Reason.com - Free Minds and Free Markets
Reason logo Reason logo
  • Latest
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Archives
    • Subscribe
    • Crossword
  • Video
  • Podcasts
    • All Shows
    • The Reason Roundtable
    • The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie
    • The Soho Forum Debates
    • Just Asking Questions
    • The Best of Reason Magazine
    • Why We Can't Have Nice Things
  • Volokh
  • Newsletters
  • Donate
    • Donate Online
    • Donate Crypto
    • Ways To Give To Reason Foundation
    • Torchbearer Society
    • Planned Giving
  • Subscribe
    • Reason Plus Subscription
    • Print Subscription
    • Gift Subscriptions
    • Subscriber Support

Login Form

Create new account
Forgot password

Policy

FTC Woos Wu

Peter Suderman | 2.8.2011 4:56 PM

Share on FacebookShare on XShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly versionCopy page URL
Media Contact & Reprint Requests

Columbia Law's Timothy Wu, the tech-policy guru behind net neutrality, is set to advise the Federal Trade Commission, according to The Wall Street Journal:

Silicon Valley has a new fear factor. Columbia Law School professor Tim Wu, an influential academic and author who popularized the term "net neutrality," has been appointed senior advisor to the Federal Trade Commission.

Mr. Wu, 38, will start his new position on Feb. 14 in the FTC's Office of Policy Planning, and will help the agency to develop policies that affect the Internet and the market for mobile communications and services. The FTC said Mr. Wu will work in the unit until July 31. Mr. Wu, who is taking a leave from Columbia, said that to work after that date he would have to request a further leave from the university.

In Mr. Wu's view, which he laid out in a book published last year called The Master Switch, new information technologies follow a predictable cycle in which open and free systems eventually become controlled by a single corporation or cartel. Mr. Wu believes the Internet may follow a similar pattern, as a few companies emerge to dominate key sectors: Google in the online search market, Amazon.com in retail, Apple in digital media and Facebook in social networking.

"There is a sense that the Internet is becoming more consolidated," said Mr. Wu.
Mr. Wu, an offbeat academic who has attended the popular Burning Man festival several times, says the next big technology policy issue is figuring out the rules of the road for these emerging platforms, and that is what he will focus on. "I would be satisfied with getting together the rules for the Internet platform," he said.

It's not entirely clear what sort of rules he's referring to. As I describe at length in my feature on net neutrality in the March issue, the Federal Communications Commission has already slogged through the long process of enacting rules to govern the Internet's core infrastructure. But the Journal's report seems to imply that, in his role at the FTC, Wu will focus on setting up rules to govern the the central players at the edge of the network—big search and content providers like Amazon, Apple, and Google. I guess it's not enough to regulate just one part of the Internet.

Wu makes an appearance in my net neutrality feature, which you can read here. You can also find Adam Thierer's review of Wu's new book, The Master Switch, in the same issue. Thierer's piece isn't online yet, but that's why you should subscribe!

Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

NEXT: The Unseen Consequences of "Green Jobs"

Peter Suderman is features editor at Reason.

PolicyScience & TechnologyInternetTelecommunications Policy
Share on FacebookShare on XShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly versionCopy page URL
Media Contact & Reprint Requests

Hide Comments (60)

Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.

  1. Ice Nine   14 years ago

    So, the bona fides for Wu's being "offbeat" is his attendance at Burning Man?

    1. juris imprudent   14 years ago

      Maybe Doherty has a shot at advising the FCC then. Or me. Sheesh.

      1. Ice Nine   14 years ago

        BM itself is surely offbeat. But when I was there in '00 & '01 the eccentricity of the attendees was already starting to be diluted by mere spectators. That has only gotten worse since and attendance is hardly a credential of "offbeatness".

  2. R C Dean   14 years ago

    Jeebus on a freakin' pogo stick.

    They don't even have jurisdiction over the infrastructure, and it looks like they are going to claim jurisdiction over content?

    If anyone can afford mo' betta lawyers than the government, its Amazon, Apple, or Google.

    I wonder how the nobs in Silicon Valley feel now about Obama. I wonder, are their panties still wet? Or are they starting to bunch up, just a little?

    1. Jeffersonian   14 years ago

      And here Lenin thought he'd buy the rope to hang the last capitalist from said capitalist. I bet he never dreamed the capitalist would be donating the fucking thing.

  3. Aresen   14 years ago

    The FTC hires a consultant who will tell them to do what they already want to do.

    Oh the surprise.

    1. Ice Nine   14 years ago

      I suspect that their skivvies actually started to dry a bit after they learned, a year after they elected him, of Obama's seeming disdain for contract law in the GM and Chrysler take-overs, and of his thoughts on executive compensation.

      1. Ice Nine   14 years ago

        Maddening reply system here. Reply was to RCDean.

  4. JW   14 years ago

    "There is a sense that the Internet is becoming more consolidated," said Mr. Wu.
    Mr. Wu, an offbeat academic who has attended the popular Burning Man festival several times, says the next big technology policy issue is figuring out the rules of the road for these emerging platforms, and that is what he will focus on. "I would be satisfied with getting together the rules for the Internet platform," he said.

    Really? Did you predict Facebook when MySpace was dominant? Were you one of the shrieking heads that warned of imminent doom from the Time-Warner-AOL merger? Did you foresee the rise of Google from nothing to 800 lb gorilla? I presume you got in very early on the Netflix IPO, since you knew online streaming would become such a big thing. Obviously, you must have been part of the team that envisioned the iPhone and Android.

    No? You didn't accurately anticipate any of these dynamic changes? Then kindly fuck off.

    1. Apple's iPhone   14 years ago

      We'd like to see a few regulations placed upon the smartphone industry.

    2. Episiarch   14 years ago

      But dude, he, like, goes to Burning Man and stuff! He has visions! None of them will come true, of course...

  5. Rich   14 years ago

    "There is a sense that the Internet is becoming more consolidated," said Mr. Wu.

    With all due respect, what does that even mean?

    1. JW   14 years ago

      It means there are deep pockets for the fleecing and new regulatory powers to be created out of thin air.

      We can't have these successful companies cattin' about not knowing who's the boss, now can we?

      1. Rich   14 years ago

        Whew. Because of the Burning Man thing I thought it might be like "'I felt a great disturbance in the Force', said Obi-Wan."

    2. Wu   14 years ago

      "There is a sense that the Internet is becoming more consolidated," said Mr. Wu.

      With all due respect, what does that even mean?

      A sense. A SENSE, DAMNIT! Don't you have a sense that it's true?! You lack vision if you don't get the sense!

  6. TheZeitgeist   14 years ago

    I am guessing he updates his Facebook page regularly and has it synced with Twitter through his iPhone which he uses to find his favorite hip restaurant on Google Maps.

    Wu's contention of the internet becoming more and more consolidated I is just him projecting his own journey of being a digital sheep.

    1. Paul   14 years ago

      It's the same genetic brain defect that makes pundits continuously repeat the notion that our choices in media are becoming fewer and fewer.

  7. TeamBarstool   14 years ago

    open and free systems eventually become controlled by a single corporation or cartel

    Doesn't he mean that when a company gets large enough to purchase a few congress critters, these critters will enact laws that raise the barrier of entry.

    1. TheZeitgeist   14 years ago

      Yeah, and he's now the critter of the congress-critters' critters. Or something like that.

  8. Benjamin   14 years ago

    Not to worry. Pretty soon some up-start tech company will come along and clean Google or Amazon's clocks. Then as these behemoths go down the drain they can cry out..."But we're too big to fail!!" And the FCC will spearhead the push towards a nice big juicy bail-out, because America can't afford to lose these beacons of American economic might.

  9. Paul   14 years ago

    In Mr. Wu's view, which he laid out in a book published last year called The Master Switch, new information technologies follow a predictable cycle in which open and free systems eventually become controlled by a single corporation or cartel. Mr. Wu believes the Internet may follow a similar pattern, as a few companies emerge to dominate key sectors: Google in the online search market, Amazon.com in retail, Apple in digital media and Facebook in social networking.

    CompuServe in online services, AOL Time Warner in internet content provision...

    1. Friendster   14 years ago

      Net Neutrality would have preserved us.

    2. MySpace   14 years ago

      Amen, brother.

    3. Pets.com   14 years ago

      Ten years too late, this Net Neutrality thing. We coulda been a contender.

    4. Prodigy   14 years ago

      No one even remembers us...

      Imagine what an ounce of regulation could have done to preserve our existence.

    5. Earthlink   14 years ago

      To think, we could have dominated the internet world with our 56k dialup modem banks had someone suggested Net Neutrality back in our time.

    6. Earthlink   14 years ago

      To think, we could have dominated the internet world with our 56k dialup modem banks had someone suggested Net Neutrality back in our time.

      1. Earthlink   14 years ago

        Fucking busy signals! GAH!

        1. Earthlink's Biggest Fan   14 years ago

          I loved when the phone would ring and we'd lose you for a bit.

    7. Green Text Chatrooms   14 years ago

      Don't forget our no avatar-having social connections. If only the would've regulated the bandwidth.

  10. Paul   14 years ago

    Has anyone noticed how Microsoft is no longer talked about as dominating everything in the tech industry?

    1. JW   14 years ago

      Only because of the brave and selfless anti-trust regulators, and years of their litigation, can we say this.

      No, fleeter and better competition has nothing to do with this.

    2. In Time of War   14 years ago

      Don't worry, the feds will be bailing them out some day.

  11. ?   14 years ago

    It's not entirely clear what sort of rules he's referring to.

    From what he's said elsewhere, he refers to the kind of rules that will "prolong the benign phase" of Amazon's, Apple's, Facebook's and Google's "monopolies." So, a list of big names will trade compliance (and a role in enforcing others' compliance) for barriers to entry...I guess.

    But I can never make much literal sense of anything Wu says or writes. Every sentence seems like a buzzword with filler and equivocation hanging off it, doing nothing. He sounds like a cunning but dumb guy bluffing his way through a job interview.
    Excuse me. There is a sense that he's a cunning but dumb guy bluffing his way through a job interview.

  12. R C Dean   14 years ago

    From what he's said elsewhere, he refers to the kind of rules that will "prolong the benign phase" of Amazon's, Apple's, Facebook's and Google's "monopolies."

    I'm a little unclear on how a business with dozens of competitors that are exactly as accessible to me as it is can be a "monopoly".

    1. Paul   14 years ago

      A monopoly as defined by politicians is any leading entity in a market segment where said politicians cannot conceive of how said leading entity will ever be displaced, lose market share or be supplanted by a new paradigm not yet even thought of.

      This is the way it will always be because I cannot conceive of it being any different. Therefore we must regulate.

      1. cynical   14 years ago

        I always thought a "monopoly" was an up-and-coming, vibrant business that was currently dedicating its financial resources to growth and investment, rather than campaign contributions.

        I believe that's how you can measure where Google went from a "promising startup" to a "scary, data-hungry monopoly".

    2. Pro Libertate   14 years ago

      Yahoo's search monopoly must be stopped! As must Prodigy's e-mail monopoly!

      1. Infoseek   14 years ago

        I get NO respect...

        1. Gopher   14 years ago

          Pff, ^^this guy...

          He doesn't know the meaning of "no respect".

          1. Lycos   14 years ago

            Piss off you little shit!

      2. PINE   14 years ago

        What did Prodigy ever do for e-mail?

  13. In Time of War   14 years ago

    Maybe I'm not reading this correctly...is he saying to keep the internet free we have to have a lot of rules controlling it?

    1. Paul   14 years ago

      Egypt, a country with strict controls over ISP's and how they operate, is a case for net neutrality.

      Yes, you're reading this correctly. More government control will avert government abuse of the internet.

  14. Ass of Catalonia   14 years ago

    Isn't it obvious that a regulatory bureaucracy created by elected representatives of a two party state beholden to special interests would produce more market freedom than competition between companies who maintain market share based on the aggregate economic decisions of their potential customers?

    I mean, jeez, if I actually had interrupt my internet service to punish a company with whom's policies I disagree... what's free about that?

    /sarcasm

  15. Colonel_Angus   14 years ago

    Fuck the FTC.

  16. The FCC   14 years ago

    Stop resisting... stop resisting...

  17. GHASR%tdr   14 years ago

    A "good idea" requires 3 things:

    #1. Screwing the other guys.
    #2. ?
    #3. Legal power to enforce #1 & #2.

  18. Corduroy   14 years ago

    I have a sense that the feds have a monopoly on bullshit

    1. R C Dean   14 years ago

      Then you must be new here.

  19. Ass of Catalonia   14 years ago

    Can someone explain to me how people can believe that it is legitimate when people force their values on others through the political system as long as enough people agree; however, if enough people support a company that it becomes a monopoly then it is some kind of great injustice?

    Is it merely a utilitarian argument based on the institutional brainwashing that government serves it's constituents for good whereas businesses exploit their customers for profit? Or is it based on the farce that government is accountable but companies are not? Is it that people assume that government agrees with them and that they stand to benefit so all other considerations go out the window?

    What is it?

    It seems to me that people are worried about fraud, "anti-competitive" practices, and monopoly profits because of the size and market share of large players on the internet. I can understand their concerns. What makes no sense to me is for the solution to have them be regulated by the largest monopoly in the USA which has a history of engaging in fraud and failing to prevent or prosecute private fraud, enacting anti-competitive statutes to favor special interests, and reaping the greatest monopoly profits of all through taxation and monetary policy.

    what the fuck

    1. Michael Ejercito   14 years ago

      Can someone explain to me how people can believe that it is legitimate when people force their values on others through the political system as long as enough people agree; however, if enough people support a company that it becomes a monopoly then it is some kind of great injustice?

      Monopolies often rely of government protection.

  20. Mr Whipple   14 years ago

    Threadjack:

    From C4L via Facebook:

    Thanks to your efforts, the House just rejected extending three of the PATRIOT Act's provisions on tonight's vote! The fight is only beginning in Congress, but this is a major victory for civil liberties.

    http://www.facebook.com/CampaignforLiberty

    1. Paul   14 years ago

      WASHINGTON ? In a misstep for the new Republican leadership, the House has rejected legislation to extend for nine months three key surveillance tools that are part of the nation's post-Sept. 11 anti-terror law.

      The Republicans brought the bill to the floor Tuesday under a procedure requiring a two-thirds majority for passage. But with 26 Republicans joining Democrats in opposing the extension of the USA Patriot Act provisions, the vote was 277-148, seven short of what was needed for passage.

      Interesting language. In a Republican "misstep", 26 Republicans joined Democrats...

      What's the breakdown of this vote? Were those 26 Republicans joining Democrats tea party-backed Repubs?

      If so, then the teabaggers might actually be living up to their rhetoric and I would hardly call that a misstep for Republicans.

      1. Mr Whipple   14 years ago

        I would imagine one of those Republican votes was RP.

      2. Mr Whipple   14 years ago

        Vote count here:

        http://clerk.house.gov/evs/2011/roll026.xml

  21. Jeffersonian   14 years ago

    We're going to fuck this net thing up, too, ain't we?

  22. juris imprudent   14 years ago

    The Internet is doomed. First the FCC, now the FTC. The FUC must be next.

  23. Virginia   14 years ago

    It's as if this guy has no idea what he's talking about.

  24. www.iphone-5-release.net   14 years ago

    http://www.iphone-5-release.net | We Are The Top Source of Up To Date News, Information, and Rumors About the iPhone 5, iPhone 6. Our Team Updates You Hourly So You Are Always Informed.(http://iphone-5-release.net/) iphone 5

Please log in to post comments

Mute this user?

  • Mute User
  • Cancel

Ban this user?

  • Ban User
  • Cancel

Un-ban this user?

  • Un-ban User
  • Cancel

Nuke this user?

  • Nuke User
  • Cancel

Un-nuke this user?

  • Un-nuke User
  • Cancel

Flag this comment?

  • Flag Comment
  • Cancel

Un-flag this comment?

  • Un-flag Comment
  • Cancel

Latest

How Trump's Tariffs and Immigration Policies Could Make Housing Even More Expensive

M. Nolan Gray | From the July 2025 issue

Photo: Dire Wolf De-extinction

Ronald Bailey | From the July 2025 issue

How Making GLP-1s Available Over the Counter Can Unlock Their Full Potential

Jeffrey A. Singer | From the June 2025 issue

Bob Menendez Does Not Deserve a Pardon

Billy Binion | 5.30.2025 5:25 PM

12-Year-Old Tennessee Boy Arrested for Instagram Post Says He Was Trying To Warn Students of a School Shooting

Autumn Billings | 5.30.2025 5:12 PM

Recommended

  • About
  • Browse Topics
  • Events
  • Staff
  • Jobs
  • Donate
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Media
  • Shop
  • Amazon
Reason Facebook@reason on XReason InstagramReason TikTokReason YoutubeApple PodcastsReason on FlipboardReason RSS

© 2024 Reason Foundation | Accessibility | Privacy Policy | Terms Of Use

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

r

Do you care about free minds and free markets? Sign up to get the biggest stories from Reason in your inbox every afternoon.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

This modal will close in 10

Reason Plus

Special Offer!

  • Full digital edition access
  • No ads
  • Commenting privileges

Just $25 per year

Join Today!