<<MAY
19, 2007>>
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John M. Eger
Van Deerlin Chair of Communication and Public Policy
Executive Director, International Center for Communications
College of Professional Studies and Fine Arts
San Diego State University
5500 Campanile Drive, PFSA 160
San Diego, CA 92182-4522
619-594-6933
619-594-6910
Fax: 619-594-4488
jeger@mail.sdsu.edu
http://www.smartcommunities.org/
http://www.smartcommunities.org/guidebook.html
http://www.iicom.org/intermedia/july2001/eger.htm
-- His paper on Smart Communities in InterMedia.
Dear E-Colleagues:
(1) ATTACHMENT I below is a msg I received from John recently.
Pls also retrieve his previous essays at;
(05/15/07) John Eger's new essay on importance of fine arts in new creative
economy
http://tinyurl.com/227zr4
Dear John:
(2) Many thanks.
Your article reminded me our first encounter at the following conference
organized by the European Parliament;
First
International Conference on Trans-national Data Regulation
Brussels, Belgium
February 9, 1978
It was almost 30 years ago!! -- Time flies like an arrow, indeed!!
(3) My presentation of a paper there appealed the delegates from European
telecommunication industries and governments for globalization of
packet-switched data telecom network (nowadays, Internet). However, I was
shocked to find an article on ÒSTOP THE UTSUMIÓ
campaign in a major British computer industry journal to oppose my appeal,
especially in such a country as Britain where global governance of colonial
commonwealth was once prominent -- another example of how difficult it is to
change "mind" of people for new technology — see;
Roger
Green "Reports on a Transnational Data Regulation Conference" Computing Europe, February
16, 1978
<http://tinyurl.com/yt29wp>
Best, Tak
ATTACHMENT
I
Does The U.S. Have a Global
Communications Policy?
John Eger
Government Technology
May 18, 2007, By
John M. Eger
http://www.govtech.net/gt/articles/120543
John M. Eger is the Van Deerlin Professor of Communications and Public Policy
at San Diego State University. A telecommunications lawyer, he was advisor to
Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald R. Ford.
Next month the United Nation's International Telecommunication Union (ITU) will
consider whether -- and if so, how -- it will assume the lead policy role for
the future growth and development of the Internet. This includes assigning
domain names and addresses and related technical matters discussed at two
earlier UN conferences. While no decision affecting the way the U.S. -- mainly
through its agreement with the southern California corporation called ICANN --
does business, that all is slowly but surely about to change.
As nations around the world awaken to the importance of creating a robust
communications infrastructure, they will be less dependent and less willing to
accept what has been considered a one-way flow of information and
communications goods and services from the United States. This
undoubtedly places a greater burden on U.S. policy makers to pursue the basic
idea of a free, unregulated, unrestricted flow of news, entertainment and
information. Clearly trade in information goods and services and the
future of journalism itself face new challenges.
The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) has been a leading proponent
of free trade in part because many countries are opposed to the importation of
American films. At the same time, of course, there is great concern over
piracy of those same films. Clearly while the government says and wants
to do one thing, the worldwide consuming public wants another.
Television, which produces all forms of audiovisual materials, has run
into the same nagging import restrictions, tariffs and administrative barriers
to the free trade of information goods and services.
Just two years ago UNESCO, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization, adopted a treaty promoting or recognizing cultural
identity. The MPAA among others in the industry opposed the U.S.'s support of
the resolution. The U.S. stood alone, along with Israel, in opposing the
cultural treaty on the grounds that it would be used for trade purposes to
block the importation of American information and entertainment products, which
constitute a major percentage of U.S. exports.
This concern about the "free flow" of information across borders is
certainly not new. Most recently, in the late '70s and early '80s, the
term "The New World Information Order" was part of the debate by the MacBride
Commission -- named after Nobel Prize winner Sean MacBride, chairman of the
panel -- whose concern, then as now, is that the current flow of information
and communications heavily favored the U.S. The developing countries were
expressing their frustration with what they were calling a form of electronic
colonialism with the U.S., indeed the Western world, dominating media flow. In
protest, the U.S. and the United Kingdom, among other countries, withdrew from
UNESCO in the '80s and rejoined just a few years ago.
Despite the concerns expressed by the McBride Commission report and the call
for a New World Information Order, the report's concern with concentration and
commercialization, and what it felt was unequal access to information and
communications, has not changed significantly. The commission's call for a
"strengthening of national media to avoid dependence on external
sources" has had some success, and as noted earlier, many countries are
now focusing on developing a robust communications media unique to their
national economy and culture.
The concern with the U.S.'s dominance of media flow does not extend to the
developing nations alone. Indeed, in the mid-'70s France published a
treatise called "The Computerization of Society" written by the
then-secretary of the Treasury, Simon Nora and co-authored by his assistant
Alain Minc, which called for a way of taxing information flows as well as
information assets.
As early as 1976, the French government realized that there was a basic change
in the structure of its economy and it was going to be increasingly difficult
to tax or control information products and services. It was also concerned with
the collection of information for subsequent data processing that was being
done in the U.S. by multinational corporations located in France. To keep the
data from being transmitted and processed elsewhere -- and in turn to create a
robust data processing industry in France -- the French devised the concept of
"data protection" and argued that nations such as France had a duty
to control "the transborder flow of data" in order to preserve and
enhance the communications and information technology infrastructure so
essential to the economy of the future. For the first time, it was clear that
data flow and media flow were one and the same and that the loss of information
could hurt domestic economic development.
France and much of Europe subsequently developed privacy laws to control the
flow of all data -- they called it "name-linked data" -- under the
guise of protecting privacy. Such laws applied to both persons and
corporations and severely threatened the free flow of trade and commerce.
Multinational banking and financial corporations and indeed all multinationals
doing business in France and elsewhere in Europe were concerned about the new
data protection laws and vigorously expressed those reservations.
Consequently, government authorities backed away from strict enforcement
as it applied to corporations. Yet the die was cast. It was clear
for many reasons that if possible, information processing should be done
locally and that these nations would assume greater responsibility for
developing the industries important to their future in the coming,
yet-to-be-defined knowledge economy.
In 2005 at the International Telecommunications Union's (ITU) World Summit on
the Information Society (WSIS) in Tunis, the European Union (EU) joined most
developing nations in expressing their concern over the widespread development
of the Internet and its control by the U.S. With support from UNESCO and
other UN agencies -- including the Office of the Secretary General -- the ITU
appears to have launched a new initiative for solving many of the problems
UNESCO identified through the WSIS.
All this may seem arcane and distant to the average American. Perhaps too
little has been said or written about these issues. Perhaps most Americans
don't care or simply trust the UN system. Yet unless the U.S. has a plan to
negotiate and establish global polices which satisfy the worldwide hunger for
the bold new future promised by the growing Internet, our own future may be in
peril.
Copyright ©2007 eRepublic, Inc. All rights reserved. | e.Republic, Inc. 100
Blue Ravine Rd., Folsom, CA 95630
--
John M. Eger
Van Deerlin Chair of Communications and Public Policy
San Diego State University
5500 Campanile Drive
San Diego, CA 92812-4522
619 594 6910
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* Takeshi Utsumi, Ph.D., P.E., Chairman, GLOSAS/USA
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* (GLObal Systems Analysis and Simulation Association in the U.S.A.)
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* Laureate of Lord Perry Award for Excellence in Distance Education
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