Obama faces digital divide growing wider on heels of FCC court
ruling
The great digital divide that President Obama repeatedly has
pledged to fix could grow even wider, after a recent federal court ruling put
the president's promise of leveling the tech playing field in jeopardy.
The concern comes
ahead of his annual State of the Union address on Tuesday. Last year, the
president pitched a plan aimed at making sure "99 percent of students
across the country" would receive access to high-speed broadband and
wireless Internet at their schools within the next five years. During his 2011
State of the Union address, he stressed the need to upgrade all Americans.
"This isn't
just about faster Internet or fewer dropped calls," Obama said at the
time. "It's about connecting every part of America to the digital
age."
But on Jan. 14, a
federal appeals court struck down the Federal Communications Commission's Open
Internet Order pertaining to so-called "net neutrality." The decision
paves the way for Internet service providers to potentially block any website
or app of their choosing.
Sen. Al Franken,
D-Minn., called the net neutrality ruling "a major setback" that
"threatens access to the Internet as we know it."
The court ruled that
because of a quirk in how the government regulates Internet service providers,
the FCC didn't have the legal basis for its own policy.
The decision
cripples the regulatory agency's ability to enforce net neutrality, which is
based on the founding principle that the Internet enables and protects free
speech. That means ISPs could technically censor the sites its customers
visit.
The ruling also
could allow Internet companies to create a tiered pricing system for certain
types of online traffic, akin to how people purchase premium channels like HBO
or Showtime at an extra cost by their cable providers.
At best, the
president's goal of equal access for students could be sidelined for a few
years during an appeals process. At worst, students in urban and rural areas
would be demoted to second-class citizens of the digital age.
"It's going to
be potentially a race to the bottom, where those who can afford to pay to get
priority of access get more eyeballs -- more readers and viewers -- and public
institutions that don't have those kind of financial resources are going to be
left behind," John Windhausen, president of Telepoly Consulting, told The Chronicle of Higher Education.
Barbara Stripling,
president of the American Library Association, argues that by allowing ISPs to
preferentially charge for a tiered access, not only will public libraries
suffer, but so will the communities that rely on them. She believe the hardest
hit would be school children in grades K-12.
"Schools,
public and college universities rely upon public availability of government
services, licensed databases, job-training videos, medical and scientific
research, and many other essential services," she wrote in a Jan.16
opinion piece on Wired.com
Stripling, who served as the director of library programs for
1,700 New York City schools, warns that without net neutrality, Americans
"are in danger of prioritizing Mickey Mouse and Jennifer Lawrence over
William Shakespeare and Teddy Roosevelt."
According to a 2013
report in The Washington Post, fewer than 20 percent of the nation's educators
believe that the Internet connections at their schools meet their teaching
needs. Many worry that the FCC ruling will only deepen the divide between the
haves and the have nots. At stake is the economic prosperity for students and
their communities.
In a letter dated
Jan. 16 to FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler, Franken pressed the regulatory agency to
exercise the power it has to ensure equal access to information is had by
all.
"Simply put,
the Internet -- once an open platform for innovation, entrepreneurship and free
speech -- could become a closed forum, accessible only to the highest
bidder," Franken said.
Last month, Wheeler
attended an open meeting in Oakland, Calif., where he heard concerns from
community leaders and citizens.
Richard Abisla, the
technology manager at the Mission Economic Development Agency in San Francisco,
told Wheeler about the importance of broadband access in low-income areas and
how it would not be financially feasible to ask struggling families to pay
extra for access.
For its part, Verizon
-- the company that sued the FCC over net neutrality -- says the company will
remain "committed to the open Internet" and that the ruling would not
"change consumers' ability to access and use the Internet as they do
now."
Instead, Verizon
says the court's decision will "allow more room for innovation, and
consumers will have more choices to determine for themselves how they access
and experience the Internet." Source: Barnini Chakraborty -Fox
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