Thursday links
Very nice article by J.H. Snider about the Art of Spectrum Lobbying — it turns out that the real game isn't really the license conditions, it's modifying the license conditions after you have the license (which is very hard to follow from the outside). Someone has to figure out how to tell this story so that mainstream media outlets will write about the scandals in this area.
Great piece from FreePress by S. Derek Turner debunking US broadband myths — particularly the old canard that we're so far behind because we have so much low-population-density territory. Baloney! The report states: There is absolutely no correlation between a country's population density and its broadband penetration.
Nice BusinessWeek piece by Jennifer Schenker about the French lead in high-speed internet access infrastructure.
And today's terrific post by Harold Feld explaining why AT&T may have decided it was a good idea to support Chairman Martin in this morning's USA TODAY.
It was a hot, muggy, miserable, spitting-rain day today in NYC. Cabs can't get across Midtown, people are sweating helplessly — but the web keeps producing great trails to follow.
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