Tech at Night: Barack Obama covering for Lieberman-Collins power grab via CISPA opposition, Darrell Issa does good on Transparency
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 26th at 02:20 AM |
In an example of lucky timing, the GSA scandal proved why Darrell Issa’s DATA act was needed. Transparency in government allows for oversight. So the bill passed the House by voice vote. I first floated a while back the idea that this sudden, strident CISPA opposition was roote d in a desire to distract the public from the much stronger and more dangerous Lieberman-Collins bill | Read More »
Tags:
Amazon Tax,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
Censorship,
Chuck Grassley,
CISPA,
Cybersecurity,
Darrell Issa,
DATA Act,
DNS,
FBI,
FCC,
FreedomWorks,
GSA,
Illinois,
Internet,
Jay Rockefeller,
Jim DeMint,
Joe Lieberman,
Lieberman-Collins,
Marketplace Fairness Act,
North Carolina,
Oversight,
PATENT WARS,
Spectrum,
Subsidies,
Susan Collins,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
transparency,
Washington Post
Tech at Night: SOPA unconstitutional?, AT&T under pressure, Verizon’s try for Netflix next?
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | December 13th at 03:00 AM |
It’s Monday, so it’s time for that weekly self promotion of mine. This week at the Daily Caller I discussed NISO, an information sharing proposal by Dan Lungren that would get government in a role of improving our security online without compromising liberty and innovation. And now back to SOPA. Now Eric Schmidt realizes we don’t want government to have a huge role online, complaining | Read More »
Tags:
AT&T,
BitTorrent,
Copyright,
Cybersecurity,
Dan Lungren,
Darrell Issa,
DNS,
GPS,
Internet,
Laurence Tribe,
LightSquared,
MPAA,
Netflix,
NISO,
Ron Wyden,
SAFE Act,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
Verizon
Tech at Night: It is urgent that we stop SOPA; Google wising up?
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | November 15th at 02:30 AM |
Censorship’s the big word right now. The FCC’s under pressure to ban pro sports blackouts, and the Supreme Court may end national profanity rules. However I consider those things small. Few people have access to television broadcasts. Most of us aren’t actually censored by these regulations. We all have access to the Internet though; that’s how a nobody like me is able to shape the | Read More »
Tags:
Abortion,
AFL-CIO,
Android,
AT&T,
Australia,
Barack Obama,
Censorship,
DNS,
E-PARASITES,
Eric Schmdt,
FCC,
FTC,
Google,
Internet,
Judiciary Committee,
MasterCard,
Media Reform,
MPAA,
Net Neutrality,
PFizer,
Profanity,
RIAA,
Search Neutrality,
SOPA,
Sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
Supreme Court,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
Verizon
Tech at Night: I can’t spare Marsha Blackburn. She fights. Also: wireless competition rages on, Barton and Bono Mack take on Poker
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 20th at 03:55 AM |
Late start tonight for Tech at Night. Sorry, but I’ve started a plan to get myself out of California, and to be honest I’m more than a bit nervous about the whole thing. Looking for new work in the Obama economy? Yeah. But at least Marsha Blackburn wants to help the tech job situation by taking on Barack Obama’s twin regulatory nightmares of the FCC | Read More »
Tags:
AFL-CIO,
Apple,
Barack Obama,
C Spire,
Copyright,
DNS,
EPA,
FCC,
FTC,
Gambling,
George Soros,
Internet,
iPhone,
iPhone 4S,
Jobs,
Joe Barton,
Marsha Blackburn,
Mary Bono Mack,
PATENT WARS,
Patents,
Poker,
Property Rights,
PROTECT IP,
Public Knowledge,
Regulation,
Ron Wyden,
Samsung,
Sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
Subsidies,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
Universal Service Fund,
Wireless
Tech at Night: Fighting an illegal tax in California, fighting unchecked regulation, and fighting the urge to regulate
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 30th at 01:00 AM |
As is usual, tonight I’ll give priority to the things we had posted at RedState, and mention those first. Especially My own post on the latest on the California Amazon Tax referendum, and more specifically on the plans of Democrats to nullify the constitutional referendum process, in service of their unconstitutional Internet sales tax. We need to pressure Republicans to vote the right away, at | Read More »
Tags:
4G,
Amazon Tax,
AT&T,
BART,
California,
Censorship,
Copyright,
DNS,
EPA,
Facebook,
FCC,
FTC,
Google,
Internet Sales Tax,
Larry Page,
LTE,
New Deal,
Privacy,
PROTECT IP,
Referendum,
Regulation,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
Use Tax
Tech at Night: DNSSEC, RIM, FCC, Net Neutrality
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | July 31st at 05:00 AM |
I hide nothing from you: I kicked back this Friday night. I slacked off. Now it’s Saturday at 2am and I’m finally getting to this. But, you all read this in the morning anyway so it really doesn’t matter much, right? (If I’m wrong I’ll surely hear in the comments) Let’s start with a widely reported but badly reported story: DNSSEC. This is a framework | Read More »
Tags:
Alan Grayson,
Ben Chandler,
Blackberry,
Commerce Department,
Communist,
Deem and Pass,
DNS,
DNSSEC,
FCC,
Free Press,
India,
Internet,
Lysekoism,
neo-Marxist,
Net Neutrality,
Privacy,
reclassification,
RIM,
Tech at Night,
Title II,
Title II Reclassification,
Trofim Lysenko,
Verisign
Reading the FOIA releases of the Andrew McLaughlin Emails III
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | June 17th at 09:08 PM |
We continue now from Part I and Part II of the series. InsideGoogle.com has the emails between Andrew McLaughlin and his contacts in Google, all the while serving as Deputy White House CTO, in a 3 PDF set, and I’m now starting on the second file.
Tags:
.HT,
Andrew McLaughlin,
Becky Burr,
Bill Woodcock,
China,
Darrell Issa,
DNS,
Earthquake,
Google,
Haiti,
IGF,
Internet,
Net Neutrality,
Packet Clearing House,
SOUTHCOM,
USAID,
Vint Cerf
Reading the FOIA releases of the Andrew McLaughlin Emails I
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | June 15th at 10:21 PM |
Via InsideGoogle.com I’ve come across the Andrew McLaughlin emails released via FOIA requests (Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3). I’d meant to make a 5 part series of my reading through them for signs that McLaughlin was inappropriately acting as an agent of Google from his job as White House CTO (which is an accusation that Darrell Issa is not letting drop quietly, internal | Read More »
Will Google be Neutral and Transparent with its new service?
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | December 6th at 12:56 AM |
Up until now, Google has been able to avoid being hoisted by its own Net Neutrality due to the fact that the firm has not been directly involved as an ISP, but rather has been a partner of ISPs such as T-Mobile. We can point out all we want how they have more money and more market power than any ISP, but until they started | Read More »