ISDN as an Enabler of Innovation Statement of Mitchell Kapor Electronic Frontier Foundation, Inc. June 13, 1991 My name is Mitchell Kapor. I am the founder and former chief executive of Lotus Development Corporation and the designer of Lotus 1-2-3, the world's most successful business software application. I am here today representing the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization concerned with the development of information and telecommunications policy which promotes innovation and free enterprise. It is often said that computer and communications technologies are converging to the point that it is no longer meaningful to speak of two separate industries. At the same time, I can tell you from my own personal experience that while the the microelectronics revolution may be providing a common technical base that unifies computing and telecommunications, the cultures and industrial dynamics of the two are still alien to each other. This is a shame, because unless the cultural gulf which separates the two is successfully bridged, society as a whole will be the loser. I believe there are substantial and vastly under-appreciated entrepreneurial opportunities which would arise out of the wide-spread availability of ISDN at affordable prices. To understand why, it's helpful to appreciate a bit of history of the personal computer field. The most important contribution of the PC field is not a product, but an idea. It is the idea that a good computer system is simply a platform upon which other parties can exercise their ingenuity to build great applications. When Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak conceived of the Apple II computer in a Silicon Valley garage in the mid-1970's, they had no clear idea what it would be used for. But they went to great trouble to make it attractive for software developers to use. They added graphics, sound, a low-cost disk drive, and a host of other capabilities. In 1979 Dan Bricklin invented the first spreadsheet, Visicalc, for the Apple II. In 1981 IBM followed Apple's lead with the introduction of the IBM PC, an "open architecture" machine for which anyone could develop programs. The explosive growth of the PC industry which followed the introduction of Lotus 1-2-3 for the IBM PC can be directly attributed to the widespread availability of inexpensive personal computers. Perhaps ten thousand separate commercial programs were introduced in the span of a few short years. Only a few were successes, but it was the market and the market alone which was capable of selecting the winners out of the multitude. And it was only the conditions of low barriers to entry for software companies which made it possible to mount the vast numbers of offering necessary to spawn the small number of eventual winners. In short, it was the existence of open platforms for innovation, such as the Apple II and the IBM PC, which catalyzed the development of vast amounts of software necessary to the process of market-mediated innovation. Today, with the desktop PC a commonplace in business and the home, it's important to remember the basic dynamic by which this PC revolution occurred. Just as the desktop personal computer represented the revolutionary platform for innovation of the 1980's, it is my belief that ubiquitous digital communications media, such as are enabled by ISDN, represent the hope of the 1990's. With the proper ISDN platform, we can have another generation of explosive growth of services, led by a generation of information entrepreneurs. Today these information entrepreneurs enjoy a margin existence in the largely non-commercial world of bulletin boards and on the national research and education network called the Internet. Give them a commercial information infrastructure which can reach large numbers of people inexpensively, and I believe we will all be truly amazed at the results. The telecommunications industry, unlike computers, is, as you know, a highly regulated one, for very good reasons of social policy. In this regard, its heritage and the heritage of computing could not be more different. While Jobs and Wozniak could create the Apple II as a platform for innovation in a garage, without let or hindrance from anyone, creating the ISDN platform will require the wise administration of policies set by bodies such as this Department of Public Utilities. In order to become ubiquitous, ISDN access must be priced low enough that the average consumer finds it affordable. As a practical matter, this means that there must be a residential tariff comparable to the unlimited local calling plans available to residential customers. This is not the case with the tariff filed by New England Telephone which is under consideration here. It is my understanding that while ISDN access itself would be available for a fixed monthly fee to business and residential subscribers, there would always be a "metered" usage fee. Circuit-switched connection would be charged under the "Switchway" tariff, which carries a substantial per minute usage charge. Packet-switched connections would be charged under the "Infopath" tariff, which carries a substantial per kilopacket charge. It may well be the case that the usage assumed by New England Telephone in the preparation of the tariff under-estimates the demand surge which would be created by an appropriately low price. I therefore ask the Department to take appropriate action, not to approve the tariff, but require its reconsideration. It is also my understanding that fee-based information service providers who wished to provide packet-switched connections to business or residential ISDN customers would be required to connect to N.E. Tel's Infopath packet-switch network. This bundling of another telephone company service with ISDN unfairly restricts the ability of third parties to offer services competitive with Infopath at lower prices or with different arrangements, such as flat-fee connections. Private inter-networking carriers should be able to connect to ISDN access lines either in central offices or other access points in the network and should be able to set their own rates for charging service providers. If the Department acts now to insure the availability of ISDN services at an affordable price to consumers, it will help Massachusetts and the entire New England economy by helping create a new platform for telecommunications innovation.