people--speech is not just for candidates) can take advantage of new categories of collaborative speech. This Wiki is one. "Mashups" of different web services combine data from different sources into new visualizations which can convey their own messages. Perhaps there is a new medium waiting to be discovered, richer than video, which we have not yet imagined.
Networks are most useful when anyone you want to reach is on the network. This externality is disregarded by the current broadband oligopoly, which does not see the benefits of wiring parts of rural New England (or, for some time, my home in urban West Virginia). The Internet is becoming as important, if not more, than phone service, which is subsidized in rural areas by the Universal Service charge. The government does not even have to provide this access itself; I believe that Universal Service-style subsidies to the current Internet providers, as much as I dislike their business practices, would do more good than harm.
I have privacy concerns about government provision of this service, but scale and safeguards work as well here as anywhere. In a wired nation (although a wireless mesh may be the "wires"), technology will advance or gain adoption (we already have strong encryption technology) to allow anonymity and privacy. We have more to fear from existing telecommunications providers’ rent seeking than from public utility Internet access.
I propose that the expansion of the Internet is a matter of national security. Countless professors earned their graduate educations using money appropriated in the name of national security, and the Internet is itself a child of ARPA. The versatility of the Internet makes it what weapons inspectors would call a mixed-use technology: a robust network which benefits the military still provides innumerable advantages for civilian uses. Consider the Interstate highway system or the Global Positioning System as examples--my fellow former gamers should also consider the joys of the railroad in Sid Meier's Civilization games. I would approach it from the other side: as the military seems to be happy with current capacity, let the positive speech right provide the initiative for expansion.