I think this is a symptom of a larger problem with American governance, namely that lobbyists for entrenched interests have too much power and the general population (innovators included) has too little.
I'd rather attack the root cause with a constitutional amendment that states "All legislators must live full-time in their home districts", and have them conduct official government business through email and videoconference. That makes lobbying impractical: a company that wanted to lobby Congress would need to station lobbyists in all 435 congressional districts, and the lobbyists would have no more pull than an ordinary citizen that the representative happened to be friends with. The reason big companies have the sort of clout that they do in American politics is that there are economies of scale to political power, and once you have scale, you can buy more of it.
I'd rather attack the root cause with a constitutional amendment that states "All legislators must live full-time in their home districts", and have them conduct official government business through email and videoconference. That makes lobbying impractical: a company that wanted to lobby Congress would need to station lobbyists in all 435 congressional districts, and the lobbyists would have no more pull than an ordinary citizen that the representative happened to be friends with. The reason big companies have the sort of clout that they do in American politics is that there are economies of scale to political power, and once you have scale, you can buy more of it.