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2004
Talking
to South Africa's Regulators Marlon
Schafer
[December 13, 2004] One WISP CEO and consultant
writes about a unique oppotunity to shape wireless Internet industry regulation
on another continent.
Tauzin
Concedes Alex Goldman
[December 8, 2004] Billy Tauzin III, former lobbyist
for BellSouth and son of the co-author of the notorious Tauzin-Dingell
bill, has conceded in a runoff election for a house seat in Louisiana,
but ISPs must remain vigilant.
FISPA
Warns ISPs About BOC Filings ISP-Planet
Staff
[November 23, 2004] FISPA has joined the chorus
of organizations warning ISPs that petitions submitted by the Bells could
permanently drive ISPs out of broadband.
Your
Free Washington Bureau For ISP Advocacy Alex
Goldman
[November 16, 2004] Can two people make a difference?
They're determined to try. They don't want your money—they want you to
write to the FCC.
VoIP
Battleground in RBOC Monopoly War Alex
Goldman
[September 17, 2004] The Bells have mostly succeeded
in closing their networks to ISPs. The next step in the monopoly war is
being fought right now, as the Bells seek the right to close their networks
to all non-Bell applications.
DSL
Prime Editorial: Jeff Pulver's FCC Dave
Burstein
[August 26, 2004] Imagine what regulation would
be like if the regulators had actual industry experience—or if they were
veteran visionaries who understood not just the present but the potential
of the future as well.
DSL
Prime: If You Care, Show It Dave
Burstein
[August 20, 2004] Small businesses across the
nation must act now to stand up for their rights. Activism is easy! You
can do it all online. Call this 21st century citizenship clicktivism.
The
Bottom Line is Competition Best
of ISP-Lists
[July 26, 2004] As lawmakers prepare to rewrite
the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (see the definition of the word CLEC)
basic arguments about the history and future of telecommunications have
immediate impact.
End
E-Rate Now Dave Hughes
[July 23, 2004] A wireless industry pioneer says
that the E-Rate should be seen as a system fraught with fraud and a secret
subsidy for phone companies. The FCC should be investigating the E-Rate,
not trying to cover up its flaws.
DSL
Prime: The FCC Commissioners Dave
Burstein
[July 19, 2004] Two FCC commissioners are fighting
for their jobs. DSL Prime expects one will stay and two will go.
Simplifying
Telecom Law Alex Goldman
[July 9, 2004] One lawyer lays out simple guiding
principles that could be used to untangle the thicket of rules and regulations
that govern telecommunications.
It's
Time to Log on to the FCC
Dave Hughes
[July 2, 2004] A wireless industry veteran and
pioneer calls on fellow WISPs to file comments with the FCC. "You don't
have to hire a lawyer, or go to Washington. Just e-file!" If you're in
the office this weekend, now's the perfect time.
Editorial:
Defining a National Alliance Alex
Goldman
[June 4, 2004] The nascent National Internet Alliance
is advocacy the way the small ISPs should have always done it. But the
alliance must be lead by its feet, or it will never get off the ground.
DSL
Prime: All Eyes on SBC Dave
Burstein
[May 19, 2004] As SBC prepares to change CEOs
and a strike becomes imminent, DSL Prime predicts the business strategy
of the likely successor. But who will call SBC on all its lies?
Wireless
Broadband on the TV Airwaves
Eric Griffith
[May 18, 2004] A new FCC proposal says frequencies
generally reserved for television broadcasts may soon be used for wireless
data services, and the Commission is holding a hearing tomorrow.
D.C.
Deadlock Continues As Crucial Telecom Deadline Expires
Alex Goldman
[May 17, 2004] A D.C. Circuit Court ruling made
in March is causing a crisis now. As the FCC, the court, the White House,
and major Internet companies angrily trade blame, we approach a period
of literal telecom lawlessness.
EarthLink
Battles Bells, MSOs in Senate Roy
Mark
[May 14, 2004] Nation's second largest ISP tells
Congress it should focus on enforcing current law, while incumbent providers
Verizon and Comcast lobby for changes in their favor.
Book
Review: Database Nation Alex
Goldman
[May 6, 2004] How much of you do you own? Individuals
do not control the use of their name, address, phone number, or even DNA.
As concerns about privacy spread, O'Reilly's primer on the subject, written
by Simson Garfinkel, repays rereading.
CompTel/Ascent
Challenges SBC Secrecy H.
Russell Frisby
[May 5, 2004] In an open letter to the FCC, a
pro-CLEC and pro-competition lobbyist asks what SBC is trying to hide.
How
to Talk to the FCC
Marlon Schafer
[April 27, 2004] So, you've been in business
long enough to know what rules you like and what rules you don't. It's
time to talk to the government.
How
I Talked to the FCC
Marlon Schafer
[April 27, 2004] Here's how I made the connections
that led to my first FCC meeting.
Big
Plans for Small ISPs in North Carolina Alex
Goldman
[April 22, 2004] A group of ISPs has found a way
around the rules that the BOCs wrote specifically to keep them out of
the broadband game.
Opinion:
Godzilla vs. Bambi on the ISP Planet Larry
Summers
[March 26, 2004] One ISP operator was angry enough
to sit down and write about what's really going on in the United States.
USTA
v. FCC: A Decision Ripe for the Supremes
Fred R. Goldstein and Jonathan S. Marashlian
[March 25, 2004] Two legal experts eviscerate
the recent DC Circuit Court ruling in favor of the RBOC trade lobby in
its lawsuit against the FCC's anti-monopoly policies.
A
Carriers' Anti-Spam Coalition Alex
Goldman
[March 11, 2004] Openwave, MTA provider to the
carriers, is building an anti-spam working group for ISPs, starting with
large carriers.
Nomadix's
Hotspot Patent, Revisited
Alex Goldman
[March 9, 2004] It can be difficult to understand
the meaning and import of any individual patent, as this discussion of
Nomadix's patent shows.
Competitors
React to Circuit Court Decision Alex
Goldman
[March 4, 2004] A recent decision by the D.C.
Circuit Court showed that the only certainty in telecommunications regulation
is a continuing litigation bonanza.
ISPs
Can Breathe Easy in 2004 Max
Smetannikov
[Febraury 2, 2004] The year of the monkey will
not see an introduction of Internet access tax, VoIP tax, UNE-P overhaul,
or any other legislation that would impact ISPs or CLECs, say industry
insiders—but brace for more regulatory changes and taxes in 2005.
A
Broad Patent for Hotspots
Alex Goldman
[January 27, 2004] Last week, Nomadix announced
that it has been awarded a patent covering key aspects of revenue generation
at hotspots. We asked Nomadix's co-founder and CTO how the company plans
to use its new power.
DSL
Prime Editorial: Billions at Stake Dave
Burstein
[January 5, 2004] Of course no game played in
Washington, D.C. is penny ante, but the dollars at stake in VoIP regulation
mean that in 2004, political decisions will affect the fortunes of several
of the nation's largest companies.
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