Undoing Michael Powell's Mischief at the FCC
Undoing Michael Powell's Mischief at the FCC
By Jim Naureckas
Feb 05 2015
As chair of the FCC, Michael Powell tried to do for broadband Internet what his father did for Iraq.
One of the first things George W. Bush did after he was installed in the Oval Office was to put the younger Powell, who was fond of saying things like "the oppressor here is regulation" (Washington Post, 1/23/01), in charge of the agency that regulates media. His blithe attitude toward the consequences of his beloved market was perhaps best expressed by his dismissal of concerns over the digital divide (Chicago Tribune, 2/7/01): "You know, I think there's a Mercedes divide. I'd like to have one; I can't afford one."
An industry analyst (Chicago Tribune, 1/24/01), asked what he anticipated from a Powell FCC, said "more of a free-market approach, perhaps less attention to consumer groups and more of letting companies do more of what they want."
And one of the most critical things that Powell did to let companies do more of what they want was to reclassify broadband cable as an "information service" rather than a "telecommunication service." Basically, telecommunication services transmit information whereas information services process it. They're regulated very differently, because while information processors are allowed to process as they see fit, it would be very difficult to have anything like free speech in an advanced technological society if those who controlled the means of transmitting information were allowed to pick and choose what information could be transmitted.
Giving the cable companies more power and controland hence wealthwas precisely the point of Powell's reclassification; it's neither coincidental nor surprising that he's now the president of the National Cable & Telecommunications Association lobbya position that no doubt allows him to purchase all the Mercedeses that he desires.
More:
http://fair.org/blog/2015/02/05/undoing-michael-powells-mischief-at-the-fcc/