Stories about cool events I've attended, musings about social media and other technology, and commentary about people, issues, ideas, whatever. I've had a web site since 1994, at my own domain since 1997, and switched it to blog format in 2005. Now, in 2008, I've added labels, shuffled things around a bit and fixed some style and UI quirks - hence 2.1. Watch for more widgets and microformats....

I recently received a
Facebook Group invitation to join an important campaign -
Internet for Everyone. It is essential that we provide high-speed Internet access to everyone in the U.S. — to enhance fairness and close the digital divide, to enhance learning and freedom to communicate, and to enable more innovation and more widespread participation in the global information economy.
Tim Karr's article on Huffington Post, "
America's Next Moon Shot: Internet for Everyone," introduced the initiative, and the
Internet for Everyone Brochure lays out the specific goals of the campaign and provides copious evidence of the shortcomings that exist in U.S. broadband implementation today.
The announcement at last month's
Personal Democracy Forum featured (among others):
I've been following efforts like this for some time, in venues such as the Freedom to Connect conference. Other involved organizations have programs and information worth checking out. The New America Foundation's
Wireless Future Program is working hard to free up underutilized wireless spectrum to enhance broadband opportunities. EDUCAUSE has proposed a
Blueprint for Big Broadband. The technology CEOs of TechNet also call for
rapidly accelerated broadband deployment.
If you believe in the importance of Internet freedom, equity, and innovation, I encourage you to join the Facebook group or
sign up here.
Labels: broadband policy, digital divide, freepress, internet
Link:
http://www.internetforeveryone.org