[governance] The Gilder Friday Letter #Net Neutrality

Salanieta Tamanikaiwaimaro salanieta.tamanikaiwaimaro at gmail.com
Sat Sep 14 07:59:00 EDT 2013



On Sep 14, 2013, at 11:45 PM, Kossi Amessinou <amessinoukossi at yahoo.fr> wrote:

> Dear salanieta,
> Thank you for your message. I am from Benin.

Hi Kossi - let me know if you know Yaovi Atohoun (Benin) who is very involved in ICT in your country. Happy to introduce you offline.
> 
> 2013/9/14, Salanieta Tamanikaiwaimaro <salanieta.tamanikaiwaimaro at gmail.com>:
>> 
>> 
>> On Sep 14, 2013, at 8:51 PM, Kossi Amessinou <amessinoukossi at yahoo.fr>
>> wrote:
>> 
>>> Dear all,
>>> Internet is important for all people. If all of us are working
>>> together, why the african can not have the quality of internet to use?
>>> We pay so much money to get bad quality service. why anything can not
>>> be doing for us? Let me know, please!!
>>> 
>> Hi Kossi,
>> 
>> There can be different reasons for this. If the wholesale is expensive,
>> chances are when it is passed down through the Telcos and ISPs, it can be
>> expensive as well. Things like liberalization of the telecommunications
>> industry in countries coupled with healthy competition and a regulatory
>> environment can help bring prices down for ordinary consumers. Sometimes,
>> the lack of an Internet Exchange Point can also clog the pipes and make
>> traffic inefficient and costly as well.
>> 
>> A good way to have your say is to get in touch with your country's regulator
>> of the telecommunications industry and engage in dialogue. No one country is
>> the same as the next and each context is different.
>> 
>> By the way, Kossi, could you please remind me of which country you are from
>> again? Hope you are well and I hope access improves in your country.
>> 
>> Kind Regards,
>> Sala
>>> 2013/9/13, Salanieta Tamanikaiwaimaro
>>> <salanieta.tamanikaiwaimaro at gmail.com>:
>>>> Dear All,
>>>> 
>>>> I just found out that on the 9th September, 2013, the DC Federal Appeals
>>>> Court heard Verizon's challenge to FCC's open internet order, see below.
>>>> 
>>>> Wish I was in DC to have sat in to hear the saline arguments.
>>>> 
>>>> See below for more information.
>>>> 
>>>> Kind Regards,
>>>> Sala
>>>> 
>>>> Sent from my iPad
>>>> 
>>>> Begin forwarded message:
>>>> 
>>>>> From: Manoj Ranchord <mranchord at yahoo.co.nz>
>>>>> Date: September 14, 2013, 6:59:19 AM GMT+12:00
>>>>> To: "Salanieta T. Tamanikaiwaimaro"
>>>>> <salanieta.tamanikaiwaimaro at gmail.com>
>>>>> Subject: Fw: The Gilder Friday Letter
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> FYI - some commentary on net neutrality.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Ps. This is a good source for alternative view from predominant
>>>>> opinion.
>>>>> 
>>>>> From: Forbes Newsletters <newsletters at forbes.com>;
>>>>> To: <mranchord at yahoo.co.nz>;
>>>>> Subject: The Gilder Friday Letter v.567.0
>>>>> Sent: Fri, Sep 13, 2013 1:00:34 PM
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> 
>>>>> — THE FRIDAY LETTER —
>>>>> (emailed weekly, from Gilder Publishing, LLC
>>>>> for Forbes friends and subscribers)
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> 
>>>>> | http://www.gilder.com/ | Issue 568.0/September 13, 2013
>>>>> 
>>>>> LIKE US ON FACEBOOK
>>>>> http://www.facebook.com/#!/GilderFridayLetter
>>>>> 
>>>>> HEADLINES:
>>>>> 
>>>>> -  The Week / A Decade Later, Net Neutrality Goes to Court
>>>>> -  Friday Feature / A Decade Later, Net Neutrality Goes to Court
>>>>> -  Blogger Bonus / The Growth Experiment Revisited
>>>>> -  Readings /
>>>>> 
>>>>> Knowledge and Power: The Information Theory of
>>>>> Capitalism and How it is Revolutionizing our World
>>>>> 
>>>>> Ronald Reagan's most–quoted living author—George Gilder—is back with an
>>>>> all–new paradigm–shifting theory of capitalism that will upturn
>>>>> conventional wisdom, just when our economy desperately needs a new
>>>>> direction.
>>>>> 
>>>>> ORDER  YOUR COPY  TODAY
>>>>> http://www.amazon.com/Knowledge-Power-Information-Capitalism-Revolutionizing/dp/1621570274/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=%20gilderpublish-20
>>>>> 
>>>>> The Week / A Decade Later, Net Neutrality Goes to Court
>>>>> 
>>>>> BRET SWANSON, Maximum Entropy (09/09/13): Today the D.C. Federal
>>>>> Appeals
>>>>> Court hears Verizon's challenge to the Federal Communications
>>>>> Commission's
>>>>> "Open Internet Order" — better known as "net neutrality."
>>>>> 
>>>>> Hard to believe, but we've been arguing over net neutrality for a
>>>>> decade.
>>>>> I just pulled up some testimony George Gilder and I prepared for a
>>>>> Senate
>>>>> Commerce Committee hearing in April 2004. In it, we asserted that a
>>>>> newish
>>>>> "horizontal layers" regulatory proposal, then circulating among
>>>>> comm–law
>>>>> policy wonks, would become the next big tech policy battlefield.
>>>>> Horizontal layers became net neutrality, the Bush FCC adopted the
>>>>> non-binding Four Principles of an open Internet in 2005, the Obama FCC
>>>>> pushed through actual regulations in 2010, and now today's court
>>>>> challenge, which argues that the FCC has no authority to regulate the
>>>>> Internet and that, in fact, Congress told the FCC not to regulate the
>>>>> Internet.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Over the years we've followed the debate, and often weighed in. Here's
>>>>> a
>>>>> sampling of our articles, reports, reply comments, and even some
>>>>> doggerel:
>>>>> 
>>>>> "CBS–Time Warner Cable Spat Shows (Once Again) Why 'Net Neutrality'
>>>>> Won't
>>>>> Work" – by Bret Swanson – August 9, 2013
>>>>> 
>>>>> "Verizon, ESPN, and the Future of Broadband" – by Bret Swanson –
>>>>> Forbes.com – June 4, 2013
>>>>> 
>>>>> "The Internet Survives, and Thrives, For Now" – by Bret Swanson –
>>>>> RealClearMarkets – December 6, 2010
>>>>> 
>>>>> "Reply Comments to the FCC's Open Internet Further Inquiry" – by Bret
>>>>> Swanson – November 4, 2010
>>>>> 
>>>>> "Net Neutrality, Investment, and Jobs: Assessing the Potential Impact
>>>>> on
>>>>> the Broadband Ecosystem" – by Charles M. Davidson and Bret T. Swanson,
>>>>> Advanced Communications Law and Policy Institute, New York Law School,
>>>>> June 16, 2010
>>>>> 
>>>>> "Reply Comments in the FCC Matter of 'Preserving the Open Internet'" –
>>>>> by
>>>>> Bret Swanson – April 26, 2010
>>>>> 
>>>>> "What Would Net Neutrality Mean for U.S. Jobs?" – by Bret Swanson –
>>>>> February 5, 2010
>>>>> 
>>>>> "Net Neutrality's Impact on Internet Innovation" – prepared for the New
>>>>> York City Council – by Bret Swanson – November 20, 2009
>>>>> 
>>>>> "Google and the Problem With 'Net Neutrality'" – by Bret Swanson, The
>>>>> Wall
>>>>> Street Journal, October 5, 2009
>>>>> 
>>>>> "Leviathan Spam" – by Bret Swanson – A whimsical take on "Net
>>>>> Neutrality"
>>>>> – September 23, 2009
>>>>> 
>>>>> "Unleashing the 'Exaflood'" – by Bret Swanson and George Gilder, The
>>>>> Wall
>>>>> Street Journal, February 22, 2008
>>>>> 
>>>>> "The Coming Exaflood" – by Bret Swanson, The Wall Street Journal,
>>>>> January
>>>>> 20, 2007
>>>>> 
>>>>> "Let There Be Bandwidth" – by Bret Swanson, The Wall Street Journal,
>>>>> March
>>>>> 7, 2006
>>>>> 
>>>>> "Testimony For Telecommunications Policy: A Look Ahead" – testimony
>>>>> before
>>>>> the Senate Commerce Committee – by George Gilder – April 28, 2004
>>>>> 
>>>>> More from Bret Swanson:
>>>>> http://www.bretswanson.com/
>>>>> 
>>>>> REGISTER FOR A FREE SUBSCRIPTION TO THE FRIDAY LETTER:
>>>>> http://nct.digitalriver.com/fulfill/0165.035
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> WEALTH & POVERTY: A New Edition for the 21st Century
>>>>> 
>>>>> The New York Times bestseller Wealth and Poverty by George Gilder is
>>>>> one
>>>>> of the most famous economic books of all time and has sold more than
>>>>> one
>>>>> million copies since its first release.
>>>>> 
>>>>> In the new, completely updated, edition, Gilder compares America's
>>>>> current
>>>>> economic challenges with her past economic problems, and explains why
>>>>> Obama's big–government, redistributive policies are doing more harm
>>>>> than
>>>>> good. Wealth and Poverty (2012) offers solutions to America's current
>>>>> economic problems and hope to those who fear that our best days are
>>>>> behind
>>>>> us.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Order Your Copy Today!
>>>>> 
>>>>> Friday Feature /Israeli Companies Are On Sale
>>>>> 
>>>>> Gilder Telecosm Forum MEMBER (09/09/13): George, Please give us a
>>>>> futurist's view of what we should be investing in. Thanks in advance
>>>>> for
>>>>> your reply.
>>>>> 
>>>>> GEORGE GILDER, Gilder Telecosm Forum (09/10/13): I'll work on it,
>>>>> though
>>>>> my noggin is mostly full of information theory these days. The
>>>>> environment
>>>>> for small and mid–sized tech is ferocious. Now that the EPA has
>>>>> effectively banned nanotech, regarding carbon nanotubes as a new form
>>>>> of
>>>>> asbestos, and network neutrality threatens the Internet, I might have
>>>>> to
>>>>> resort to biotech, as long as it remains legal (genetic modification,
>>>>> eek!).
>>>>> 
>>>>> Meanwhile, I'll make do with my usual suspects, most of which you can
>>>>> buy
>>>>> more cheaply than ever. I would particularly note that great Israeli
>>>>> companies such as the cloud security paragon RADW are on sale. EZCH is
>>>>> still the best semiconductor company in the world and an even better
>>>>> stock
>>>>> because it remains widely unrecognized; TSEM is still the best analog
>>>>> play
>>>>> and also even cheaper despite its increasingly stable finances; CGEN is
>>>>> no
>>>>> longer in the bargain basement but is worth a bet; EVGN.TA remains
>>>>> attractive; INTC is an Israeli company in disguise and is on sale
>>>>> despite
>>>>> its world leading fabs and attractive Moore's Law double dividends; AMD
>>>>> spearheads graphics processors and will gain with clouds; ADSK seems
>>>>> well
>>>>> valued but it is the leader in 3D CAD and moving into the cloud with
>>>>> ever
>>>>> ascendant and unique software from Otoy; and AUDC is now better valued
>>>>> but
>>>>> it is a survivor at layer–five at a time when everything is becoming
>>>>> sessions…
>>>>> 
>>>>> Read more posts by George Gilder and the Telecosm Forum members by
>>>>> logging
>>>>> on to the Gilder Telecosm Forum with your subscriber password at
>>>>> www.gildertech.com.
>>>>> 
>>>>> REGISTER FOR A FREE SUBSCRIPTION TO THE FRIDAY LETTER:
>>>>> http://nct.digitalriver.com/fulfill/0165.035
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> The Israel Test: Why the World's Most Besieged State
>>>>> is a Beacon of Freedom and Hope for the World Economy
>>>>> 
>>>>> Have you ever wondered why, in our time, it is the Left that leads the
>>>>> attack on Israel? After reading The Israel Test you will never wonder
>>>>> again. George Gilder's brilliant work definitively shows how America's
>>>>> ability and desire to defend Israel will define our survival as a
>>>>> nation:
>>>>> "If Israel is destroyed, capitalist Europe will likely die as well, and
>>>>> America, as the epitome of productive and creative capitalism spurred
>>>>> by
>>>>> Jews, will be in jeopardy."
>>>>> 
>>>>> ORDER YOUR COPY TODAY [Now in Paperback!]
>>>>> Blogger Bonus / The Growth Experiment Revisited
>>>>> 
>>>>> STEPHEN MOORE, Wall Street Journal Book Review of "The Growth
>>>>> Experiment
>>>>> Revisited", By Lawrence Lindsey (09/09/13): When Ronald Reagan endorsed
>>>>> the idea of supply–side tax cuts in 1981, he turned 50 years of
>>>>> economic
>>>>> orthodoxy on its head. Even Republicans like Sen. Howard Baker of
>>>>> Tennessee, who voted for the cuts, called it "a riverboat gamble." What
>>>>> followed was a quarter–century of nearly unprecedented wealth creation
>>>>> and
>>>>> technological progress. America's net worth exploded by nearly $40
>>>>> trillion in these years, and nearly 40 million Americans were added to
>>>>> business payrolls.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Now, in the wake of the great recession of 2008–09 and the fifth year
>>>>> of
>>>>> the most meager of Keynesian "recoveries," it is a good time to
>>>>> re–explore
>>>>> how supply–side policies set America on the prosperity path in the
>>>>> go–go
>>>>> years of the 1980s and '90s. This is what Lawrence Lindsey's "The
>>>>> Growth
>>>>> Experiment Revisited" sets out to do.
>>>>> 
>>>>> The 1980s boom was launched on the simple insight that, by lowering tax
>>>>> rates and regulatory hurdles and juicing the incentives to produce,
>>>>> innovate and take risks, the animal spirits of the American
>>>>> free–enterprise system would revive. Two seminal books hatched the
>>>>> supply–side revolution. The first was Jude Wanniski's "The Way the
>>>>> World
>>>>> Works" (1978); the second, George Gilder's "Wealth and Poverty" (1981).
>>>>> 
>>>>> Almost as influential, coming a few years later, was Lawrence Lindsey's
>>>>> "The Growth Experiment" (1990). Slightly academic in nature, it was the
>>>>> first book to quantify the economic and revenue windfall of the 1981
>>>>> Reagan across–the–board tax cuts. Mr. Lindsey's conclusion was that
>>>>> Reagan's 1981 tax act quickened the pace of production, which reduced
>>>>> the
>>>>> predicted revenue loss. His research found that although the Reagan tax
>>>>> cuts didn't "pay for themselves," the ones at the highest end of the
>>>>> income spectrum "did produce a revenue gain" because of "changes in
>>>>> taxpayer behavior." He concluded that "the core supply–side tenet—that
>>>>> tax
>>>>> rates powerfully affect the willingness of taxpayers to work, save and
>>>>> invest, and thereby also affect the health of the economy—won as
>>>>> stunning
>>>>> a vindication as has been seen in at least a half–century of
>>>>> economics."
>>>>> 
>>>>> He has now updated his book, taking us through the booms and busts of
>>>>> the
>>>>> past 20 years. It is a valuable project in part because Mr. Lindsey was
>>>>> a
>>>>> front–seat economic adviser to George W. Bush, serving as director of
>>>>> the
>>>>> National Economic Council and as one of the architects of the
>>>>> often–maligned 2001 and 2003 Bush tax cuts.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Mr. Lindsey's central claim is that those tax changes saved the economy
>>>>> from the undertow of the financial meltdown at the end of the Clinton
>>>>> presidency. The bursting of the high–tech bubble in 1999–2000, which
>>>>> tends
>>>>> to be forgotten, was followed by the turmoil and economic upheaval
>>>>> after
>>>>> 9/11. Mr. Lindsey makes a convincing case that Mr. Bush doesn't receive
>>>>> nearly the credit he deserves for steering the economy clear of a
>>>>> mini–depression in the early 2000s. The economic revival of 2003–07
>>>>> wasn't
>>>>> particularly speedy, but it looks impressive today when compared with
>>>>> the
>>>>> dismal results of Obamanomics.
>>>>> 
>>>>> The purpose of the tax cuts, Mr. Lindsey writes, was "to provide a
>>>>> cushion
>>>>> for the economy when the bubble burst." They were designed as an
>>>>> "insurance policy" against a downturn. The author says that he was
>>>>> driven
>>>>> by a lesson, impressed upon him by then Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
>>>>> Greenspan, not to repeat the policy mistakes after the 1929 stock
>>>>> market
>>>>> crash, when taxes and tariffs were raised in 1930 and 1931. They only
>>>>> exacerbated the length and severity of the Depression.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Mr. Lindsey writes that the Bush tax cut in 2001 was "a standard
>>>>> Keynesian
>>>>> remedy for a recession" but "with a supply–side twist," and that it
>>>>> helped
>>>>> avert a deeper recession. "The economy began to recover as soon as the
>>>>> tax–cut checks hit," he insists. Those policies consisted mainly of tax
>>>>> rebates, credits and a slow phase–down of rates (to a 35% maximum). On
>>>>> the
>>>>> opinion pages of this newspaper we have questioned the
>>>>> bang–for–the–buck
>>>>> quality of the 2001 tax package, arguing that, contrary to Mr.
>>>>> Lindsey's
>>>>> claim, the rebates and credits bumped up consumption in only a minor
>>>>> and
>>>>> temporary way and that what was needed was permanent tax–rate
>>>>> reductions
>>>>> to encourage investment and work. It is true that the economy revived
>>>>> in
>>>>> 2001 and 2002, but only haltingly.
>>>>> 
>>>>> The real economic sparkplug was the 2003 investment–tax cut, which
>>>>> lowered
>>>>> the rate on capital gains and dividends. Not only did growth
>>>>> accelerate,
>>>>> but stocks rose in value—as Mr. Lindsey had predicted—and revenues to
>>>>> the
>>>>> federal government exploded by nearly $800 billion until 2008, when the
>>>>> bursting of the housing bubble sent the economy into the intensive–care
>>>>> unit.
>>>>> 
>>>>> For all the moaning about growing deficits under Mr. Bush, Mr. Lindsey
>>>>> defends the record of the president he worked for: The cumulative debt
>>>>> during Mr. Bush's two terms, he notes, added $2 trillion—or less than
>>>>> the
>>>>> amount Barack Obama borrowed in his first two years in office. This is
>>>>> true, though it ignores the fact that Mr. Bush left behind a deficit
>>>>> that
>>>>> was headed to $1 trillion in 2009 no matter who became president. Mr.
>>>>> Lindsey sees vindication in Mr. Obama's decision to extend the Bush tax
>>>>> cuts for everyone in 2011 and for "99 percent of all taxpayers" in
>>>>> 2013.
>>>>> 
>>>>> The puzzle of Mr. Lindsey is that one of the most prominent defenders
>>>>> of
>>>>> supply–side economics and lower tax rates is also a disciple of
>>>>> demand–side economics: He believes that, in times of recession,
>>>>> Keynesian
>>>>> fiscal policies designed to increase overall demand will help steer an
>>>>> economy back on the growth path. Both tax cuts and spending increases,
>>>>> he
>>>>> says, "may be sensible as counter–cyclical policies."
>>>>> 
>>>>> That isn't everyone's reading of history, of course. What is beyond
>>>>> dispute, after reading Mr. Lindsey's book, is that tax rates have a
>>>>> direct
>>>>> effect on the health of the economy, a lesson that the current Obama
>>>>> administration has chosen to ignore.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Comment On This:
>>>>> http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324123004579055323264287530.html
>>>>> __________________________________________
>>>>> 
>>>>> Like The Gilder Friday Letter on Facebook:
>>>>> http://www.facebook.com/pages/George-Gilders-Friday-Letter/215657745111042?v=wall
>>>>> __________________________________________
>>>>> 
>>>>> Readings /
>>>>> 
>>>>> ABC's Monday Night Football Offers Essential Lesson In Economics
>>>>> http://www.forbes.com/sites/johntamny/2013/09/08/abcs-monday-night-football-offers-an-essential-lesson-in-economics/
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> Hey GOP! Get Smart Fighting Obamacare
>>>>> http://www.forbes.com/sites/steveforbes/2013/09/04/hey-gop-get-smart-fighting-obamacare/
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> John Scully Just Gave His Most Detailed Account of How Steve Jobs Got
>>>>> Fired From Apple
>>>>> http://www.forbes.com/sites/randalllane/2013/09/09/john-sculley-just-gave-his-most-detailed-account-ever-of-how-steve-jobs-got-fired-from-apple/
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> Startup Culture is Killing Innovation
>>>>> http://www.wired.com/opinion/2013/09/why-do-research-when-you-can-fail-fast-pivot-and-act-out-other-popular-startup-cliches/
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> Wall Street Give New iPhone Thumbs Down
>>>>> http://blogs.wsj.com/moneybeat/2013/09/11/wall-street-gives-apples-new-iphones-thumbs-down/
>>>>> ________________________________
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>>> 
>>> 
>>> --
>>> AMESSINOU Kossi
>>> Ingénieur TIC
>>> ICT Engineer
>>> Contact: 00229 95 19 67 02
>>> skype: amessinou
>>> @amessinou @bigf
>>> http://www.facebook.com/amessinoukossi
>>> www.linkedin.com/pub/kossi-amessinou
>>> Que Dieu vous bénisse
>>> Je suis un serviteur de celui qui est, qui était et qui vient, pour la
>>> gloire de notre DIEU au milieu des HOMMES.
>> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> AMESSINOU Kossi
> Ingénieur TIC
> ICT Engineer
> Contact: 00229 95 19 67 02
> skype: amessinou
> @amessinou @bigf
> http://www.facebook.com/amessinoukossi
> www.linkedin.com/pub/kossi-amessinou
> Que Dieu vous bénisse
> Je suis un serviteur de celui qui est, qui était et qui vient, pour la
> gloire de notre DIEU au milieu des HOMMES.

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