Google, Verizon and online health care

By | August 9, 2010, 1:32pm PDT

Summary: What the two companies don’t seem to want, and if you think about it a moment you will see why, is any unnecessary detail packed into new laws written by the Congress.

The “deal” announced by Google and Verizon today definitely has health care in mind.

(Handshake graphic from CNET’s excellent coverage of this story. Thanks Marguerite Reardon and Tom Krazit for the good work.)

Getting health applications past regulators like the FDA, will require tracking of service quality, as well as serious assurances on both privacy and security.

If someone dies while wearing a heart or diabetes monitor, lawyers will want to know where fault lies before suing. There are famous and controversial figures using such devices, and there will be more. Device makers don’t want to be caught with liabilities they did not create. So auditing of the data traffic becomes logical.

Putting those services inside the network makes little sense to me, but it makes enormous sense to the health IT industry, to the legal industry, to the regulatorium, to insurers, and to device makers. It may seem like the extended warranty on a PC, but people want to pay before they play, so carriers want to sell.

Essentially, you’re building health applications into a private network, tracking that network, layering it on the public network, and charging for the extra services and expense. What’s wrong with that?

Most of the public reporting on all this is pure nonsense. “Open vs. Paid Internets” Wired? Nothing on the public Internet will be allowed to sell improved priorities and you know it. Google is “evil,” Huffington Post? There’s no there there. A “private net neutrality deal,” Ars Technica? There’s no paper being signed, just a framework being offered for regulators from two vendors.

Under the original net neutrality rules proposed by the FCC, it’s difficult to see how something like the NHIN Connect program would be able to use the current Internet, with its economies of scale. It features lots of value-added services — authentication, encryption, security. It’s designed to run on the wired Internet.

As to whether the lack of guarantees on wireless is a problem, that last mile is the most competitive in the market, with four national carriers and a host of others competing. If consumers are disadvantaged, any rules can be amended by simply giving the FCC authority to amend them.

What the two companies don’t seem to want, and if you think about it a moment you will see why, is any unnecessary detail packed into new laws written by the Congress. Such laws are like prayer in school — if they’re strong enough to do good they’ll do harm, and if they’re weak enough not to do harm they can’t possibly do any good.

One final point. This is the really the first word on possible new regulations, not the last. If Huffpo and the rest can convince voters they don’t want this, they are free to try.

But they’ll be cutting the health IT market in the name of ideology if they do.

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Disclosure

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a journalist, writer and part-time futurist for over 30 years. At the present moment I run only a personal blog in addition to my ZDNet open source blog. DanaBlankenhorn.Com has the subtitle The War Against Oil. In the past I have used it to write about political history, e-commerce, personal matters, some ideas related to open source, and The World of Always On, which is the idea of using sensors, motes and RFID to turn WiFi links into platforms for applications which live in the air. My IRA account at Schwab holds a few tech shares, most notably some Intel and Applied Materials, but there are no open source companies in it. I don’t even own any CBS stock.

Biography

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist since 1978, and has covered technology since 1982. He launched the Interactive Age Daily, the first daily coverage of the Internet to launch with a magazine, in September 1994.
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RE: Google, Verizon and online health care
macdev305 28th Oct
A good example of network health applications is University of Chicago Schools for Public Health developing a mobile EEG monitor, connected via Bluetooth to a patient???s smartphone, which can display brainwave data in real time.
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RE: Google, Verizon and online health care
Marcos El Malo 9th Aug 2010
News Flash: Companies don't want to be regulated by regulators, not even a little.

On the other hand, companies are willing to pledge to the public that they will be good and not take advantage of us. That sounds like a pretty good deal to me. I trust huge corporations, like most patriotic American citizens.

Now, let's get back to bashing Apple.
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RE: Google, Verizon and online health care
DanaBlankenhorn 10th Aug 2010
@Marcos El Malo You're right in what companies want. It's really an overthrow of the deal they made over a century ago in order to assure manufacturers stability in basic infrastructure. We need to find a new way to do that.
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A good example of network health applications is University of Chicago Schools for Public Health developing a mobile EEG monitor, connected via Bluetooth to a patient???s smartphone, which can display brainwave data in real time.

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