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FC: Pennsylvania Gov. Ridge competes with Net startups in his own state
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Fri, 17 Mar 2000 11:16:46 -0500
[The buzz has Ridge on the very short list for the GOP vice presidential
nomination. This article below shows what a Bush-Ridge administration might
view technology. --Declan]
http://www.phillynews.com/daily_news/2000/Mar/13/business/PORT13.htm
Guv riles cybernauts
Netizens see state's portal as competition
by Michael Hinkelman
Daily News Staff Writer
Outside the state, Gov. Tom Ridge is often
portrayed as one of the most tech-friendly
governors in the nation. Closer to home,
however, some members of the state's cyber
community think the techno-gov may be
dabbling a bit too much into commercial
Internet territory.
They claim the Republican governor is
actively promoting "socialized e-commerce"
of all things.
And what has raised their ire? A joint
venture between the state and software giant
Microsoft Corp. to create "PA PowerPort,"
the country's first statewide Internet portal.
...
The governor called the new initiative a
"one-stop shop for the information we all
need" in his budget address last month.
According to one critic, the project puts the
state in a position of competing with tax
dollars against "every Web and Internet
Service Provider and entrepreneur currently
existing in the state that are out there actually
trying to build this industry in Pennsylvania."
That's the view of Kessler Freedman Inc., a
Web site design company in
Mechanicsburg, just outside Harrisburg.
The company, which has been the most
vocal critic of "PA PowerPort," has
developed more than 40 commercial Web
sites since its inception in 1996.
In an essay posted on their Web site,
Kessler Freedman contends Ridge wants to
build what amounts to a "mini-Yahoo," albeit
with services like hometown news that are
geared toward the state.
Several Pennsylvania-based
privately-owned dot-coms already are
building similar Web sites and offering some
of the same services that the state plans to
make available.
...
"It bothers me," said Allen Deckert, a
co-owner of PAdotNET. "Maybe they don't
think there's enough talent here and they
didn't need to get anybody's opinion or do a
survey of people who are trying to do the
exact same thing the state wants to do."
Wayne Kessler, a co-owner of Kessler
Freedman, summed up his feelings this way:
"If the state suddenly decided they were
going to give away free food, I would
imagine there would be a lot of restaurants
and supermarkets that would be pretty
ticked."
...
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- FC: Pennsylvania Gov. Ridge competes with Net startups in his own state Declan McCullagh (Mar 17)
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