"Public policy has a role to play in fostering an entrepreneurial,
innovative, reinvented journalistic sphere that, in the language of the
recent Knight Commission Report, sustains democracy in a digital age.
Net neutrality is a good place start, and so is open data, but
government might have additional roles to play in stabilizing
precarious local news ecosystems -- as long as such support does not
unfairly benefit monopolistic incumbents. Is it possible for large,
unwieldy government bureaucracies like the Federal Trade Commission to
strike this balance? Questions like this are really questions about
whether it is possible to envision a meaningful public life that lies
beyond both the market and our supposedly "unfettered" digital space
(which is actually far from unfettered). In asking these questions,
we're really inquiring about the viability of democracy itself."<br><br><a href="http://benton.org/node/36858?utm_campaign=Benton%27s+Headlines&utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_content=2010/06/15/nid-36885&">http://benton.org/node/36858?utm_campaign=Benton%27s+Headlines&utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_content=2010/06/15/nid-36885&</a><br clear="all">
<br>-- <br>O meu número em Luanda: (+244) 936144613<br>My number in Luanda: (+244) 936144613<br>_______________________________________________<br> <br>Rui Correia<br>Advocacy, Human Rights, Media and Language Consultant<br>
Angola Liaison Consultant<br>2 Cutten St<br>Horison <br>Roodepoort-Johannesburg, <br>South Africa<br>Tel/ Fax (+27-11) 766-4336<br>Mobile (+27) (0) 84-498-6838<br>_______________<br>áâãçéêíóôõúç<br>
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