Dave Farber Named FCC Chief Technologist
Telecommunications coder since the 1960s, outspoken professor, and
testifier
in the Microsoft trial
David J. Farber
has been named the
chief technologist at the FCC.
Currently at U-Penn he is working on high-speed networking and distributed computing. Those on his "Interesting People" mailing list know him to be on the cutting edge of the tech memepool. I'll rest a little easier knowing he's "on the inside."
Federal Communications Commission, a US Gov't agency involved in the regulation of Communications including particularly licenseing of Radio and TV operators and stations. More importantly, they're involved in regulating telephone and related technologies, including universial access and broadband access.
See www.fcc.gov
The original rational of the FCC was that the bandwidth of radio communications was limited, so you needed this government agency to regulate who owned what frequency and what power (and hence range) they were allowed to have. I'm not sure I agree with this, but at least you can make a case for it (the alternative would involve some pretty chaotic "arms races" with the deepest pockets buying the heaviest signal and stomping on anyone else).
But somehow or other they got from this to a justification for government censorship of the airwaves (restrictions on "sexual or excretory" language, no direct calls to action, noncoms can't mention ticket prices, and so on). This rules are pretty vauge in their details and that seems to be intentional: you don't get shutdown for violating them, but they might be used as a pretext for shutting you down, if it was politically expedient (e.g. there was a college station whose frequency was turned over to a religious group during the Reagan years).
But okay, say that you buy that it's appropriate for the FCC to regulate *broadcast* technology, possibly including speech. How do you justify that the FCC got involved with regulating Cable Television? And now how do you justify that they're getting involved with regulating the Internet? Anything that vaugely involves "communication" seems to fall under the FCCs domain (I expect marriage counsellors will be next).
Anyway, these guys scare me. You're talking about a federal bureaucracy that's in the business of routinely regulating speech, with barely a squeak of anyone shouting "First Ammendment".
I take this as unalloyed good news. As far as I can tell the FCC was intended to regulate the use of the radio spectrum. It has had more and more stuff shuffled off onto it, and more and more of its critical decisions taken out of its hands by special-interest legislation in Congress.
Dave has always enjoyed being in the thick of things. It was one of his grad students (Dave Crocker) who, while at Rand, wrote RFC 822. Dave was one of the prime movers behind CSNET, which as far as I can tell was the first ISP...run with government seed money as a trial baloon to see if the Internet could be financially self-sufficient. Dave was not only on the board of directors, he contributed software which he'd had written for other purposes.
The reason that I'm heartened is that Dave isn't an expert in just one thing. He's one of the very few Renaissance men of the Internet, with a perspective far wider than most folks running around today. This is just the sort of person that the FCC needs. Those who think he should be elsewhere, where the "really interesting" stuff is happening, I think underestimate what the FCC is going to be doing (forced into doing) over the next few years.