Before Net Neutrality: The Surprising 1940s Battle for Radio Freedom [View all]
Before Net Neutrality: The Surprising 1940s Battle for Radio Freedom
by Victor Pickard, Author of
America's Battle for Media Democracy
The Atlantic January 29
In 1947, near the 40th anniversary of his invention of the Audion tube, Lee de Forest, the father of radio, addressed a message to the National Association of Broadcasters that was widely circulated and printed in Time magazine, the Chicago Tribune, and other news outlets:
What have you gentlemen done with my child? He was conceived as a potent instrumentality for culture, fine music, the uplifting of Americas mass intelligence. You have debased this child
made of him a laughing stock
The occasional fine program is periodically smeared with impudent insistence to buy or try
Soap opera without end or sense floods each household daily.
De Forests anguish over radios lost democratic potential echoed across a chorus of media criticism.
His position also evokes a more contemporary debate about a much newer technological infrastructure and its cultural purpose. Recent policy battles over net neutrality may seem unprecedented, but weve faced similar moments in American history.
As we again set policies that define core power relationships for a new medium, we might look to our past to discern lessons for charting our future. For the media system weve inheritedone dominated by a small number of corporations, lightly regulated in terms of public interest protections, and offset by weak public alternativeswas not inevitable or natural; it resulted from the outcomes of specific policy battles, and from specific logics and values triumphing over others.
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http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2015/01/before-net-neutrality-the-surprising-1940s-battle-for-radio-freedom/384924/