Larry Lessig on Congressional Reform, Internet Policy and the Upcoming Election

This is a brief interview with Lawrence Lessig at this year's Personal Democracy Forum in New York City. Lessig answers questions about Change-Congress.org: an online, participatory tagging tool to encourage reform and transparency in the US Congress.

Click here for an audio interview with Lessig.

Here is the description of the tool from the Change-Congress.org web site:

Change Congress is a movement to build support for basic reform in how our government functions. Using our tools, both candidates and citizens can pledge their support for basic changes to reduce the distorting influence of money in Washington. Our community will link candidates committed to a reform with volunteers and contributors who support it.

Here's part of the interview where Lessig addresses internet issues and the upcoming election:

I think there's a fundamental decision that will be made in this Election about the philosophy that will guide the next generation of the internet. John McCain has signaled very clearly that he's going to continue the philosophy of what I refer to as a kind of Neanderthal philosophy that the government has no essential role in this essential infrastructure. And that means basically privatizing the infrastructure to the interest of a increasingly small number of infrastructure providers. And the Obama platform is fundamentally committed not to displacing private interest but to complimenting private interest with other interests which are also essential to the internet's future.

So social interest and public interest and cultural interest that compliment the commercial interest; and so I think that an Obama Administration will appoint people and drive for regulation that guarantees this wider range of objectives that's achieved by this infrastructure. So just like we didn't build the high--the national highway system simply to serve GM's cars or to serve Ford-cars but to build it to support a wide range of uses, some commercial, some non-commercial and the same thing with the electricity grid and the same thing with every single infrastructure we've built. That's the way I think we'll think about the internet--that it serves many different objectives--some private, some not, and the government needs to make sure it can serve all of them well.

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