Received: by eff.org id AA05634 (5.65c/IDA-1.4.4 for pub-infra-exploder@eff.org); Tue, 10 Dec 1991 18:35:50 -0500 Reply-To: pub-infra Precedence: bulk To: pub-infra Date: Tue, 10 Dec 1991 18:35:47 -0500 Message-Id: <199112102335.AA05629@eff.org> Subject: Initial Positive Response to the Open Platform Proposal From: mkapor (Mitch Kapor) Sender: ckd The initial response to the Open Platform concept has been extremely positive in many quarters. 1. Congress In a letter to Mitchell Kapor from the Chairman of the Subcommittee with primarily jurisdiction over telecommunications policy dated November 5, 1991, Representative Edward J. Markey complemented Mitchell Kapor on his "insights on the development of a national public information infrastructure" which "were appreciated greatly by myself and the Members of the Subcommittee." Chairman Markey, writing to Mitch Kapor as a representative of the computer industry, called for other leaders in the industry to participate more actively in the policy process. The letter states: "In crafting the right policies [for the telephone network], the assistance of you and your colleagues in the computer industry is critical if we are to bring the benefits of advanced information technology to the American public. As I said at the hearing, we need to pursue policies that encourage the Bell companies to work with other sectors of the communications industry to create a consumer-oriented, public information network. Please let me or my staff know what policies you and others in the computer industry believe would best serve the public interest in creating a reasonably priced, widely available network in which competition is open and innovation rewarded. I also want to learn what lessons from the computer industry over the past ten to fifteen years should apply to the current debate on structuring the information and communications networks of the future....I ask your help in gaining input from the computer industry so that the Subcommittee can shape policies that will bring this spirit of innovation and entrepreneurship to the information services industry. Key members on the Senate Commerce Committee have also expressed serious interest in the proposal and for it to be further developed in cooperation with others in the computer industry. We have agreed to reach out to leaders in the computer industry such as yourself to obtain your input and seek your participation in this policy process. 2. Communications Industry Since unveiling the proposal, Mitchell Kapor and Jerry Berman, EFF's Washington Office Director, have met with top officials of many of the communications and electronic publishing firms involved in the current debate, including the American Newspaper Publishers Association, the National Cable Television Association, Dun and Bradstreet, AT&T, and the Electronic Publishers Association. All have expressed enthusiasm about the Open Platform concept and have urged that we develop the proposal in more detail. They want to know if it is both economically and technically feasible to deploy a feature rich ISDN or whether innovation must await the full and costly deployment of residential fiber optics. 3. Consumer Groups On November 25, 1991 the Communications Policy Forum, a consumer forum cosponsored by the Consumer Federation of American, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and the American Civil Liberties Union, met to discuss the future of telecommunications policy in the wake of the court's decision to permit the RBOCS to engage in information services. At this meeting, EFF presented the Open Platform Proposal as a necessary part of any legislation that seeks both to establish fair competition as well as innovative health, education, and other information services. Consumer groups expressed great interest in the idea and called on EFF to develop its concept further and to use the Communications Policy Forum as a mechanism for developing a more detailed open platform design for further consumer review in early 1992.