Gigi Sohn one of thought leaders laying the groundwork for future policy change

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Throughout her 30 years in telecommunications and technology policy, Gigi Sohn has worn many hats—a telecom lawyer, a progressive advocate, a top aide at the Federal Communications Commission, an academic. But if there’s one thread uniting the career of a woman widely viewed as the godmother of progressive tech policy in Washington, it’s her ability to bridge the vast chasms between industry, the advocacy community, and the federal government. “I spend a lot of time building bridges between industry and public interests—and also between the public-interest groups themselves,” Sohn said. It’s a role she’s played since she founded progressive tech-policy group Public Knowledge in 2001. It’s one reason she was hired in 2013 by Democratic FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler; she worked tirelessly to assure net-neutrality activists that Wheeler—a former telecom lobbyist—had their best interests at heart. Today, it’s the part she plays even as she watches much of what she accomplished during her stint in government be undone by a Republican FCC. “It is a major bummer to see everything you worked on get unraveled,” Sohn said, lamenting the recent rollback of the previous commission’s net-neutrality and broadband-privacy rules. That disappointment hasn’t translated into anger.


Gigi Sohn one of thought leaders laying the groundwork for future policy change