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- This article originally appeared in the Spring, 1991 issue of Whole
- Earth Review (issue #70)
-
- Whole Earth Review is a quarterly magazine of access to tools and
- ideas. Published by POINT, a California nonprofit corporation.
- Editorial office: 27 Gate Five Road, Sausalito, CA 94965;
- 415/332-1716. Subscriptions $20 per year for individuals, $28 per
- year for institutions; single copies $7
-
-
- Highways of the Mind or Toll Roads Between Information Castles?
-
- By Roger Karraker Illustrations by MATT WUERKER
-
- Copyright 1991 by POINT and Roger Karraker
-
-
- This is not an article about technology. It's an article about human
- needs. For example:
-
-
- => A doctor telecommunicates a CAT scan from her small hospital to
- the nearest major medical center.
-
- => An MIT professor uses his desktop computer in Cambridge to tutor a
- talented young physicist on a reservation in rural Montana.
-
- => Biologists scattered around the world exchange data on an hourly
- basis, coordinating their effort to map the human genetic code.
-
- => A grassroots political organization gets the word out about a
- meeting, just in time to mobilize for a municipal legislative session.
-
- => Each of these activities, science-fiction as they might sound,
- actually are happening today, courtesy of computer-mediated
- telecommunication networks. The future of this technology is a matter
- of much behind-the-scenes maneuvering. Roger Karraker, instructor in
- journalism and Macintosh at Santa Rosa Junior College, has teased out
- the key issues from a politically and technically complex debate.
- -Howard Rheingold
-
-
- **********************************
-
-
- A quiet but crucial debate now under way in Congress, in major
- corporate boardrooms, and in universities, has the potential to shape
- American in the 21st century and beyond. The outcome may determine
- where you live, how well your children are educated, who will blossom
- and who will wither in a society where national competitiveness and
- personal prosperity will likely depend on access to information.
-
- The battle is about who will build, own, use and pay for the
- high-speed data highways of the future and whether their content will
- be censored. These vast data highways, capable of sending entire
- libraries coast-to-coast in a few seconds or sending crucial CAT scans
- from a remote village to urban specialists, could be linked in a vast
- network of "highways of the mind."
-
- The backbone of these communications networks will be built of fiber
- optics, hair-thick strands of glass, transmitting digital pulses
- thousands of times faster than ever before. In addition to their
- speed, fiber optics bring with them an environmental bonus: fiber
- optics are made of silicon, the earth's most common element and the
- growing use of optical fibers will mean much less demand for
- traditional cables composed of copper, an element whose fabrication
- causes much environmental damage.
-
- Futurist Alvin Toffler says the future of the United States depends
- upon the creation of these networks. "Because so much of business now
- depends on getting and sending information, companies around the world
- have been rushing to link their employees through electronic networks.
- These networks form the key infrastructure of the 21st century, as
- critical to business success and national economic development as the
- railroads were in [Samuel] Morse's era."
-
- These data highways connecting schools, colleges, universities,
- researchers and industry could help create high-quality education in
- the smallest schools, or start a society-wide revolution as important
- as the invention of printing.
-
- Conversely, if access to such data networks is restricted to only
- those who already have money, power and information then the highways
- of the mind might become nothing more than a classic case of economic
- imperialism, taxation without communication, that one critic has
- dubbed "toll roads between information castles."
-
- Virtually all sides to the controversy agree that such networks are
- essential. The future belongs to those who have ready access to huge
- amounts of accurate information. The Japanese government and industry
- are actively building such a network. The Japanese government
- estimates that in 20 years 35 percent of Japan's gross national
- product will be dependent on information that flows across this web.
-
- In the United States there is only a vague consensus that this
- high-bandwidth network is vital. In place of the unity of purpose
- evident in Japan, there is internecine squabbling over who has the
- right to do what/to where/to whom.
-
- ___________
- Four Questions
-
- At issue are vastly different visions of the roles of government,
- education and corporations. Four key questions dominate the debate:
-
- 1. Who will build the network? (Will the federal government create the
- infrastructure or will it be left to private enterprise?)
-
- 2. Who will have access to network services? The debate here is
- between those who would restrict the network's services to the
- nation's research leaders and those who believe in access to anyone
- with a modem .
-
- 3. Who will pay for all this? Everyone concedes that the federal
- government will pay the lion's share of getting the network underway.
- But should it do so by directly funding the infrastructure or by
- paying the user fees of just the big research organizations working on
- federal projects?
-
- 4. What kind of information will be allowed on the network? If the
- federal government owns the network, the First Amendment is in place
- and unpopular speech and art will be protected. If private enterprise
- owns and runs the network, freedom of electronic speech is less clear.
- Conceivably, a corporation owning the network could refuse to allow
- discussion of controversial topics.
-
- So far, two models or metaphor - "highways" and "railroads" have been
- proposed to frame the debate. Both borrow from transportation examples
- in U.S. history. Both, I believe, fall short of the mark. And we
- suggest that a little tweaking of the two, the best solution for the
- U.S. might be found in a kind of synthesis of these different visions.
-
- ___________
- The Interstate Highway Model
-
- One vision, championed most visibly by U.S. Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenn.)
- is to create a National Research and Education Network (NREN) that
- will link the nation's top research, education, corporate and
- governmental researchers. Gore's bill to create NREN died in the last
- Congress but was re-introduced in January, 1991 with more coordinated
- support among governmental agencies. The NREN proposal is just one
- part of the government's five-year, $2 billion High Performance
- Computing Program, which includes supercomputers, software, networking
- and education.
-
- Gore speaks of a "catalyst" role for the Federal Government akin to
- the creation of the interstate highway system in the 1950s. The
- interstate transportation system was seen as a national resource and
- national tax monies were used to finance the infrastructure, which
- benefited all Americans through more far-flung, decentralized
- distribution of goods and services.
-
- The highway model - that government recognizes the communications
- infrastructure as a vital national resource - is the norm throughout
- Japan, Europe and most of the world.
-
- ___________
- The Railroad Model
-
- IBM, MCI and other private firms prefer a different model: private
- enterprise and quasi-monopolies such as America's railroads of the
- 19th century.
-
- The decision in the 19th century to give private transportation
- monopolies to the railroads and let them determine the nation's
- destiny created the 20th century landscape of America. Not
- surprisingly towns and farms accessible to the railroads prospered and
- grew. Areas ignored by the railroads withered and died.
-
- Under the railroad model, the public and the government weren't
- consulted; private interest, not national interest, determined who
- got what. It was pure free market capitalism with no government
- regulation, no direct governmental investment and led to some ugly
- excesses. Yet at a time when federal budget deficits approach $300
- billion per year the idea of letting private enterprise foot the whole
- bill is powerfully attractive.
-
- And that is essentially what IBM, MCI and Merit, an agency of the
- state of Michigan have proposed. Last September they formed ANS
- (Advanced Network Services), a not-for-profit joint venture that
- proposes to build and maintain a private network. But the federal
- government would need to guarantee that the research institutions
- would have annual budgets sufficient to pay their ANS bills.
-
- ___________
- Why Decide Now?
-
- The existing national research communication system is woefully
- inadequate to today's needs and must be updated soon; this technical
- obsolescence lends urgency to the need for finding answers to these
- policy questions.
-
- The question is how best to modernize and expand the DARPA/Internet
- network . It the late 1960s, the Defense Department's Advanced
- Research Projects Agency (ARPA) created a network of telephone lines
- connected to large research institutions in government, education,
- private enterprise and the military to allow researchers to exchange
- computerized information.
-
- Over the next decade and a half the number of researchers grew
- significantly. As computers grew more powerful and easier to use,
- researchers outside the computer sciences began to use remote
- terminals and telecommunication networks to exchange messages and
- share computing resources from their homes, offices, and laboratories.
- Each research center supported dozens or hundreds of users, and each
- local center was plugged into the overall network; thus, both the
- number of nodes in the network and the number of users at each node
- proliferated. The number of regional networks in government, business
- and education skyrocketed, as did connections to ARPANet's main lines,
- or "backbone". Most importantly, the type of data exchanged by
- researchers changed dramatically. Where once simple electronic mail
- messages were sufficient, collaborators across the nation now needed
- to exchange high-density data like sounds, CAT scans, other graphic
- images, even video images.
-
- By 1987 the ARPANet suffered data gridlock and the last of its 1970s
- state-of-the-art lines (56,000 digital "bits" per second - about
- 50,000 words per minute) were laid to rest. ARPANet's successor is
- NSFNET, funded until 1993 by the National Science Foundation, another
- government agency. NSFNET's original lines were so-called T-1 or 1.544
- million bits per second - 28 times the capacity of ARPANet. These
- lines lasted just three years, and are now being replaced by a newer
- T-3 (45 million bits per second) backbone - another 28-fold increase.
- No one expects it to last for long.
-
- The growth of the so-called Internet - those machines connected to
- the NSFNET backbone - has been phenomenal. In 1989, the number of
- networks attached to the NSFNET/Internet increased from 346 to 997;
- data traffic increased five-fold. The latest estimate, itself probably
- wildly out-of-date, is that 100,000 to 200,000 main computers are
- directly connected to NSFNET, with perhaps a total of two million
- individuals able to exchange information.
-
- For example, the WELL, Whole Earth's computer conferencing system, is
- not connected directly to either the NSFNET backbone or the so-called
- Internet of sites on the backbone. But the WELL's computer is linked
- to Apple Computer's mainframes, and to Pacific Bell's computers and to
- the University of California at Berkeley - all of them on the
- Internet. So the WELL's 3,500 customers can send electronic mail to
- millions of other computer users around the country and, via
- connections between the Internet and other countries, all around the
- world.
-
- NSFNET's phenomenal growth in 1989 was, evidently, just a prelude for
- the data deluge that is now in full flood. Traffic more than doubled
- between September 1989 and September 1990. It is projected to double
- again this year. It won't take too long to exhaust even those T-3
- lines that carry 800+ times the data of the pre-1987 lines.
-
- That's where the NREN proposal comes in. As proposed by the Coalition
- for the National Research and Education Network and championed by
- Senator Gore, Congress would authorize the network and provide $400
- million over five years to put it in place. The universities and
- research centers would pay the additional costs for the local area
- networks that would connect their scholars to the network.
-
- When completed in 1995 the network would have a 3-gigabit backbone - 3
- billion bits per second, a 66-fold increase over the current T-3
- capacity, a 50,000-fold increase over the old ARPA lines. That's about
- 300 million times faster than the clattering state-of-the-art
- teletypes I used at the Associated Press a quarter-century ago.
-
- ___________
- From CAT Scans to Instant Encyclopedias
-
- What can you do with 3 billion bits per second? The NREN Coalition
- likens it to sending 100 three-dimensional x-rays and CAT scans every
- second for 100 cancer patients, or sending 1,000 satellite photographs
- to researchers investigating agricultural productivity, environmental
- pollution or weather prediction. Reduced to just words, it would be
- 100,000 typed pages per second, or as the Coalition dangles
- tantalizingly before us, "making it possible to transmit the entire
- Encyclopedia Brittanica in a second...."
-
- Now before you begin salivating at the thought of every book, every
- magazine article available instantaneously at your slightest whim,
- here's the rub: as currently designed, NREN's 3-gigabit data lines
- aren't coming to your house, or your kids' school, even your local
- library. NREN will connect only the largest research universities and
- consortia, at least one in every state. From there, lower-speed
- regional networks would connect nearby institutions. At the bottom of
- NREN's proposed three-tier system would be local campus networks.
- There's no plan or provision for K-12 schools or local libraries in
- the NREN proposal.
-
- One doesn't need the vast capacity of NREN to exchange simple
- electronic mail. There are many alternative, if slower, networks
- available. Using super-sophisticated NREN for such mundane tasks might
- be like trying to get a drink out of a fire hose. And it's problematic
- whether local schools and libraries would be able to pay for the
- equipment needed to exchange items much more complex than simple
- electronic mail. There's the potential here for the creation of
- information haves and information have-nots. As Apple Computer
- librarian Steve Cisler puts it, "If this is going to be a data
- superhighway, how would you like to have to go to a computer company,
- military base, or university to find an onramp?"
-
- Dave Hughes, a Colorado telecommunications pioneer, takes a more
- cautious view of the slimmed-down NREN that Gore and others are trying
- to push through Congress. An ex-Army colonel and former aide to
- Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, Hughes believes that NREN's plan,
- with local schools not even mentioned, could perpetuate educational
- elitism, where the already-prosperous research universities get
- additional taxpayer-paid subsidized service and the already-poor local
- schools get short shrift.
-
- Which doesn't mean that Dave Hughes doesn't want to see a high-speed
- data network. To the contrary, he wants it to reach every corner of
- America, terminating in at least each of the 16,000 local school
- districts. Such as the 114 one-room school houses in Montana which he
- and Frank Odasz of Western Montana College have managed to connect up,
- after a fashion, through their Big Sky Telegraph system, and and from
- there out to the rest of the world. And over which a theoretical
- physicist from MIT has been able to teach a course in chaos theory
- mathematics to students in these schools - which the physicist cannot
- do through the Internet workstation on his MIT desk, Hughes says.
- Hughes and Odasz already have created a grassroots online culture in
- the wide-open spaces where physical isolation reinforces the lack of
- ready access to national sources of information.
-
- Hughes wants either to flatten NREN's three tiers of service into a
- single tier, or have guarantees of affordable access and compatible
- protocols between the three tiers to and from every
- educational/political subdivision in America. From observing online
- behavior nationally for the past 11 years, he thinks talent will find
- its own level on the network, and that those with neither the talent
- or motivation will be satisfied with local bulletin-boards and video
- games. He believes all schools in the country should have the right of
- access under the law, including either affordable rates, or
- appropriate subsidies down to the local level.
-
- "The implicit assumptions behind the NREN proposal," Hughes says, "are
- that it will only link large research (which also may be 'educational'
- in the sense of higher education) institutions. As currently conceived
- NREN will NOT extend to the 16,000 K-12 school districts in America,
- much less foster the vision of a nation of people learning all their
- lives by mixing institutional (edifice-centered) education and
- training, and learning, formally and informally, from home, library,
- place of business or study.
-
- "So the metaphor of the need for 'Highways of the Mind' across this
- land is very deceptive. It really could turn out to mean 'Super Toll
- Roads between Castles.' That is not my vision of a Network Nation."
- ___________
- The Network Nation
-
- What would a real Network Nation be like? Conservative theorist/author
- George Gilder, like Hughes, foresees a renaissance in education caused
- by the "telecomputer": the merger of fiber optic telephone service to
- the home and new ultra-powerful multimedia computers.
-
- "The telecomputer could revitalize public education by bringing the
- best teachers in the country to classrooms everywhere," Gilder says.
- "More important, the telecomputer could encourage competition because
- it could make home schooling both feasible and attractive. To learn
- social skills, neighborhood children could gather in micro-schools run
- by parents, churches or other local institutions. The competition of
- home schooling would either destroy the public school system or force
- it to become competitive with rival systems..."
-
- High-speed data communications to the home might also revolutionize
- where and how we live. Data communications could allow rural
- tele-commuting, ending two centuries of "brain drain" from the
- countryside to the cities.
-
- Gilder says, "Every morning millions of commuters across America sit
- in cars inching their way toward cluttered, polluted and crime-ridden
- cities," he says.
-
- "Or they sit in dilapidated trains rattling toward office towers that
- survive as business centers chiefly because of their superior access
- to the global network of computers and telecommunications. With
- telecomputers in every home attached to global fiber network, why
- would anyone commute? People would be able to see the boss life-size
- in high-definition video and meet with him as easily at home as at the
- office. They would be able to reach with equal immediacy the head of
- the foreign subsidiary or the marketing chief across the country. They
- would be able to send and receive documents almost instantly from
- anywhere."
-
- ___________
- Who Pays the Bill?
-
- Whether it's the $400 million Gore's NREN bill calls for or the
- untold billions required for fiber optics to the home, high-speed data
- communications will cost a bundle and the major political battle is
- over who will pay.
-
- For Gilder and for many of us who hope to benefit from fiber-to-the
- home, the answer is clear: let the local telephone companies install
- fiber to every home, amortize the cost and add it to our monthly
- telephone bills.
-
- To consumer groups and many state public utilities commissions that
- reeks of reverse Robin Hood-ism: stealing from the poor, retired and
- elderly who may never be able to utilize the capabilities of the new
- system in order to subsidize the corporations, universities and a
- well-educated few. Indeed, that's already underway. Much of the U.S.
- telephone system, especially in the central cities and along corporate
- "data corridors" has already been converted to fiber optic service and
- the costs rolled into the local telephone rate.
-
- Another option: last September IBM and MCI, who already operate NSFNET
- under contract, proposed to build a "private Internet" backbone that
- would require less governmental funding, but would involve user fees.
- Advanced Network Services, the IBM/MCI non-profit joint venture, would
- build and operate the network.
-
- The benefit, as IBM exec Allan H. Weis, president/chief executive
- officer of ANS puts it, is ""Because we are broadening the community
- of those using the network, the fixed costs of national networking
- will be more widely distributed. This will free up funds which could
- then be allocated to assist the neediest organizations to connect to
- the national network, as well as to continue to support and enable the
- national network to remain in the vanguard of new technology."
-
- That doesn't sit well with Dave Hughes. "With this Administration, the
- budget crunch, and general ignorance of the implications, I'm afraid
- that the decision makers - including Congress - will welcome 'private
- enterprise' with open arms. And overlook such minor details as 'equal
- access.' No, it will be 'if you got the bucks you can buy it.' Kiss
- off the idea that all K-12 schools will have 'educational' access."
-
- Mitch Kapor, the co-founder of Lotus Computing and the president of
- the Electronic Frontier Foundation, also believes that universal
- access should be a central tenet of any national network policy.
-
- "Whatever infrastructure we create," Kapor says, "should incorporate a
- notion of 'universal digital service', much as AT&T pioneered, and
- which later became national policy, with respect to voice telephony in
- the early 20th century. Everyone should be able to connect to the
- net."
-
- Hughes and Kapor approach the NREN controversy from substantially
- different perspectives. Hughes is suspicious of turning the nation's
- infrastructure over to the agendas of private enterprise.
-
- As Hughes terms it, "I am concerned about the U.S. mind-set which,
- without thinking, says that the 'private sector' should provide
- telecommunications in the U.S. simply because that is the way it
- always has been, while in a couple other key areas - sewage, highways,
- and education - that is not the case.
-
- "If we believe so mightily that our national future is very much
- wrapped up in computing and telecommunications - and that especially
- 'research and education' are going to have to be improved mightily for
- us to compete - then we ought to be thinking a lot more carefully than
- we are now about which portion of telecommunications should be
- government provided/subsidized/regulated and which portion pure
- profit-and-loss commercial."
-
- Kapor, one of the country's most respected entrepreneurs, suggests
- that one way to satisfy both Big Scientists and Universalists is to
- have, in effect, two networks, achieved by "overlaying"
- lower-bandwidth networks onto an NREN-like backbone.
-
- "These high-end and low-end visions of the NREN are strikingly
- different. There is no assurance that one size network fits all. Some
- important public policy choices will therefore be made, one way or the
- other," he says.
-
- While he lauds the IBM/MCI/ANS group for its donations of millions of
- dollars to NSFNET computing, Kapor is concerned that ANS policies may
- become, by default, national polices concerning telecommunications
- without the benefit of public debate. ANS, he says, is already
- establishing policies for measuring network traffic, billing and
- accounting, and setting access charges for new information
- entrepreneurs, all without the normal hearing and rule-setting process
- required of public utilities.
-
- "What ANS does in the way of setting up commercial access to the
- national information infrastructure may well become, in effect,
- national policy," Kapor says. "But there is no guarantee of public
- accountability.
-
- "We are dependent on the continued good will of ANS in setting its
- policies. We don't know, for instance, whether the technology for
- counting traffic on the net that ANS develops will be as enabling for
- would-be information entrepreneurs as it will for big corporate
- information providers. Without an open public process for getting
- input in the development of the net, the resulting choices are less
- likely to be in the public interest."
-
- Kapor also sees that a purely private enterprise such as ANS may not
- be fully in consonance with the goals of Electronic Frontier
- Foundation's goals, including First Amendment guarantees for
- electronic speech and guaranteed access to communications services at
- fair prices.
-
- EFF's recent newsletter noted that Prodigy, a national computer
- communications system half owned by IBM, has been embroiled in
- disputes because of its policy of reading and censoring postings made
- to Prodigy's public forums.
-
- "I believe it's important to establish the legal principle that
- businesses which offer a network service which is principally that of
- a conduit - moving bits from here to there - may not restrict the
- content of the information they carry. The ability to restrict
- content, whether conducted by the government in the form of
- censorship, or by a private carrier for whatever reason, is not
- conducive to the free and open flow of information," he says.
-
- ___________
- So What' the Answer?
-
- Now let's play Chinese menu, taking a few items from column A (Gore's
- NREN/Big Scientists bill) and column B (the Universalists approach).
-
- A workable national network might include the following features:
-
- => Built and managed by private enterprise
-
- => Federal start-up subsidies for colleges, universities, libraries
- and schools
-
- => First Amendment free speech guarantees
-
- => Guaranteed interconnection to other data services offered by
- telephone companies and other locally regulated businesses
-
- => Guaranteed universal digital access for everyone who wants to
- connect
-
- => Fair rates and policies subject to regulatory review
-
- In short, we'd have a regulated public utility: precisely the system
- that the U.S. used over the past century to develop the best - and
- cheapest - public telephone system in the world.
-
- The problem, as usual, is in how one defines the purpose of the
- national network. Laura Breeden, a network group manager at Bolt
- Beranek and Newman (a private research and development company that
- was one of the original ARPAnet contractors), frames the issues this
- way:
-
- "If you think of data networking as a public utility, then it seems
- important to regulate it in some of the same ways that other utilities
- are regulated, i.e. to make sure that basic services are provided to
- everyone and not withdrawn unreasonably.
-
- "If you think of it as a strategic resource, important for insuring
- U.S.competitiveness and technological progress, then you put it where
- it can do the most good strategically .
-
- "If you believe that it is important to education generally, then you
- put it at as many schools as possible.
-
- "If you think data networking is some of all of these, you have to
- balance the trade-offs among them."
-
- The National Network is a complex issue. It's safe to say only a
- handful of representatives understand the issue in depth. A letter
- from you to your elected representatives asking for reasonable rates,
- guaranteed free speech rights and access for local schools, libraries
- and homes might make a lot of difference.
-
- ____________
-
- For more information concerning NREN, consult the following sources:
-
- The WELL, Whole Earth's computer conferencing system, has extensive
- coverage of NREN/Internet issues the Info, Telecommunications and
- Electronic Frontier Foundation conferences. Call 415/332-4335 (voice)
- or 415/332-6106 (modem) for more information on how to join the WELL.
- On the WELL you will find: Dave Hughes (dave@well.sf.ca.us), Steve
- Cisler (sac@well.sf.ca.us), Tom Valovic (tvacorn@well.sf.ca.us), Mitch
- Kapor (mkapor@well.sf.ca.us), and Roger Karraker (roger@well.sf.ca.us)
-
- Mike Nelson, Senate Commerce Committee, U.S. Capitol, Washington, DC
- 20510; 202/224-9360.
-
- Sen. Albert Gore, U.S. Senate, Washington, DC 20510 (Gore's office, or
- the Senate Commerce Committee, can send you a copy of Gore's article,
- "Networking the Future," published in the July 15, 1990 Outlook
- section of the Washington Post .
-
- Coalition for the National Research and Education Network: Mike
- Roberts, Vice President/Networking, EDUCOM, 1112 16th Street NW, #600,
- Washington, DC 20036; roberts@educom.edu
-
- Research & Education Networking , a commercial publication devoted to
- developments related to NREN, is published nine times a year. Volume
- I, Number 1 is eight pages long. Institutional rate is $59 annually;
- personal rate is $39. Available from Meckler, 11 Ferry Lane West,
- Westport, CT 06880; 203/226-6967; Fax 203/454-5840
-
- This version of this document was prepared by Matisse Enzer,
- matisse@well.sf.ca.us; 415/647-4324 This version was prepared by
- taking the ASCII version of Roger Karraker's original submittal to
- Whole Earth Review and manually bringing it into line with the
- published version. Any errors in that process are the sole
- responsibility of myself, Matisse Enzer.