In an appearance on CNBC Friday, Google CEO Eric Schmidt took himself out of the running to be the Obama Administration’s promised chief technology officer,
so we can stick in fork in that really bad idea. Asked by host Jim
Cramer if he’s interested in the job Schmidt said, “I love working at
Google and I'm very happy to stay at Google, so the answer is no.”
Thank goodness for that.
As a technology adviser to candidate Obama and now a member of the
transition economic team, Schmidt (and Google) already clearly has the
president-elect’s ear. Given the scrutiny the Obama Justice Department
will likely need to apply to Google, the relationship is already
problematic. Formalizing it, even with Schmidt resigning his position
at Google, would only make things messier.
Schmidt’s demurral, however, has only fueled the giddy speculation in
the blogosphere about other candidates for a job that, at the moment,
has little more substance than Obama’s vague campaign promise to
appoint an administration CTO to…well, he wasn’t very specific about
that.
Among the names being floated
(although not by anyone in the Obama camp): Larry Lessig, Vint Cerf, Ed
Felten, Bill Gates, Julius Genachowski, Shane Robison, Sonal Shah, Jeff
Bezon, Reed Hundt and William Kennard.
All of whom, Media Wonk imagines, are smart enough not to take a
government job that, at this point at least, doesn’t come with a clear
bureaucratic portfolio. That way lies four years of grip-and-grin
photo-ops with science-fair winners.
The presumed tech-friendliness (and known “socialistic tendencies”) of
the Obama Administration has also fueled fantasies in some quarters
that copyright—and in particular DMCA—reform is in the offing.
Michael Hatamoto of cdfreaks.com
points to Obama’s statement during the campaign that “we need to update
and reform our copyright and patent systems to promote civic discourse,
innovation, and investment while ensuring that intellectual property
owners are fairly treated.”
All such speculation is just fantasy football at this point. With two
wars, a deep recession and the collapse of the global financial system
to deal with, there are far-more pressing claims on President Obama’s
political capital. Tech and IP policy are falling further down the
priority list with each down-tick in the employment data. So let’s not
get carried away.
Any action on the copyright front, in particular, will come from Congress, not the Administration.
Here’s something useful the Obama Administration could do, however: It could, through the appointment of a new FCC chair, filling the CTO job, even naming the new White House IP czar
(officially a coordinating, rather than policy-setting, job, but since
it’s a new position we’ll assume some flexibility in the portfolio) set
a tone that encourages genuine policy-making, in the public interest.
All too often, in the specialized realms of technology and intellectual
property, “policy-making” in Washington consists of getting the
incumbent corporate interests into a room to cut a deal, then taking
that deal to either Congress or the FCC for formal blessing.
Public interest groups sometimes manage to force or cajole their way
into the room during the discussions, but the process is the same: the
deal becomes the policy.
Often overlooked in that process are any broader cultural, political,
scientific or democratic issues that are inevitably at stake when
setting communication, media and information policy in a free society.
If the Obama Administration were to foster and encourage a more open,
public-interest oriented policy process that aspired to more than
simply splitting the difference between entrenched economic interests,
that would be change Media Wonk could really believe it.
Paul Sweeting
Paul Sweeting is the Editor of Content Agenda,
a business-to-business brand dedicated to the nexus of content,
technology and business. This piece was originally published on Paul's
blog "Media Wonk" on Content Agenda and is posted on DMW with the author's
permission.
Image by techpulse360
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