Communications change we can believe in?

22.01.2009
Love him or hate him, you've got to respect a guy who won't give up his BlackBerry.

I'm talking about our just-sworn-in President Obama, who famously refuses to give up his BlackBerry (rumors of his doing so are apparently greatly exaggerated). Seems he'd rather risk having his private noodlings publicly immortalized than disconnect from the world.

I know how he feels (hey, I use Google's search engine, which stores my private information for all eternity). So the good news is that for the first time ever, we've got someone in the White House who understands, at a personal level, how communications technologies have changed the way we live.

Moreover, as Network World reporter Brad Reed has amply documented, President Obama has made communications infrastructure a focus of his presidency. Net neutrality and universal broadband are clearly front-and-center on his agenda -- in fact, this may be the first inauguration speech that specifically called out universal broadband.

So, does all this add up to -- I have to say it -- communications change we can believe in? As a previous president might have said, it depends on what the meaning of "change" is. One of the strongest themes of the inaugural speech was that decisions in the present should be grounded in a thorough understanding of the past.

So let's cast a quick look backwards. The Internet may be one of the most successful public-private experiments ever conducted: it was conceived by academic researchers, midwifed by government research funding, and nurtured by the free market. That is, academic researchers, availing themselves of government funding, created the Internet, and during the 1990s it was successfully transitioned to the free market, becoming one of the most powerful economic engines in the world.