Quello Center - Telecommunication Management and Law

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In The News: Call for Paper Proposals: Experts Workshop

Beyond Broadband Access: Data-Based Information Policy For a New Administration

A call for proposals is going out for a three-day day by-invitation Experts Workshop on approaches to developing data-based information policy. Abstracts are due by April 15, 2009. The deliverables are expected to be policy recommendations, a book and a new research agenda. The event is co-organized by Penn State, Michigan State University, Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, and Rutgers University.

Submissions should be made to . Abstracts should not exceed 500 words and should be accompanied by a brief biographical statement.

The workshop will bring together a group of about twenty experts on information metrology from around the world. The event will take place in Washington, DC, where, during morning and afternoon sessions, they will make presentations, share research, hear guest experts, discuss concrete approaches and new theories, identify problems and challenges, and develop conclusions and a future research agenda.

September 22-24, 2009
The New America Foundation
1899 L Street NW, Suite 400
Washington, DC 20036

For more information, contact Richard Taylor at or Dr. Johannes Bauer at .


Posted Friday, March 27, 2009 -- 1:36 pm

In The News: The Economics of Malware (2006-2008)

This collaborative project with Professor Michel van Eeten, Technical University of Delft, the Netherlands, examined the economic incentives of players in the information and communication value net to invest in information security.  It examined the interplay of the economics of cybercrime and the economics of security decisions. 

Contact: Johannes M. Bauer, , +1.517.432.8003.


Posted Thursday, September 18, 2008 -- 1:03 pm

In The News: The Dynamics of Complex Communication Systems (2006-2009)

This project is a collaborative effort with Professor Volker Schneider at the University of Konstanz, Germany.  The three-year project was funded in 2006 by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, Germany.  The proposed project aims at the development of a micro-foundation to modelling these dynamic processes starting from individual agent’s decisions. 
One of the key features of the new environment is the presence of pervasive links between individuals, which changes the conditions of optimal decision-making for individuals, organizations, and policy-makers.  Many of the available research approaches and tools fall short of the challenges as they use static or relatively simple dynamic approaches. 
The proposed project is premised on the belief that recent “complex systems theories” promise to yield more powerful tools to understand the dynamic processes in communications systems. 

Contact: Johannes M. Bauer, , +1.517.432.8003.


Posted Thursday, September 18, 2008 -- 1:00 pm

In The News: Benchmarking the Network Society: Regulation, Investment, and Innovation (2007-)

A wealth of data on the status of information and communication technologies and their uses is available.  Major projects of international data collection include the Digital Opportunities Index collected by the Digital Opportunities Partnership (including, among others, the International Telecommunication Union and the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development); the Network Readiness Index by the World Economic Forum; the E-Readiness Index by The Economist Intelligence Unit; and the Broadband Portal by the OECD. 

The purpose of this project is to provide a comprehensive approach to analyze this wealth of information more thoroughly than is presently done, with a particular emphasis on the effects of regulation on investment and innovation.  The existing projects rank nations but do not mine the data in ways that could help decision-makers in policy and industry to improve a nation’s performance.  The project will develop an analytical framework and empirical tools to assess regulatory policy and industry strategy and provide a framework and tools to evaluate the likely implications of future courses of action. 

Contact: Johannes M. Bauer, , +1.517.432.8003.


Posted Thursday, September 18, 2008 -- 12:53 pm

In The News: Quello Center Initiates NSF-Funded Study of Media Localism and Ownership

While the quality of of media coverage of local affairs and the influence of media ownership structure on that coverage are hotly debated in policy circles, the empirical foundation for that debate is surprisingly slim. To address this need, beginning this Fall an interdisciplinary team of five MSU researchers will initiate the largest study of local media performance to date, examining coverage of local affairs by traditional media and on the internet for selected cities in 100 U.S. Metropolitan Statistical Areas. The study is funded by NSF for two years at the level of $500,000. The Quello Center will play a major role in this project as the PI is Quello Center Co-Director Steve Wildman and two of the Co-PIs (Professor Stephen Lacy and Professor Emeritus Thomas Baldwin) are Quello Center faculty associates and the project will utilize Quello Center facilities and student research assistants.


Posted Wednesday, September 10, 2008 -- 1:36 pm