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Where Does the U.S. Really Stand in Broadband and Why?

Monday, June 21, 2010 - 09:30 AM to Tuesday, June 22, 2010 - 10:59 AM EST
The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation1101 K Street NW610a Washington District Of Columbia, 2005

Event Summary

Resolved: The US is lagging seriously behind other countries on broadband access and this is due primarily to a failure of U.S. telecom regulation. That is not the way ITIF sees it and we welcome the chance to explain why in a debate. Everyone agrees it would be better if more Americans were enjoying broadband capability in computing and telecommunications. But are we as far behind as some critics say? How do we measure international rankings? If we are lagging badly is this because regulators have let service providers focus on corporate bottom line rather than the broader public interest? Or is it, as ITIF believes, more complex? Is America actually doing better than what critics contend and are the impediments to wider broadband deployment more related to an array of infrastructure challenges and to America's persistent socioeconomic digital divide? What can we do about these challenges? Join us for lively and spirited debate to settle these questions – with live voting for the audience.

Speakers

Tom
Tom Galvin
Executive Director
Digital Citizens Alliance
Moderator
Robert D.
Robert D. Atkinson@RobAtkinsonITIF
President
Information Technology and Innovation Foundation
Respondent
George
George Ford
Chief Economist
Phoenix Center
Respondent
Matthew F.
Matthew F. Wood
Associate Director
Media Access Project
Respondent
Sascha
Sascha Meinrath
Director, Open Technology Initiative
New America Foundation
Respondent
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