Technology

Technology & Democracy Project

Barton-Rush Bill Not ‘An Elegant Solution’

This article, published by Xchange Magazine, quotes Discovery Institute Senior Fellow Hance Haney: “”The term ‘’competition’’ means different things to different people,”” writes Hance Haney, an analyst for the Discovery Institute think tank, in his blog. The rest of the article can be found here.

Conservative Coalition Sends Letter on Telecom

FreedomWorks Discovery Institute Citizens Against Government Waste American Conservative Union National Taxpayers Union Competitive Enterprise Institute March 31, 2006 The Honorable Joe BartonChairman, U.S. House Energy and Commerce CommitteeRoom: 2125 Rayburn House Office BuildingWashington, DC 20515 Dear Chairman Barton: As members of the free-market community, we, the undersigned organizations, are encouraged that the latest draft of the telecommunications legislation takes Read More ›

Indiana Is Open for Business

There’s about to be a building boom in Indiana, which is desperate good news for a state that has been severely challenged by the global manufacturing shift and years of ambivalent leadership. The chief architect of the boom is the state’s decisive Governor Mitch Daniels, President Bush’s former budget director. In Washington, Daniels drew scorn from congressional big spenders, acquiring Read More ›

Royal Society Selects Silicon Eye as Candidate for Aventis Prizes

View the Press Release Senior Fellow George Gilder’s recent book, Silicon Eye, has been included in the longlist of the best in popular science writing for adults by the Royal Society. Silicon Eye is one of 13 selections comprising this year’s longlist, each of which will be considered for the prestigious Aventis Prizes, to be announced later this Spring.

Let There Be Bandwidth

Ma Bell’s back: Run for your lives! — or at least to the halls of Congress. That, it seems, is the overheated conventional wisdom. But the $170 billion combination of AT&T and BellSouth into the world’s largest telecom company is a perfectly natural progression of business and technology. The merger will rationalize a market beset by decades of political mismanagement. Read More ›

Ma Bell’s Lost Sons

The same year Merian Cooper’s epic King Kong was produced (1933) he issued a sequel, Son of Kong. Little Kong was smaller, kinder, gentler, and like his pop did not survive the end of the movie. Ma Bell, like the original Kong, was captured, exhibited for public amusement, and ultimately destroyed. The son escaped capture, but perished when his island Read More ›

Indiana Adopts Nation’s Best Broadband Policy

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Bret SwansonSenior Fellow(317) 663-0509 INDIANAPOLIS —”This week Indiana adopted the best communications law anywhere in the nation and took a bold leap into the 21st century,” said Discovery Institute senior fellow and Indiana resident Bret Swanson. “Amazingly, it’s already working. The bill was passed just Tuesday night, but already—just three days later—I have seen telecom crews Read More ›

My View: Our Biggest Obstacle To Real Broadband

Ten years ago, Washington gave us the Telecommunications Act of 1996. The law’s complex and intrusive implementation by the Federal Communications Commission and the 51 state utility commissions resulted in the $3 trillion technology crash of 2000-02 and has now plunged the U.S. to 16th in the world in residential broadband rankings. Yet for Hoosiers, hope abounds. Indiana is possibly Read More ›

Phone Legislation Passes Committee

This article, published by the South Bend Tribune, quotes Bret Swanson of Discovery Institute: “This is all about giving Indiana citizens and businesses the communication tools they need to compete in a global economy,” said Bret T. Swanson, a senior fellow for the Discovery Institute, a pro-deregulation think tank based in Washington, D.C. The rest of the article can be Read More ›

Eliminate Video Franchising

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Hance Haney(202) 558-7083 Cable Franchise Process Should Be Eliminated –Franchising Harms Consumers and U.S. Competitiveness WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Discovery Institute’s Technology & Democracy Project has urged the Federal Communications Commission to reform local regulation of cable services, which imposes unnecessary costs and delays on both incumbent cable operators and new entrants. “The U.S. lags behind Read More ›