Going mobile: technology and policy issues in the mobile Internet

28 May 2010The Internet is changing. In a few short years, Internet use will come predominately from mobile devices such as smart phones and tablets rather than traditional PCs using fixed broadband. A fully mobile broadband Internet offers exciting opportunities for innovation in networks, devices, and applications with enormous benefits for the economy and society.

The shift from a wire-centric Internet to a mobile one has profound implications for technology, policy, and applications. This report by ITIF Research Fellow Richard Bennett explains how mobile networks are changing as they become part of the Internet, the implications mobile networking has for public policy, and how policymakers can facilitate the flowering of the mobile Internet. This will only come to pass, however, when engineering and policy collaborate to successfully overcome the challenges to the development of a Mobile Internet that lives up to its full potential. For this to happen, policymakers must do two key things: First, they need to refrain from strangling the Mobile Internet with excessive regulation, realizing that the well of innovation that brought us where we are has not run dry. Second, policy makers need to ensure that the mobile Internet can develop the infrastructure it needs, the most important part of which is spectrum. Policymakers need to make tough choices, transferring spectrum from less compelling historical uses to the emerging Mobile Internet.

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03 May 2012

Strengthen our voice - take part in the Australian Community Sector Survey

There's just under two weeks to go for Victoria's community sector organisations to help us provide an authentic snapshot of the state of demand for services in the state.

22 March 2012

The Attorney-General's Department has launched a new inquiry to explore the scope for reforming Australian contract law. There will be a three-month consultation period.

08 March 2012

Women's Health Victoria (WHV) is a statewide women's health promotion, information and advocacy organisation, working with policy makers and health professionals to influence and inform health policy and service delivery.

The online survey is open to anyone who has used WHV's services, resources, or websites in the past 12 months. It covers: WHV publications, professional training, The Index database of gendered statistics, WHV Clearinghouse, BreaCan Service (supporting people diagnosed with breast or gynaecological cancer), capacity building, member services, and more.