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The Internet is Serious Business Film Screening on Sept 30 @ 7:30pm

I, along with Joe Plotkin and a number of other Community Wireless and network innovators, gave a talk a while ago for at People’s Production House. It was a great experience talking about the history of NYCwireless and the Community Wireless movement, and the students were very engaging and asked a lot of thoughtful questions.

The talks were recorded and edited into a movie, which will premiere on September 30. Everyone is invited to attend the screening:

An alien comes to New York City to discover how humans communicate, and is intrigued by the huge networks of cables, routers, and servers that we call the Internet. Who owns all that stuff and how does it work? Join us at Anthology Film Archives for the debut screening of the video “The Internet is Serious Business.” CUP Teaching Artist Helki Frantzen worked with People’s Production House and students from City-As-School to produce this Urban Investigation about the physical infrastructure that undergirds the Internet. Please RSVP to info@anothercupdevelopment.org

The Internet is Serious Business
Tuesday, September 30 at 7:30 pm
Anthology Film Archives
32 Second Avenue (at 2nd St.)
New York, NY
F/V to 2nd Ave
free and open to the public

Filed under: Community Wireless, NYCwireless, , , ,

New ITIF Report: "Explaining International Broadband Leadership"

The Information Technology & Innovation Foundation (ITIF) has just released a new report examining in depth broadband policies in 9 nations, and concludes that while we shouldn’t look to other nations for silver bullets or assume that practices in one nation will automatically work in another, U.S. policymakers can and should look to broadband best practices in other nations.

Learning the right lessons and emulating the right policies here will enable the United States to improve our broadband performance faster than in the absence of proactive policies. The report analyzes the extent to which policy and non-policy factors drive broadband performance, and how broadband policies related to national leadership, incentives, competition, rural access, and consumer demand affect national broadband performance. Based on these findings the report makes a number of recommendations to boost U.S. broadband performance.

Executive Summary (pdf)
Full Report (pdf)

The report is extensive, and has some very good policy recommendations that should be heeded by all levels of government.

Overall, at the broadest level, nations with robust national broadband strategies–that is, those that make broadband a priority, coordinate across agencies, put real resources behind the strategy, and promote both supply and demand–fare better than those without.

Filed under: Community Wireless, Policy, , , ,

IS4CWN '08 Opening Plenary Speakers Announced

I just received this email from Sascha Meinrath about the speakers that have been annouced for the 2008 IS4CWN conference:

IS4CWN is pleased to announce our opening plenary session will feature Amir A. Dossal, Executive Director of the UN Fund for International Partnerships and Agnes Callamard, Executive Director of Article 19.

Amir A. Dossal, guides the development of strategic alliances for the United Nations with corporations, foundations and philanthropists aimed at achieving the Millennium Development Goals. He also oversees the management of the UN Democracy Fund (www.un.org/democracyfund) which aims to strengthen democratic institutions and enhance democratic governance in new or restored democracies. Amir has developed numerous partnerships for the United Nations, including with the Commonwealth Business Council, the European Foundation Centre, Google.org, the LTB Foundation, the Synergos Institute, the US Chamber of Commerce, and others. He has also spearheaded the UN’s engagement in new areas including the technology sector working with Cisco Systems, Ericsson, Microsoft and Vodafone.

Dr. Agnès Callamard is the executive director of ARTICLE XIX, an international human rights organization specializing on freedom of expression and freedom of information. Agnès Callamard has evolved a distinguished career in human rights and humanitarian work. She is a former Chef de Cabinet for the Secretary General of Amnesty International, and as the organization’s Research Policy Coordinator, she led Amnesty’s work on women’s human rights. Agnès has conducted human rights investigations, including on violence against women, in a large number of countries in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. She has founded and led HAP International (the Humanitarian Accountability Partnership) where she oversaw field trials in Afghanistan, Cambodia and Sierra Leone and created the first international self-regulatory body for humanitarian agencies committed to strengthening accountability to disaster-affected populations

More information at: www.wirelesssummit.org

Filed under: Community Wireless, NS4CWN, , , , ,

Doc Searls on Why Hotels and Airports Should Have Free Wi-Fi

Doc Searls (who wrote a great article in Linux Journal about NYCwireless in 2004) has a great blog post on the frustrating world of for-pay Wi-Fi in hotels and airports. NYCwireless has long said that public and semi-public spaces like hotels and airports (and parks!) have a lot more to gain if they make their Wi-Fi networks free and treat them as PR and marketing pages.

The problem here is that the Net is seen by too many hotels and airports as a way to make money rather than to keep customers happy. That’s because it’s seen as a private business rather than a public utility. It would be better for everybody if we admitted that it’s the latter, even when private businesses provide access to it.

Yes, it has costs. So do electricity, water, waste collection and road maintenance, and neither airports nor hotels charge for those — at least not Thing is, the Net is not a steady scarcity, such as parking. Nor is it simple. But making it gratis removes the billing complexities that are one of its main costs and a frequent cause of failure.

So here’s a message to the aviation and hospitality industries: You’re not in the pay toilet business. Quit trying to turn the Internet into one.

Filed under: Community Wireless, News, , , , , ,

Silicon Alley 100

So its a stupid popularity contest, but its a good idea none-the-less. If you think I do good work with NYCwireless, I’d love it if you would vote/nominate me and leave comments. And don’t forget to vote for other Alley folks too!

“Silicon Alley 100 – Dana Spiegel”:http://alley100.bricabox.com/content/475

Filed under: Community Wireless

Laura Forlano's Presentation on Search and the City — A Comparative Analysis of WiFi Hotspots in New York and Budapest

Maxigas of “Indymedia/IMC Hungary”:1 has posted Laura Forlano’s talk on how people use hotspots. She’s been working on this research (as her PhD at Columbia) for quite a while, and has some very interesting results.

Laura gave her presentation at the *The Philosophy of Telecommunications Convergence Conference* at the MTA (Hungarian Academy of Sciences) in Budapest on September 27, 2007.

“MP3, 20min, 30MB”:2
“Quicktime Movie, 20min, 128MB”:3
“Quicktime Movie, 20min, 6MB”:4

[1]http://indy.media.hu
[2]http://metatron.zapto.org/log/audio/filtel/laura-forlano.mp3
[3]http://metatron.zapto.org/log/video/filtel/laura-forlano-opt2.mov
[4]http://metatron.zapto.org/log/video/filtel/laura-forlano-opt.mov

Filed under: Community Wireless, Event, International, NYCwireless

OneWebDay Speech

__This is the text of the speech I gave on Saturday at OneWebDay__:

I want to thank Susan for inviting me here to speak for a few minutes today, and say what an honor it is to be among people who are doing such good work.

Over the past 7 years, NYCwireless has built free, public Wi-Fi hotspots in parks and public spaces throughout New York City. We’ve succeeded beyond what we imagined possible. Today, many parks throughout New York City, including the most popular parks in Manhattan, offer residents and visitors the ability to connect freely to the wireless internet. We’ve inspired people throughout the world, where similar community wireless groups have not only created hotspots, but have lit up entire cities and changed national policy.

We’ve accomplished this great feat because of the dedication of many people. NYCwireless is an all-volunteer organization. We are People Powered, and these people have built and invented amazing things, such as a Linux based Operating System (called pebble) and an open source hotspot management system built by Île Sans Fil in Montreal. We’ve turned around and shared all of the great inventions we’ve created with the rest of the world. Just as many others here today, we see the value in what I believe are the three fundamental pillars of the internet: Participation, Openness, and Sharing. Indeed, these principles are not new—they have been a part of all great civilizations and are fundamental to our culture.

These three principles have powered the internet’s very creation, and have powered many of the great achievements since. Participation, openness, and sharing are essentially people-focussed principles. They drive us to work constructively with one another and broadcast our accomplishments, information, and code globally, freely and openly. This is the power of the internet and the web—connecting people to each other. And NYCwireless and all of the hundreds of other community wireless networks around the world have been trying to extend the reach of the internet, bringing the internet to the people, where the people are, and connecting them with the internet’s global community.

The last decade was about bringing people together online while they are sitting alone at their desks. This next decade will be about bringing people together face-to-face, and enabling them to reach out to the rest of the world. Making this kind of localism a part of the global internet is critical to building a more participatory and open internet. People accomplish more when they work face-to-face. This is the promise of public, open wireless networks, and we’ve seen it played out countless times locally and globally.

We stand on the precipice of this future, and yet there are still dangers ahead for the evolution of the internet. There are still people in this very city who cannot get high-speed connections, to say nothing of the millions of Americans who are cut off from this great resource. And there is a serious lack of competition within the telecom and cable industries that prevents the distribution of affordable, ubiquitous connectivity and the availability of truly high-speed networks, like the hundred megabit and gigabit ones that exist in parts of europe and asia. Cellular companies have created walled gardens and usage limiting policies that don’t allow open and complete access to the entirety of the internet. And the threat of a non-neutral internet in America threatens the communications of the millions of individuals and small companies that have filled the internet with the richness of their ideas and their information.

The culture of the monopolistic phone and cable companies and proprietary software companies have polluted the openness of our society and our information. The greatest successes of the digital age have been driven by those same fundamental principles of the internet: participation, openness, and sharing.

Each and every one of us must continue to work to ensure an open and participatory internet. NYCwireless and other wireless activists, including even large companies like Google, are working to reform this country’s spectrum and telecom policies. The amazing creation of community wireless networks happened because we had this tiny bit of unlicensed spectrum that was given back to the people and made available for free use by all Americans. Technology companies ran with this sliver of wavelength, and created an entire industry around Wi-Fi. But it is not enough. We’ve accomplished so much with only 50 Mhz of shared spectrum. Imagine what we could accomplish with more.

All of us have the responsibility of continuing to grow the internet through its founding principles of participation, openness, and sharing. We, as a culture, have done great things, but there are countless more great things to do, and more battles to be fought. Beware those who would lock away the keys of our society behind paid gateways and closed networks. Participate in building open networks. Creating free and open information resources online. Share your knowledge with the rest of the world. And bring the internet to the people.

Filed under: Community Wireless, Event, New York City, NYCwireless

NYCwireless August Meeting: Aug 30th at 7:00pm

All are invited – please re-post everywhere!

_Please note earlier starting time for meeting_

h2. Location and Time

*Wednesday, October 25th, 2006 at 7:00pm*
*”Bway.net”:http://maps.google.com/?q=568%20Broadway,%20New%20York,%20NY*
568 Broadway at Prince St, NE corner
Suite 404
New York, NY 10012
(lobby sign-in required)

h2. Agenda

*Michael Hallinan and Tejpaul Bhatia, GlobeCo2020*

GlobeCo2020 is sharing the internet with the developing world. We are a media services company that delivers digital content into emerging markets. We aim to develop sustainable business models for broadband networks. We are focused on bridging the global digital divide due to poor infrastructure and unsustainable business models in the developing world.

Join us at NYCWireless to help answer how wireless technologies can be used to bridge the global digital divide. Topics covered:
* Wireless infrastructure in the developing world
* Content delivery as a business model
* A “franchise model” for wireless networks
* Emphasis on brainstorming, questions and feedback

*Michael Rourk Hallinan*
As a Captain in the Marine Corps, Michael has six years of experience planning, installing, operating and maintaining over 20 wireless and satellite voice, video and data systems in Australia, Kenya, Kuwait, Japan, Korea, Philippines, Iraq and Hurricane Katrina ravaged parts of the US.

Michael received the Navy-Marine Corps Achievement Medal for leading 50 Marines with “inexhaustible energy” during the final combat offensive in Fallujah, Iraq. He also received a Navy Commendation Medal for leading 50 engineers in deploying wireless networks throughout Asia and the Middle East. He is an active member of the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association and founder of Semper Fi House, a community support initiative for Marines.

Prior to the Marine Corps, Michael founded Student Media Group, which distributed student media nationally for companies such as AT&T and Citibank. Michael has also held various positions at Merrill Lynch, the US Senate and the US Department of Justice.

Michael holds a Bachelor of Arts in International Affairs from Georgetown University. He is a board member of The Way of Grace Development Corporation, which is developing social and physical infrastructure in the war torn country of Liberia. Michael has worked with the SoCal FreeNet project, which brings free wireless access to lower-economic neighborhoods in San Diego.

*Tejpaul Bhatia*

Tejpaul Bhatia is the founder of Tej Media Networks, a consulting company that provides digital technology and strategy services to global media companies including ESPN, NBC, SONY, ABC, Brightcove and Corpus.

Tejpaul was most recently senior manager of international business strategy for ESPN, where he planned and launched new media businesses in Mexico, Latin America, Asia, Australia and Europe. He joined ESPN in 2002 to build the underlying infrastructure for acquiring, distributing and tracking video on multiple digital platforms and was responsible for conceiving, developing and distributing ESPN360, the company’s customizable global broadband service.

“NYCwireless”:3 monthly meetings are held on the last Wednesday of every month. They are free, and open to all, RSVP not required.

“NYCwireless”:3 is a non-profit organization that advocates for, and enables the growth of free, public wireless networks.

[3]http://www.nycwireless.net

Filed under: Community Wireless, Event, New York City, NYCwireless

NYCwireless July Meeting: Jul 25th at 7:00pm

All are invited – please re-post everywhere!

_Please note earlier starting time for meeting_

h2. Location and Time

*Wednesday, October 25th, 2006 at 7:00pm*
*”Bway.net”:http://maps.google.com/?q=568%20Broadway,%20New%20York,%20NY*
568 Broadway at Prince St, NE corner
Suite 404
New York, NY 10012
(lobby sign-in required)

h2. Agenda

-Ryan Sarver, Skyhook Wireless

Ryan is in charge of Product Development for Skyhook Wireless which includes products like Loki and Loki Mobile. He is also the Chair of LocationAware.org and is an Invited Expert for the W3C Ubiquitous Web Applications Working Group.

“NYCwireless”:3 monthly meetings are held on the last Wednesday of every month. They are free, and open to all, RSVP not required.

“NYCwireless”:3 is a non-profit organization that advocates for, and enables the growth of free, public wireless networks.

[3]http://www.nycwireless.net

Filed under: Community Wireless, Event, New York City, NYCwireless

Community Wireless Summit May 18-20, 2007 — Washington, DC.

Here’s the announcement for the “International Summit for Community Wireless Networks”:1 that’s happing in the middle of may. This is a great conference, and I’ll be hosting a panel on holistic design for community and muni-wireless networks.

bq. *INTERNATIONAL SUMMIT TO ADDRESS FUTURE OF BROADBAND*

bq. Community Technology Leaders from Six Continents to Participate

bq. Champaign-Urbana, I.L., April 18 — The CUWiN Foundation and the Center for Community Informatics (CCI) will host the International Summit for Community Wireless Networks (“http://WirelessSummit.org”:1) from May 18-20, 2007 at Loyola College in Columbia, Maryland.

bq. The summit is the largest gathering of wireless network developers, technology and policy experts, and community organizers working to build universal, low-cost broadband networks around the world. “We are proud to host an event that brings together technologists and activists committed to universal access to informatics,” said Marco Figueiredo, CCI Director.

bq. “The International Summit for Community Wireless Networks explores the opportunities and challenges facing the growing movement to build community and municipal broadband networks,” said Sascha Meinrath, co-founder and Executive Director of CUWiN. “This event showcases cutting-edge technologies and develops political strategies to increase digital inclusion.”

bq. Since the first National Summit for Community Wireless Networks in 2004, over 300 Community Internet and municipal broadband projects have sprung up in the United States alone. The Summit will focus on how these networks can better serve their target populations, the policies needed to support broader deployment of community wireless systems, and the latest technological and software innovations.

bq. Presenters at previous summits have included FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein, Jim Baller of the Baller Herbst Law Group, Annie Collins of Fiber for Our Future, Mark Cooper of the Consumer Federation of America, Harold Feld of Media Access Project, Robert W. McChesney of Free Press, Matt Rantanen of Tribal Digital Village, Greg Richardson of Civitium LLC, Paul Smith of the Center for Neighborhood Technologies, Jim Snider of the New America Foundation, Dana Spiegel of NYCwireless, Esme Vos of Muniwireless.com and many other luminaries.

bq. “High-speed broadband access is the electricity of the 21st century, yet many rural and poorer urban communities are being left off the grid,” said Ben Scott, policy director of Free Press, the DC-based policy think-tank. “The innovators and organizers at the International Summit for Community Wireless Networks are blazing the trail to make broadband affordable and available to everyone.”

bq. *About CUWiN (“http://www.cuwin.net”:2)*

bq. The CUWiN Foundation is a world-renowned coalition of wireless developers and community volunteers committed to providing low-cost, do-it-yourself, community-controlled alternatives to contemporary broadband models. CUWiN is fiscally sponsored by Grassroots.org, a non-profit 501c3. CUWiN’s mission is to develop decentralized, community-owned networks that foster democratic cultures and local content. Through advocacy and through our commitment to open source technology, CUWiN supports organic networks that grow to meet the needs of their communities.

bq. *About CCI (“http://cci.cs.loyola.edu”:3)*

bq. The Center for Community Informatics engages Loyola College’s students, faculty and staff in supporting the creation and deployment of informatics tools for community empowerment. CCI develops the Community Telecenter Free Software Toolset; promotes awareness events for the Loyola College community; offer courses in Community Informatics; promotes Digital Inclusion Conferences; researches and develops human-friendly technologies to facilitate inclusion in the New Society of Knowledge; and, evaluates, documents and develops sustainable models for Universal Access to Informatics.

[1]http://WirelessSummit.org
[2]http://cci.cs.loyola.edu
[3]http://www.cuwin.net

Filed under: Community Wireless, NS4CWN, NYCwireless

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