Thoughts on the National Broadband Plan

The FCC is in the process of developing a National Broadband Plan Please check out the site and make your voice heard. Here are some of my thoughts off the bat:

1. I would give a kidney to testify at the upcoming field event the FCC is having on the new National Broadband Plan. Our business is in making innovative, open set-top boxes. We are arguably the only open set-top box maker in the US. If my testimony is not of interest to them given their consideration home gateways and open set-top boxes, well, then its something of a farce. I'll be there on Monday if any of you know anyone involved with this, please pass them along to me.

2. The open gateway they talk about is really a no brainer to me. There is a direct parallel to the 1968 Carterfone decision which allowed the direct connection of 3rd party devices to the AT&T network. It looks comical in retrospect to think it was ever controversial, because it gave rise to fax machines, and most importantly modems, leading in a pretty obvious way to the modern consumer adoption of the Internet. It's very clear to me that something very similar can happen with net connected TVs (but only if its done in an open way that allows the next wave of small innovators to participate).

3. CableCard is a farce and probably unfixable. No small company (or innovator of any kind) can get approved for cablecard, and even if they could, the devices are hamstrung and made needlessly handicapped by the MSOs who won't allow pay per view and other "special content" to be available. The goal of protecting content is probably best served by a compromise like a individual watermark rather than DRM.

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