Response to Chapters 10-12 We The Media
Dan Gillmor
The majority of the content in these chapters reflected the issues of open-ended questions regarding internet regulation, or the lack there of. The thing that Gillmor impresses on the reader is that the Government is doing a poor job of providing protection to citizens, and leaving them to be at the mercy of Big Business. For example (and there are plenty more within Gillmor’s book), the 2003 policy granted in favor of phone companies to control access to new high-speed data pipes (2006, p.225-226). Not only do these companies monopolize how people have to squeeze out their cash in order to access the internet, but now they are trying to filter and monitor people’s “internet fingerprints”, for more on this refer to the January 8,2008 article in the NY Times; http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/01/08/att-and-other-isps-may-be-getting-ready-to-filter/ . Gillmor made mention of the impending practices of filtering in chapter 11 of his book. He commented on the threat as follows;
“ …it is currently illegal to copy a snippet of video directly from a DVD to use as part of another work. But you can do this with a piece of text, though the e-book industry is working to prevent even a small cut and paste unless authorized by the copyright holder. If we need permission or have to pay, simply to quote from other works, scholarship will be only one casualty” (2006, p. 218).
The most disappointing thing about the issues at hand, is that the government that WE the American people live under, enacted regulations that now need undoing (they have needed undoing for years). Gillmor includes in his argument, commentary from David P. Reed’s sentiments about the FCC. Reed (former chief scientist at Lotus Development and Software Arts) feels that with new technology, equipment facilitates overlapping signals by sorting them out. Reed defined Software as the evolution to achieve the freedom from the hypothetical airwave scarcity that is harboring the corporate monopoly over the waves (Gillmor, 2006, p. 234). Obviously, historically American corporations lack social corporate responsibility and ignore the long-term effects of pure capitalism. People need to exercise their freedom of speech not only in grassroots journalism, but also by writing good old-fashioned letters. As corporate America should always allow room to be included in the democratization process, not control it. People who are unable to write or endorse policies to protect their security and freedom then need to VOTE for GOOD and capable governmental representatives.