1st Edition

The Internet and Telecommunications Policy Selected Papers From the 1995 Telecommunications Policy Research Conference

Edited By Gerald W. Brock, Gregory L. Rosston Copyright 1996
    332 Pages
    by Routledge

    332 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book is based on the Telecommunications Policy Research Conference which reports on research into telecommunications policy issues. While the conference is now a respectable 23 years old, this is only the second printed edition of selected papers. A new law, the Telecommunications Act of 1996, accelerated the process of integration in the communication industry and made major revisions to the Communications Act of 1934 that increase the incentive for integration within the industry. Although the papers in this volume were written prior to the passage of the new law, their importance is merely enhanced by it. They deal with fundamental, complex policy problems that arise when previously separate segments of the telecommunications industry are integrated, rather than specific regulatory rules that are likely to be changed under the new law. With the passage of this law, the timeframe for developing appropriate policies for an integrated industry has been shortened. Changes expected to occur over a period of several years will now likely occur much more rapidly. These papers provide insights to help guide the transition in the industry.

    Divided into five parts, this volume:
    * deals with problems of transforming local exchange telephone service from a monopoly in each geographical area to an interconnected competitive network of networks,
    * considers the pricing problems that arise in an integrated network carrying traffic of different types across multiple service providers,
    * examines the problem of achieving interoperability in complex networks,
    * considers issues of intellectual property that arise in expected integrated networks of the future, and
    * discusses electronic publication of scholarly journals, copyright protection, and the applicability of copyright law in the digital age.

    Contents: D.P. Reed, Foreword. G.W. Brock, G.L. Rosston, Introduction. Part I:Local Competition. T.J. Brennan, Is the Theory Behind U.S. v AT&T Applicable Today? R. Stannard, The Rochester Local Exchange Market Nine Months Later. N. Economides, L.J. White, Access and Interconnection Pricing: How Efficient Is the "Efficient Component Pricing Rule?" Part II:Pricing Problems in Complex Networks. Q. Wang, M.A. Sirbu, J.M. Peha, Pricing of ATM Network Services. W.H. Lehr, M.B.H. Weiss, The Political Economy of Congestion Charges and Settlements in Packet Networks. S. Shenker, D. Clark, D. Estrin, S. Herzog, Pricing in Computer Networks: Reshaping the Research Agenda. Part III:Interoperability. D.P. Reed, The Transition to Digital Television Distribution Systems: A Technological View of Expected Interoperability. C. Weare, Organizing Interoperability: Economic Institutions and the Development of Interoperability. N. Omoigui, M. Sirbu, C. Eldering, N. Himayat, Comparing Integrated Broadband Architectures From an Economic and Public Policy Perspective. Part IV:Intellectual Property. J. MacKie-Mason, S. Shenker, H.R. Varian, Service Architecture and Content Provision: The Network Provider as Editor. J.M. Foley, Corporate Free Speech Rights and Diversity of Content Control: An Emerging Dilemma. R.G. Noll, The Economics of Scholarly Publications and the Information Superhighway. Y. Yuan, S.F. Roehrig, On the Duration of Copywright Protection for Digital Information. J. Litman, Revising Copyright Law for the Information Age.

    Biography

    Gerald W. Brock (Edited by) ,  Gregory L. Rosston (Edited by)