Tech at Night: Free Press wants worse Internet for us, Public Knowledge is fine with global Internet regs, evaluating Cybersecurity laws
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | June 23rd at 03:57 AM |
Texas takes on Google as the state comes after the corporation on antitrust grounds. I’m not sure this is a good idea, any more than it was a good idea for the Clinton administration to go after Microsoft, but it’s probably even dumber for Google to obstruct the investigation.
Tags:
Antitrust,
AutoCAD,
China,
CISPA,
Cybersecurity,
Cybersecurity Act,
FCC,
Free Press,
George Soros,
Google,
Lieberman-Collins,
LinkedIn,
Public Knowledge,
SECURE IT,
Tech at Night,
Texas,
Verizon
Tech at Night: The left’s war on spectrum.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | May 19th at 03:02 AM |
The FCC and the radicals are at war with the secondary spectrum market. Gigi Sohn even tried to make the point at the Less Government debate that license holders don’t own spectrum. That’s true. They own the licenses. That’s where property rights come in. So it’s disappointing to see Democrats still piling on against Verizon even as the push begins to go after Dish. As | Read More »
Tech at Night: Cybersecurity action in the Senate, Soros squad on the move
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | May 15th at 02:00 AM |
In case you missed it, Friday’s Tech at night featured Q&A with Rep. Steve Scalise. Don’t miss is now. Team Soros, assemble! Remember when it was “wrong” for AT&T to get spectrum by buying T-Mobile? Remember when I said it should be allowed because the Obama administration and the radicals were making it too hard to get spectrum any other way? Vindication, baby: The left | Read More »
Tags:
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
CISPA,
Comcast,
Cybersecurity,
Darrell Issa,
FCC,
FISMA,
Free Press,
FTC,
George Soros,
Google,
John Kyl,
John McCain,
Kay Bailey Hutchison,
Lieberman-Collins,
LightSquared,
Microsoft,
Netherlands,
Pirate Pay,
Public Knowledge,
Ron Johnson,
Roy Blunt,
SECURE IT,
Spectrum,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
Verizon
Tech at Night: House passes key FCC reform, House and Senate SECURE IT bills deserve passage
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 29th at 02:30 AM |
FCC reform advances in the House. Greg Walden’s FCC Process Reform Act is a needed bill, so I’m glad that it went from committee to the floor, and took minimal modification in passing. I like that it got an extra poke at FCC being more closed on FOIA requests than even CIA. Locking in the reforms is important, and CTIA is right in saying we | Read More »
Tags:
Comcast,
CTIA,
Cybersecurity,
Facebook,
FCC,
FCC Process Reform Act,
FCC Reform,
FOIA,
George Soros,
Greg Walden,
Internet,
Joe Lieberman,
John McCain,
Mary Bono Mack,
Michael Copps,
Net Neutrality,
Public Knowledge,
Ron Johnson,
SECURE IT,
Spectrum,
Susan Collins,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
United Nations,
Verizon
Tech at Night: FTC makes a move, FCC still trouble, NAM backs SECURE IT
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 27th at 01:00 AM |
So we already had the coming FCC battle over Verizon’s attempts to acquire the spectrum it needs, the Senate fight over ‘cybersecurity,’ and a possible Congressional fight over Internet sales taxation. But now there’s a new issue to keep track of: the FTC is taking it upon itself to regulate the Internet on the grounds of protecting privacy. Jim Harper seems thinks it’s nothing new, | Read More »
Tags:
Agency Pricing,
Amazon,
Antitrust,
Apple,
Barack Obama,
Comcast,
Cybersecurity,
FCC,
FTC,
NAM,
Net Neutrality,
Personal Responsibility,
Privacy,
Public Knowledge,
SECURE IT,
Spectrum,
Tech at Night,
Verizon
Tech at Night: Republicans fight for transparency, FCC taking bipartisan criticism, Securing the Internet
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 22nd at 03:30 AM |
Previously on Tech at Night I linked to a story that suggested there was a split between Darrell Issa and Chuck Grassley on FCC transparency. It turns out the story I relied on, had it wrong. Oversight wasn’t grading transparency itself; the committee was grading the management of FOIA requests, and FCC did relatively well by having established processes for dealing with FOIA. and tracking | Read More »
Tags:
Art Brodsky,
Chuck Grassley,
Comcast,
Cybersecurity,
Darrell Issa,
DATA Act,
Eric Cantor,
FCC,
FOIA,
George Soros,
Internet Sales Tax,
Jay Rockefeller,
Joe Lieberman,
John McCain,
Mario Diaz-Balart,
Marsha Blackburn,
Mary Bono Mack,
Paul LePage,
Public Knowledge,
Sales Tax,
SECURE IT,
Spectrum,
Susan Collins,
Tech at Night,
transparency,
Verizon
Tech at Night: Ron Johnson backing GOP’s SECURE IT Act, Anonymous fails again
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 2nd at 03:00 AM |
Harry Reid may be on a mad dash to bring the radical Liebmerman/Collins/Rockefeller cybersecurity bill, but a broad spectrum of Republicans continue to fight. Democrats may have toned down its Internet Kill Switch provisions, but still is a massive power grab online, and the new SECURE IT act is a much better idea. What I absolutely love about SECURE it is that it hits all | Read More »
Tags:
Anonymous,
Apple,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
Blackout,
China,
Chuck Grassley,
Cybersecurity,
Dan Coats,
EPAD,
FCC,
George Soros,
Gigi Sohn,
Greg Walden,
Harry Reid,
iPad,
Jay Rockefeller,
Joe Lieberman,
John McCain,
Kay Bailey Hutchison,
Kim Dotcom,
Lisa Murkowski,
Megaupload,
PATENT WARS,
Public Knowledge,
Richard Burr,
Ron Johnson,
Sales Tax,
Saxby Chambliss,
SECURE IT Act,
Susan Collins,
Tech at Night
Tech at Night: George Soros wins over AT&T, SOPA and PROTECT IP battle continues, FTC to take on Google?
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | December 20th at 01:30 AM |
Top story tonight is of course the major win by the triple alliance of George Soros and his front groups like Public Knowledge, Sprint Nextel, and the Obama administration’s dual agency of the FCC and the DoJ. Yes, AT&T has given up on acquiring T-Mobile. I believe they will now have to pay a sizable fee to T-Mobile as compensation. This is bad news for | Read More »
Tags:
4G,
Apple,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
California,
Competition,
Darrell Issa,
Department of Justice,
Eric Holder,
FCC,
FTC,
George Soros,
Google,
Hollywood,
HTC,
Internet,
Judiciary Committee,
Lamar Smith,
LTE,
Mike Lee,
NTSB,
OPEN Act,
PATENT WARS,
PROTECT IP,
Public Knowledge,
Ron Wyden,
Samsung,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
T-Mobile,
TEA party,
Tech at Night,
Wireless
Tech at Night: Public Knowledge attacks me, Wireless subsides, Bad laws
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | November 12th at 03:30 AM |
It turns out it’s not just a few of us on the right who know Tech at Night exists. Gigi Sohn says Tech at Night shapes the debate along with good old Less Government. Of course, Sohn also told a lie about me and claimed AT&T pays me, but… that’s the head of a Soros-funded group for you. Media Marxists and all that. Something I | Read More »
Tags:
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
Censorship,
FCC,
George Soros,
Gigi Sohn,
Internet,
Net Neutrality,
PROTECT IP,
Public Knowledge,
SOPA,
Sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
T-Mobile
Soros-funded Gigi Sohn falsely accuses me of being AT&T funded
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | November 10th at 06:00 PM |
Gigi Sohn talked to Personal Democracy Forum about the work she does at her organization, Public Knowledge. She took time to call out RedState and Less Government. Here’s my hastily-created transcript of the key passage around the 28:00 mark: [On AT&T/T-Mobile] We often get attacked by the right-wing press, folks like, you know, RedState and Less Government, so I’m constantly dealing with attacks fully funded | Read More »
Tech at Night: Kill the bad bills and regs: SOPA, Net Neutrality, “Anti-trust” favoritism
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | November 5th at 03:00 AM |
There’s been a push lately to attack punitive, unfair taxes on wireless service, one that Erick Erickson signed onto, and was advertised at RedState. Ironically I only found out about it because I saw the ads while working on the code side of the site, but that’s how it goes sometimes. Anyway, that movement seems to have gotten a win, as the House passed the | Read More »
Tags:
4G,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
Censorship,
Copyright,
Eric Holder,
George Soros,
Internet,
John Kerry,
Kill the Bill,
MPAA,
Net Neutrality,
PROTECT IP,
Public Knowledge,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
T-Mobile,
Taxes,
Tech at Night,
Wireless,
Wireless Tax Fairness Act
Tech at Night: USF Reform Reactions, We must stop SOPA and PROTECT IP censorship
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 31st at 11:00 PM |
Last week I noted that the FCC is officially moving ahead with its new subsidy program. The administration will convert the Universal Service Fund – currently taxing the public and handing it out to rural telephone carriers – into a grab bag of Internet subsidies. The rural phone companies are unhappy, and everyone else is racing to get a cut. C Spire, apparently serving many rural southern customers, | Read More »
Tags:
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
C Spire,
Copyright,
DMCA,
FCC,
George Soros,
Google,
GPS,
IIA,
Internet,
LightSquared,
PROTECT IP,
Public Knowledge,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
Subsidies,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
Tech/Users Coalition,
Universal Service Fund,
Universal Service Fund Reform
Tech at Night: It’s better for government to inform than to regulate, CWA dishes out talking points, Backlash against copyright freeloaders
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 25th at 01:30 AM |
Mary Bono Mack, pay attention: Here’s the model for any privacy ventures you should attempt: voluntary action by private individuals, educated by simple government actions. If you really must get government involved, teach the people to fish, so that they can protect their own privacy for a lifetime. Because if we insist on regulating the Internet problems of the moment, not only do we expand | Read More »
Tags:
AT&T,
Competition,
Copyright,
CWA,
Cybersecurity,
FCC,
Free Press,
George Soros,
Internet,
Jobs,
Martin O'Malley,
Mary Bono Mack,
Poker,
Privacy,
Public Knowledge,
Regulation,
Right to Work,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
UIGEA,
Unions,
Universal Service Fund,
Universal Service Fund Reform
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: Steve Jobs 1955-2011
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 5th at 08:30 PM |
Steve Jobs died today after a long battle with cancer. He was 56. Founding NeXT would have been enough to turn anyone into a cult hero in his field. Acquiring Lucasfilm’s Graphics Group and turning it into Pixar would have made anyone a respected business leader. But for Steve Jobs, those were feathers in his cap called Apple, the company he co-founded with Steve Wozniak, | Read More »
Tags:
ACTA,
Al Franken,
Apple,
Barack Obama,
California,
Censorship,
Competition,
Copyright,
DMCA,
FCC,
Free Press,
George Soros,
Google,
GPS,
Internet,
Internet Tax,
iPad,
iPhone,
iPod,
LightSquared,
Macintosh,
MacOS X,
NeXT,
NeXTStep,
Open Society Institute,
Patents,
Pixar,
Public Knowledge,
Richard Blumenthal,
Sheldon Whitehouse,
Socialism,
Steve Jobs,
Sunlight Foundation,
Tech at Night,
Univeral Service Fund Reform,
Universal Service Fund
Tech at Night: Radicals want free stuff, UK rejects its own PROTECT IP, FDT on Internet Sales Tax, FCC games
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 4th at 03:00 AM |
South Korea has Net Neutrality activists in an uproar as, guess what? The government is considering asking a high-bandwidth Internet service to pay its fair share for the government-subsidized Internet in the country. Just more proof that when the radicals say “Net Neutrality,” they really mean “free stuff paid for by the taxpayers.” The radical left’s push for freeloading continues in America too, as Public | Read More »
Tags:
4G,
Australia,
Barack Obama,
Censorship,
Clearwire,
Copyright,
Dick Durbin,
eBay,
FCC,
Greg Walden,
Internet,
Internet Sales Tax,
LightSquared,
LTE,
Net Neutrality,
PROTECT IP,
Public Knowledge,
Regulation,
Socialism,
South Korea,
Sprint,
Tech at Night,
United Kingdom,
WiMAX,
Wireless
Tech at Night: Twitter targets activists, SAFE data act expands regulation, California anti-tax referendum, Google, Apple, Anonymous
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | July 20th at 11:00 PM |
Twitter has a credibility problem on its hands, all of a sudden. Even as I’m getting blind link spam sent to me every single day on the site, Twitter has singled out a conservative activist group to have its accounts wiped out. Not only was the Empower Texans feed shut down, but every single employee’s personal feed was targeted as well. Twitter’s response has been | Read More »
Tags:
4G,
Aaron Swartz,
Amazon,
Amazon Tax,
Android,
Anonymous,
Antisec,
Anymode,
Apple,
AT&T,
California,
Civil Defense,
Competition,
Copyright,
Cybersecurity,
D Block,
Empower Texans,
Eric Schmidt,
FBI,
George Soros,
Google,
Herb Kohl,
HTC,
Internet Sales Tax,
JSTOR,
Larry Lessig,
Lulzsec,
Mary Bono Mack,
Net Neutrality,
Nextel,
Patent,
Privacy,
Public Knowledge,
Public Safety,
Referendum,
Regulation,
SAFE Data Act,
Samsung,
Science,
Sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
Twitter,
Wireless
The nonsensical, astroturf campaign against AT&T and T-Mobile
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | June 22nd at 08:00 AM |
I’ve said before that the case against the AT&T/T-Mobile deal makes no sense. Not only does the historical record suggest that the merger will increase competition, but the actions of key players are the opposite of what we’d predict if the merger were expected to reduce competition and raise margins. There’s something more to it, though. That something is astroturf pushing a basic agenda of | Read More »
Tags:
Astroturf,
AT&T,
Competition,
Free Press,
George Soros,
Neo Marxists,
Net Neutrality,
Open Society Institute,
OSI,
Public Knowledge,
Sprint,
T-Mobile,
Wireless
Tech at Night: Amazon Taxes march on, FCC colludes with Marxist activists
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | June 4th at 03:30 AM |
I am so sick of California. While it’s good that the “privacy” bill didn’t make it out of the Senate, it’s not so good that the Amazon tax is going on to the Senate. Texas: Don’t be like us. Defeat your Amazon tax in SB 1. And the hacks go on: Anonymous attacks.. Iran?, its apparent offshoot lulzsec attacked PBS and Sony, but leaves itself | Read More »
Tags:
4chan,
Amazon Tax,
Anonymous,
AT&T,
California,
Clearwire,
Cybersecurity,
FCC,
Free Press,
George Soros,
Internet,
LightSquared,
Lulzsec,
Michael Copps,
Open Society Institute,
OSI,
PBS,
Privacy,
Public Knowledge,
RSA,
SecurID,
Sony,
Sprint,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
Texas
The Sprint/George Soros argument on AT&T/T-Mobile makes no sense
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | June 1st at 05:00 PM |
If Sprint is weak, then it fears competition and favors oligopoly. Therefore, Sprint’s opposition to the AT&T/T-Mobile deal projects the deal would increase competition nationally. Regular readers of my Tech at Night series have seen me make the case for the proposed merger of AT&T and T-Mobile USA by pointing out how it would improve competition because the two companies combined could compete better with | Read More »
Tags:
AT&T,
Competition,
Free Press,
George Soros,
Inflation,
Nextel,
Open Society Institute,
OSI,
PPI,
Public Knowledge,
Sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
T-Mobile,
Verizon,
Wireless