Obama Is From Google, McCain Is From AT&T on Digital Age Rules

Source: 
Coverage Type: 

Sens Barack Obama (D-IL) and John McCain (R-AZ) approach regulation in the information age from fundamentally different perspectives. Sen Obama, who clinched the Democratic nomination with an Internet-savvy campaign, wants the government to take an active role in wielding the Web as a weapon against poverty and rural isolation, an approach that could benefit Google. Sen McCain sees the Internet mainly as a business and trusts market forces to foster innovation for society's benefit. It's the same tack he has taken in Congress, advocating a hands-off approach to telephone-industry mergers that created the new AT&T. "McCain is a traditional, market-oriented conservative, and Obama is more comfortable with government intervention in the marketplace to promote competition," says Andrew Jay Schwartzman, president of the Media Access Project. John Kneuer, a former Bush administration official who now advises McCain on technology issues, says the senator wants the government to leave private industry alone so the marketplace can solve problems.


Obama Is From Google, McCain Is From AT&T on Digital Age Rules