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The Digital Broadband Migration: The Dynamics of Disruptive Innovation
February 13, 2011 - February 14, 2011
@ University of Colorado-Boulder
Video
To view video recordings of the event, click here.
The Internet ecosystem - consisting of network providers, application developers, content creators and end users - continues to be a source of disruptive innovation. It provides enormous benefit to consumers everywhere while continuing to present significant challenges to existing business models and to policymakers and regulators. Silicon Flatiron's 2011 Digital Broadband Migration Conference, entitled "The Dynamics of Disruptive Innovation," will focus on the sources and nature of these disruptive advances, how they can be nurtured rather than stifled, and how any negative consequences for consumers can be minimized or averted. The conference will begin with a tutorial overview of the evolution of the Internet, including recent disruptive developments. The first panel will put these developments in perspective by addressing such questions as: (1) what creates the necessary conditions for innovation in networked industries; (2) how those conditions can be cultivated; and (3) what conditions tend to smother rather than encourage innovation? The second panel will pick up this thread and address alternative governance structures and processes that can be used to create positive conditions for continued innovation while minimizing, for example, the need for counterproductive government intrusion in the market. The third panel will concentrate on the particular challenges faced by the content-based sector and on possible business models that may allow that sector to flourish in a drastically changed environment. The fourth and final panel will return to the issue of governance by focusing on the role that existing, evolved, or new multi-stakeholder entities such as standards groups and self-regulation bodies can play in meeting the twin goals of facilitating continued rapid innovation while providing efficient and effective consumer protection. Several outstanding keynote speakers will complement the tutorial and the individual panels. Silicon Flatirons looks forward to another successful Digital Broadband Migration Conference and we hope that you will be able to join us February 13-14, 2011.
| Sunday, February 13, 2011 |
- Dale Hatfield
Senior Fellow
Silicon Flatirons Center
Adjunct Professor
University of Colorado
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- Vinton Cerf
Vice President
Chief Internet Evangelist
Google
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- Aneesh Chopra
United States Chief Technology Officer
Office of Science and Technology Policy
The White House
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- Vinton Cerf
Vice President
Chief Internet Evangelist
Google
- Aneesh Chopra
United States Chief Technology Officer
Office of Science and Technology Policy
The White House
- Brad Feld
Managing Director
Foundry Group
- Michael Fricklas
Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary
Viacom Inc.
- Michael Powell
President & CEO
National Cable & Telecommunications Association (NCTA)
Former Chairman
Federal Communications Commission
- Dan Reed
Corporate Vice President of Technology Policy and Strategy
Microsoft
Moderator
- Phil Weiser
Senior Advisor for Technology and Innovation
National Economic Council
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Moderator
Presenters
- Mark Cooper
Research Director
Consumer Federation of America
Senior Adjunct Fellow
Silicon Flatirons Center
- Susan Crawford
Professor of Law
Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University
- Sharon Gillett
Chief, Wireline Competition Bureau
Federal Communications Commission
Discussants
- Robert Quinn
Senior Vice President-Federal Regulatory & Chief Privacy Officer
AT&T
- Howard Shelanski
Director, Bureau of Economics
Federal Trade Commission
- Stephen Williams
Circuit Judge
U.S. Court of Appeals, D.C. Circuit
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Moderator
- Paul Ohm
Associate Professor of Law
University of Colorado
Presenters
- Paul de Sa
Chief, Office of Strategic Planning & Policy Analysis
Federal Communications Commission
- Mark Lemley
William H. Neukom Professor of Law
Stanford University
- Gigi B. Sohn
President and Chief Executive Officer
Public Knowledge
Senior Adjunct Fellow, Silicon Flatirons Center
Discussants
- Susan Fox
Vice President for Government Relations
The Walt Disney Company
- Michael Gallagher
President and Chief Executive Officer
Entertainment Software Association
- David Hyman
General Counsel and Secretary
Netflix
- Maureen O'Connell
Senior Vice President of Regulatory and Government Affairs
News Corporation
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| Monday, February 14, 2011 |
- Dale Hatfield
Senior Fellow
Silicon Flatirons Center
Adjunct Professor
University of Colorado
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Moderator
- Jonathan Sallet
Partner
O'Melveny & Myers LLP
Senior Adjunct Fellow
Silicon Flatirons Center
Presenters
- Marc Berejka
Senior Policy Advisor
Office of the Secretary, Department of Commerce
- Douglas Sicker
DBC Endowed Professor, Computer Science
Director, Interdisciplinary Telecommunications Program
University of Colorado
- Peter Swire
Co-Chair
W3C Tracking Protection Working Group
Professor of Law
Ohio State University
Discussants
- James Assey
Executive Vice President
National Cable & Telecommunications Association
- Kathryn C. Brown
Senior Vice President, Public Policy & Corporate Responsibility
Verizon
- Leslie Harris
President and Chief Executive Officer
Center for Democracy and Technology
Senior Adjunct Fellow, Silicon Flatirons Center
- Jack Waters
Chief Technology Officer
Level 3 Communications
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- Dale Hatfield
Senior Fellow
Silicon Flatirons Center
Adjunct Professor
University of Colorado
- Phil Weiser
Senior Advisor for Technology and Innovation
National Economic Council
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- Larry Strickling
Assistant Secretary for Communications and Information
National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA)
U.S. Department of Commerce
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Conference Summary
For a conference summary by Beth Hartman and Kent Lund click here.
Video
To view a video of the conference click here.
Speaker Presentations
Click the links below to download speaker presentations from DBM 2011.
- Marc BerejkaMulti-Stakeholder-Ism: Making it Fly
- Vinton CerfInternet Speculations
- Aneesh ChopraRemarks to Silicon Flatirons
- Mark CooperCrowd Sourcing Enforcement: Building a Platform for Participatory Regulation in the Digital Infromation Age
- Susan CrawfordGovernance of the Looming Cable Monopoly
- Paul de SaThe Dynamics of Disruptive Innovation: How will content-based business succedd?
- Chairman GenachowskiVideo
- Sharon GillettThe Connect America Fund & Intercarrier Compensation Reform Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
- Fred Kahn TributeVideo
- Doug SickerNew Models of Governance - The Roles of Federal Agencies, Advisory Committees, Advisory Groups, Standards Bodies and More
- Gigi B. SohnRhetoric and Reality: Can Content Companies and Copyright Reformers Find Common Ground?
- Peter SwirePrivacy Institutions in the Federal Government
Readings
Susan P. Crawford, "The Looming Cable Monopoly." Yale Law and Policy Review Inter Alia, November 30th, 2010. John Curran, "Stimulus funds help wire rural homes for the Internet." Daily News Los Angeles, January 29th, 2011.
Harold Furchtgott-Roth, "FCC Confuses Expropriation with Incentives." Forbes Magazine, January 27th, 2011. Helen E. Golding and Lee L. Selwyn, "Revisiting the Regulatory Status of Broadband Internet Access: A Policy Framework for Net Neutrality and an Open Competitive Internet." Federal Communications Law Journal, 63 no1 D 2010. Cecilia Kang, "Obama administration looks to Defense Department airwaves for commercial use." The Washington Post, January 31st, 2011. Jennifer Martinez, "Blackburn: The next tech champion?" Politico, January 27th, 2011. Jonathan E. Nuechterlein, "Antitrust Oversight of an Antitrust Dispute: An Institutional Perspective on the Net Neutrality Debate." Journal on Telecommunications and High Technology Law 7 no1 Wint 2009. Catherine J.K. Sandoval, "Disclosure, Deception and Deep-Packet Inspection: The Role of the Federal Trade Commission Act's Deceptive Conduct Prohibitions in the Net Neutrality Debate." Fordham Law Review, 78 no2 N 2009. Anne Swardson, "Alfred Kahn, Father of 1970s Airline Deregulation, Dies at 93." Business Week Magazine, December 29th, 2010. "Technical Report: An Estimate of Infringing Use of the Internet." Envisional Ltd., Cambridge, January 2011.
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