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div class="rxbodyfield"p page="1" class="ArticleBody"The U.S. government may be poised to reverse
course on its market-only approach to rolling out broadband and a smart electricity grid to all
corners of the country, advocates said Thursday./pp align="right"a
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width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"With a
Democratic Congress and a Democratic and tech-savvy president in Barack Obama, the upcoming months
will be the time to push for government involvement in building network infrastructure, said Ben
Scott, policy director of Free Press, a communications policy advocacy group./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"b[ Google#39;s CEO says#160;a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/11/18/Googles_Schmidt_Innovation_must_come_first_1.html?source=rssamp;url=http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/11/18/Googles_Schmidt_Innovation_must_come_first_1.html?source=fssr"private
efforts not enough; government must take the lead/a. And Ted Samson#39;s#160;a
href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/sustainableit/?source=fssr"Sustainable IT blog/a#160;reports
how#160;a
href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/sustainableit/archives/2008/11/sun_joins_in_ca.html?source=fssr"coalitions
are calling on Congress for a clean energy economy/a. Your source for the latest in government IT
news and issues: Subscribe to InfoWorld#39;s a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/newsletter/subscribe.html?source=fssr"Government IT newsletter/a.
]/b/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"In recent years, some conservatives and broadband providers have
called on the government to stay out of broadband rollout, saying such quot;industrial-policyquot;
intervention could lead to a heavily regulated industry, with little competition and high prices.
quot;I#39;m about to use some words that have been profane in this town for the last eight
years,quot; Scott said at a Google-sponsored forum on broadband and electricity policy. quot;We
need an industrial policy.quot;/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The U.S. broadband market isn#39;t
competitive now, with most people having only one or two providers, Scott said. The U.S. pays more
per megabit of service than most other industrialized nations, and it#39;s 15th among
industrialized nations in broadband adoption, speakers said./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"If
policy makers agree that universal broadband and a higher broadband adoption rate are crucial for
the U.S. economy, quot;then we#39;re going to have to take some really aggressive measures to get
there,quot; Scott said./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Thursday#39;s event was the first of three
Google-sponsored discussions in Washington, D.C., concerning policy recommendations the company has
for the next Congress and the Obama administration. In a speech Tuesday, Google Chairman and CEO
Eric Schmidt a target="_blank"
href="http://googlepublicpolicy.blogspot.com/2008/11/eric-schmidt-on-whats-ahead-in-2009.html"laid
out/a many of Google#39;s policy goals, including a national broadband policy, energy independence,
and a more open and accessible government./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"In addition to addressing
broadband, Thursday#39;s panel talked about a need for a quot;smartquot; electricity grid, which
would allow customers to monitor their electricity use in real time and allow them to work with
electricity utilities to reduce use during peak demand. Both universal broadband and a smart
electricity grid will take major investments and require leadership and strong public support, said
Michael Oldak, senior director of state competitive and regulatory policies for the Edison Electric
Institute, a trade group representing electric companies./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Oldak
compared the challenges facing the outdated electrical grid to the challenge of sending astronauts
to the moon in the 1960s. quot;We need that same kind of drive to get more kids into science and
engineering,quot; he said./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Asked if the public would support higher
prices for an improved electrical grid, Oldak said that#39;s the wrong question to ask. In pilot
programs using quot;smartquot; thermostats, customers have saved 10 percent to 15 percent on their
electric bills by allowing electric companies to control electricity use during peak hours. For
instance, an electric company could adjust the temperatures of air conditioners or heaters via the
thermostats to reduce electricity consumption. Without smart grids, the U.S. will continue to waste
energy and the energy industry will have to build dozens of new power plants to keep up with
demand, he said./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"quot;You can#39;t look at this as adding $5 to
people#39;s bills,quot; he said. quot;You#39;ve got to look at what the situation will look like
with or without smart grids.quot;/pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Since Schmidt#39;s speech, there
have been some detractors to Google#39;s policy vision. While privacy groups have raised concerns
about the practices of Google and other online companies, Google#39;s policy goals don#39;t mention
privacy, said Jeffrey Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy and a
frequent Google critic./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"quot;Failing to acknowledge privacy online
is a glaring omission and undermines the company#39;s credibility,quot; Chester said. quot;Google
should acknowledge that protecting online privacy must be a key task for the new administration and
Congress. Google is so generous making suggestions, but fails to reflect how its own data
collection house should be put in order.quot;/pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Blogger Matt Sherman,
of a target="_blank"
href="http://www.onlyrepublican.com/orinsf/2008/11/is-broadband-a-public-utility.html"The Only
Republican in San Francisco/a , questioned remarks by Obama transition official Susan Crawford,
suggesting broadband should be treated like a public utility, one way the government could get
involved in broadband rollout./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"quot;Is there anyone in the
technology world who sees public utilities as a model for innovation?quot; Sherman wrote. quot;A
1.5 megabit connection (T1) was an unimaginable luxury when I started in tech in the mid-90#39;s.
It was for well-funded companies only. Today, it is a low-end consumer connection and costs around
80% less. Has your sewage service followed a similar trajectory?quot;/pp page="2"
class="ArticleBody"But a national broadband policy would not have to mean excessive government
subsidies, said Gigi Sohn, president of digital rights group Public Knowledge. It could mean tax
breaks for companies that roll out broadband in underserved areas and a thorough review of wireless
spectrum use, she said at Thursday#39;s forum./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"People who aren#39;t
connected to broadband will have more and more social and economic disadvantages, added Scott.
quot;What are the consequences of not being connected to the 21st-century network?quot; he said./pp
page="2" class="ArticleBody"#160;/p/divbr style=clear: both;/ a
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