Some legislators aiming to stop free Wi-Fi

As communities start understanding the importance of providing free Wi-Fi, we are beginning to see resistance from legislators and industry.

Telecommunications companies have taken notice as cities, nonprofit organizations and startup companies have begun using these technologies to offer free or steeply reduced Internet access, said Bill Gurley, a Silicon Valley-based venture capitalist with Benchmark Capital who closely follows the issue.

Legislators in a dozen states, including Texas, have filed bills to remove competition for telecommunications companies, he said. Most are pending, but an Indiana effort failed, while a similar law in Pennsylvania passed, although it omitted Philadelphia because of that city’s existing efforts.

“These are very disruptive, low-cost technologies, and it’s not in the incumbent telecommunication companies’ best interest to embrace them,” Gurley said. “But these are technologies that can be very beneficial to communities.”

NOW on PBS recently had a show on it and they have a good run-down of the arguments for and against posted online. For more info, see the Slashdot discussion and the Lessig podcast posted to Wired the other day.

UPDATE: FCC commissioner Michael Copps speaks out in favor of municipal WiFi:

If we are going to fix the Universal Service system, which is predicated on the idea that everybody should have access to comparable communications at comparable and reasonable prices, we have to ask, is our advanced telecommunications part of that or not? Is broadband a part of that or not? So before we start fixing every little problem with universal service I think we ought to have some kind of a philosophical or national purpose or national objective discussion about where does broadband fit in.

I think we may be probably the only industrial country on the face of God’s green earth that doesn’t have a national plan for broadband deployment.

And when I talk about central-infrastructure challenge, you know it seems like each generation faces an infrastructure challenge. Before the Civil War, we had infrastructure challenges and building internal improvements of highways and turnpikes and canals. After the Civil War, it was building transcontinental railroads. With the Eisenhower years, we built the national highway system. I think our (challenge) is broadband.