"The 107th Congress as a whole marked a watershed year in the history of the Internet and Washington," says Adam Thierer, director of telecommunications studies for Washington think tank the Cato Institute, and co-author of the study. "A lot of people in Congress held this 'infant industry' outlook at first. Now they've got a 'time's up gang, you're next' attitude." And there's not just more bills, according to Cato, but more potentially damaging bills. "It's a smorgasbord of bad legislation," Thierer says. "Most of them are very regulatory in character."
But not everyone feels the political winds have shifted. "I wouldn't say they're bearing down," says Connie Correll, executive VP of TechNet, a tech industry political action group. "Our industry has grown, and anything that becomes a larger presence draws attention." Correll says that there's actually a lot of goodwill directed toward high tech on Capitol Hill. "In the last few years, we've elected more pro-technology members," she says. "Most of the folks on the Senate side now have BlackBerrys."
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