[Politech] Adam Thierer on the plot to stop Net telephone (VoIP) revolution

From: Declan McCullagh (declan@private)
Date: Wed Feb 18 2004 - 21:14:09 PST

  • Next message: Declan McCullagh: "[Politech] Australia's eavesdrop establishment gains new spy powers [priv]"

    ---
    
    To: declan@private
    Subject: Cato TechKnowledge: The Plan to Stop the VoIP Revolution
    Reply-To: athierer@private
    From: "Adam Thierer" <athierer@private>
    Message-Id: <20040210161250.23DCC34690@private>
    Date: Tue, 10 Feb 2004 08:12:50 -0800 (PST)
    
    
    
    The Plot to Stop the Internet Telephone Revolution
    
    Issue #73
    February 10, 2004
    
    by Adam Thierer and Wayne Crews
    
    Much has been written over the past few months about the revolutionary 
    potential of Internet telephony, or voice over Internet protocol (VoIP) 
    service. VoIP would let consumers make phone calls through an Internet 
    connection, largely bypassing traditional circuit-switched wireline 
    telephone networks. In time, some think it might come to completely replace 
    older phone networks.
    
    In just a few short years, VoIP has gone from wishful thinking to 
    marketplace reality as numerous companies now plan to deploy such services. 
    This has also led many industry watchers to speak of VoIP as a veritable 
    deregulatory deus ex machina that potentially offers a sudden and 
    unexpected way to escape from the past century's regulatory morass.
    
    "Not so fast!" say opponents. That same potential for revolutionary change 
    that excites some, frightens many others. This is an old story, of course. 
    New, "disruptive technologies" are often viewed with suspicion, or even 
    outright hostility, by those who fear they have something to lose by a 
    change in the status quo. But technological revolutions are the healthiest 
    part of a capitalist economy. In a world where "only the paranoid survive," 
    it's good that organizations are forced to stay on their toes, constantly 
    concerned about the impact of new technologies on the old ways of doing 
    business. That's what drives the Schumpeterian "creative destruction" that 
    makes our economy so innovative and prosperous.
    
    Often, however, when the fears over technological change reach a fever 
    pitch, certain interests substitute a political response for a market 
    response. For many, adjusting or abandoning an old business model is just 
    not an option they are willing to consider. Instead, they lobby legislators 
    or regulators for protection from the new competitors or technologies. 
    Steamboat operators feared the rise of railroads; butter makers petitioned 
    against margarine as a substitute; television broadcasters sought to delay 
    competition from cable providers; and some small retailers still fight to 
    keep large chain stores like Wal-Mart out of local communities.
    
    It should come as no surprise, therefore, that this process is playing 
    itself out today in the debate over Internet phone calls. The issue at hand 
    involves the regulatory classification or treatment of Internet telephone 
    service. VoIP is something new; it does not fit neatly into the Byzantine 
    regulatory taxonomy the FCC has established for older communications 
    services. Its opponents want to open the door for regulation of this new 
    service by needlessly subjecting it to the full force of traditional 
    telecom regulations.
    
    In what would be viewed by most people as a silly squabble over semantics, 
    volumes of paper are currently being filed at the FCC over the question of 
    whether VoIP should be classified as a "telecommunications service" or 
    something else, such as an "information service." Incredibly, in an era in 
    which we should be mapping out the abolition of the FCC altogether, such 
    definitions make a world of difference to the development of a new service. 
    Because of the haphazard manner in which communications law has developed 
    over the past 70 years, there exist distinct regulatory paradigms for 
    telecom, cable, broadcasting, and wireless service. Internet-based 
    applications do not fit into any of these categories, especially since 
    providers in each of those old sectors can provide online services using 
    different technological platforms or delivery mechanisms. But if VoIP comes 
    to be regulated under one of these archaic classification schemes, 
    especially the "telecom services" paradigm, it could be strangled while 
    still in the cradle by a bewildering batch of federal and state regulations.
    
    Consequently, in the filings and public statements made by the various 
    interest groups that have lined up to oppose a regulation-free VoIP 
    environment, several recurring themes have been cited to justify its 
    classification as a "telecom service": The potential loss of state and 
    local telecom taxes; the need to collect universal service fees and 
    subsidies; access for the disabled; public safety requirements such as 
    "E911;" and the need for various other "consumer protections." For example, 
    citing such concerns, a number of state regulators have raised a big stink 
    about VoIP, but really they're just worried about losing some of their 
    regulatory turf and power.
    
    Of much greater concern is the recent intervention of the law enforcement 
    community, led by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of 
    Justice, and the Drug Enforcement Administration, which have jointly asked 
    the FCC to assure that wiretap and monitoring capabilities easily apply to 
    the new technology. Apparently the law enforcement agencies oppose 
    telecommunications deregulation because it means they won't be able to spy 
    on us quite as easily. As Jim Harper, founder of Privacilla.org, put it, 
    "The law enforcement cart is coming before the civil society horse. The 
    communications infrastructure is being created with eavesdropping in mind 
    before there is any evidence of [the need for] it, plus with VoIP it won't 
    work anyway as the criminals will use offshore VoIP or open source VoIP, 
    rather than . . . any of the major carriers." A wiretap-ready Internet that 
    enables the sort of online surveillance that the FBI, DOJ, and DEA desire 
    will be a costly proposition, requiring expensive equipment upgrades and 
    ongoing regulation of this dynamic sector. Moreover, the scheme would 
    likely entail heavy FCC involvement in the regulation of Internet telephony 
    in the future.
    
    In one sense, what all these diverse parties, from the old hidebound state 
    regulators to the FBI, are really saying is that unless VoIP providers can 
    learn to "play the game" exactly the same way old telecom companies did, 
    they should not, effectively, be allowed to provide service at all. Stated 
    differently, this new technology must be pigeonholed into old regulatory 
    classification schemes and regulatory paradigms of the past; it must not be 
    allowed to breathe the free air of an unregulated communications marketplace.
    
    After all, if VoIP was allowed to develop in a relatively free, unregulated 
    environment, just think of the horrors that might befall our society! We 
    might make cheap phone calls or something.
    
    Adam Thierer (athierer@private) is director of telecommunications studies 
    and Wayne Crews (wcrews@private) is the director of technology studies at 
    the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C. at the Cato Institute in Washington, 
    D.C. (www.cato.org/tech). They are the authors of What's Yours Is Mine: 
    Open Access and the Rise of Infrastructure Socialism. To subscribe, or see 
    a list of all previous TechKnowledge articles, visit 
    http://www.cato.org/tech/tk-index.html.
    [][]Cato Institute
    
    
    To unsubscribe, click here
    _______________________________________________
    Politech mailing list
    Archived at http://www.politechbot.com/
    Moderated by Declan McCullagh (http://www.mccullagh.org/)
    



    This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Wed Feb 18 2004 - 22:56:53 PST