Tech at Night: Jay Rockefeller admits the truth of Lieberman-Collins, and there’s no escaping basic economics
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | May 10th at 12:30 AM |
The masks are slipping on Cybersecurity. The CISPA debate has died to a dull roar now that the House is done with it, while the Senate may or may not pass it, and the President has promised a veto. And yet, still not outrage against Lieberman-Collins, despite Jay Rockefeller (who introduced a version of the bill the previous two Congresses) admitting he’s anti-business and anti-profit, | Read More »
Tags:
CISPA,
Cybersecurity,
Jay Rockefeller,
Lieberman-Collins,
Net Neutrality,
Privacy,
Regulation,
Spectrum,
Tech at Night,
Twitter,
Warrants
Tech at Night: CISPA is fine, Lieberman-Collins is not. Let Verizon innovate. Make Netflix compete.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 18th at 11:30 PM |
Yup, CISPA is still the top story. It will improve our security, which matters in an age of Chinese and Anarchist Internet attacks. And unlike Lieberman-Collins, Which is the bill being pushed in the Senate, no government power grab is involved. So the House is right to challenge the President’s push for Lieberman-Collins. Lungren’s PRECISE Act is another bill that would create no new regulations. | Read More »
Tags:
Android,
Anna Eshoo,
Apple,
Barack Obama,
CISPA,
Comcast,
Cybersecurity,
Dan Lungren,
Data Transparency,
FCC,
FEC,
Innovation,
iOS,
Joe Lieberman,
Megaupload,
Motorola Mobility,
Net Neutrality,
Netflix,
PATENT WARS,
PRECISE Act,
Samsung,
Spectrum,
Susan Collins,
Tech at Night,
transparency,
Twitter,
Verizon
Tech at Night: Opening up the OPEN Act, FCC spectrum insanity
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | February 7th at 02:00 AM |
Yes, we beat SOPA, but the problem of foreign infringers is still around. And we’re not just talking about online copyright infringement, either. Copies of clothing, purses, gadgets, you name it: foreign free riders are a problem. It’s an important tradeoff to find, so an open process for the Darrell Issa OPEN Act is a good one. A slow, consensus-based approach is also smart, so | Read More »
Tags:
Barack Obama,
Censorship,
Darrell Issa,
Eric Cantor,
Facebook,
FCC,
Fr?d?ric Bastiat,
Google,
India,
John Boehner,
OPEN Act,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Tech at Night,
Twitter,
Verizon
Tech at Night: Google to obey censorship laws, LightSquared and FCC team up on Grassley, Pirates lose
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | February 2nd at 03:00 AM |
Sometimes, the anarchists lose. Even in leftist Sweden, The Pirate Bay’s founders lost their last appeal. It’s guys like these, who deliberately put up a system for infringing on US copyrights while playing word games to justify it, that motivated SOPA and that drive the desire for a treaty like ACTA. Google considers its privacy changes a public policy issue as the firm is getting | Read More »
Tags:
ACTA,
Apple,
AT&T,
Blogger,
Censorship,
China,
Chuck Grassley,
Copyright,
Cryptography,
FCC,
Gmail,
Google,
Herb Kohl,
Jay Rockefeller,
Lamar Smith,
Lifeline,
LightSquared,
Pirate Bay,
Privacy,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
Subsidy,
Susan Collins,
Tech at Night,
Trademark,
Twitter,
Zachary Katz
Tech at Night: Google causes a privacy stir, Twitter causes a censorship stir, Grassley continues to fight
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | January 28th at 03:00 AM |
So, Google is integrating its websites more. As a result, some privacy settings will apply network-wide, and one site will be able to use data from another site. People are flipping out, naturally. People have been giving Google this data for ages. People have known that Google was watching them, and yet they chose to keep using Google and in fact use one account for | Read More »
Tags:
Anonymous,
California,
Chuck Grassley,
Data Roaming,
ESA,
FCC,
Google,
LightSquared,
Marsha Blackburn,
Privacy,
Regulation,
Roaming,
Siri,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Sprint,
Tech at Night,
transparency,
Twitter,
Washington Post,
Wireless
Tech at Night: More Copyright, and the Wyden-Issa OPEN act gains attention
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | January 25th at 11:30 PM |
Some are still worried about the Megaupload takedown (including many the
Tags:
Barack Obama,
Chuck Grassley,
Copyright,
Darrell Issa,
Data Roaming,
Ethics,
FCC,
GPS,
Greg Walden,
LightSquared,
Megaupload,
OPEN Act,
Patrick Leahy,
Roaming,
Ron Wyden,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Tech at Night,
Twitter
Tech at Night: War on Copyright intensifies as infringers fall, Grassley hacked
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | January 23rd at 11:30 PM |
Filesonic stops infringing. I guess the site’s leadership didn’t want to go to jail like Ninjavideo, or get hit like Megaupload did. People put up with ad-laden, obnoxious ‘file sharing’ sites when they want to download something that can’t be distributed legally, by less annoying sites. Everyone knows this. It’s a good thing that Megaupload was taken down. That was a blow for property rights. | Read More »
Tech at Night: SOPA and PROTECT IP in yet more trouble. We need to constrain the FCC.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | January 14th at 04:00 AM |
Some bills become unstoppable in the Congress. They pile up cosponsors, get leadership support, and cruise on through to easy passage. Not SOPA, or its original Senate version, PROTECT IP. They’re in trouble. While the left is fighting these bills with blackouts and protesting, our message is simpler: If you back SOPA or PROTECT IP, we will primary you. That matters. One guy who has | Read More »
Tags:
Blackouts,
Chuck Grassley,
Competition,
Erick Erickson,
FCC,
Google,
Lamar Smith,
Marsha Blackburn,
NFL,
Orrin Hatch,
Oversight,
Patrick Leahy,
PROTECT IP,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Tech at Night,
Twitter
Tech at Night: Kill SOPA, Control the FCC, LightSquared meets with FCC again
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | January 12th at 02:30 AM |
Have some more SOPA. We still need to kill the bill and primary the offenders, after all. The bill by Lamar Smith (with strong support from Chris Dodd) is a real problem. Forbes says it relies on ignorance and fiction not facts, understanding, and reality. WordPress developers have come out against it, too. Arguments continue over unlicensed spectrum. Look, I’m open to the argument that | Read More »
Tags:
Censorship,
Chris Dodd,
Chuck Grassley,
FCC,
Google,
ICANN,
Lamar Smith,
LightSquared,
SOPA,
Tech at Night,
Twitter,
Unlicensed Spectrum,
Wordpress
Tech at Night: AT&T regroups against a coordinated attack; SOPA and FCC scrutiny continue
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | November 29th at 12:30 AM |
What do AT&T, LightSquared, and the late Super Committee have in common? Spectrum. AT&T is the big story right now, too. They know the fix is in, with Sprint, Eric Holder, and FCC all ganging up on them as a team effort. The Obama administration is all but running guns to Sprint in this effort. So, the firm is trying to slip the noose by | Read More »
Tags:
Anonymous,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
Chuck Schumer,
Cybersecurity,
Darrell Issa,
Eric Holder,
FCC,
Justice Department,
LightSquared,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
Twitter
Tech at Night: A deregulated Internet creates jobs, Microsoft answers Google attacks, Lee and Cornyn speak up
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 6th at 03:00 AM |
The free market of Internet access, driven by constantly improving technology and heightening competition, is a driver of job creation and economic growth. Even Julius Genachowski, Obama’s FCC Chairman, has to admit that. This is just one reason we fight FCC power grabs. So when the government starts talking about new regulations in emerging fields such as “cloud computing”, just say no. And when Steve | Read More »
Tags:
4G,
ANA,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
Bethesda,
Brad Smith,
Competition,
Economy,
Facebook,
Facial Recognition,
FCC,
Germany,
Google,
Growth,
ICANN,
Internet,
Jobs,
John Cornyn,
Julius Genachowski,
Microsoft,
Mike Lee,
Minecraft,
Novell,
Patents,
Regulation,
Scrolls,
Sprint,
Steve Chabot,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
Trademarks,
Twitter,
Verizon,
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
Tech at Night: FTC joins the FCC in overreaches with Twitter, Anonymous hackery lives on, Al Qaeda reels
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | July 2nd at 12:00 AM |
When it comes to the FTC beginning to persecute Google, I think conservatives have mixed feelings because the problem of overbearing government is one of Google’s making. So while we do need to keep government in its place here, the situation is understandable. The FTC going after Twitter, though? That just doesn’t make sense. It’s not even the largest “social media” software around, not at | Read More »
Tags:
4G,
Anonymous,
Antisec,
Competition,
Cybersecurity,
FCC,
FTC,
Google,
GPS,
Hackerleaks,
LightSquared,
Lulzsec,
Regulatory Reform,
Robert McDowell,
Spectrum,
Tech at Night,
Terrorism,
Tim Wu,
Twitter,
Wireless
Anthony Weiner and his eponymous Twitter “hack”
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | May 28th at 10:00 PM |
Friday night Anthony Weiner, Democrat from New York City and Client Number Nine‘s successor in the House (Edit: mixed up my NY Dems, sorry!), had a problem on Twitter. His account, @RepWeiner, had posted on it a rather inappropriate message. It went like so: RepWeiner @GennetteNicole http://yfrog.com/h25m3luj 22 hours, 18 minutes ago The Twitter post and the image on YFrog have since been deleted. To | Read More »
Tech at Night: George Soros wants your Internet, and the Democrats are peddling online censorship, and Ryan Giggs is still an adulterer
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | May 28th at 03:00 AM |
Have you ever noticed that the Soros-funded left never refers to Sprint Nextel by the firm’s full name? They only talk about Sprint. You know why? If they say Sprint Nextel, it’ll remind everyone that when #3 Sprint and #4 Nextel merged, wireless competition, prices, and service all improved. If you remember that fact, they think you might make the “wrong” predictions about #2 AT&T | Read More »
Tags:
AFL-CIO,
Android,
Apple,
AT&T,
Comcast,
Comcast v. FCC,
Competition,
CTB,
FCC,
Free Press,
George Soros,
Google,
Internet,
Lodsys,
Marsha Blackburn,
Media Access Project,
Media Reform,
Neo Marxists,
Net Neutrality,
Nextel,
OSI,
Patent Troll,
Patents,
PROTECT IP,
Public Knowledge,
Ryan Giggs,
Sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
Superinjunctions,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
Twitter,
Verizon,
Wireless
Tech at Night: Crowder on Net Neutrality, Walden on the FCC, Apple on the patent troll, Ryan Giggs is an adulterer
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | May 24th at 03:30 AM |
Top story: the great Steven Crowder has a new video on Net Neutrality. With all the hype on Twitter leading up to this release, I was looking forward to Crowder’s video release. It’s funny, accurate, and devastating to the left. As usual for Crowder. Sometimes a patent troll runs into fire. Lodsys, as you may recall, decided to abandon the strategy of targeting deep pockets | Read More »
Tags:
Android,
Apple,
Censorship,
Competition,
FCC,
Free State Foundation,
Google,
Greg Walden,
Internet,
Internet Tax,
iOS,
Jailbreaking,
John Hemming,
Lodsys,
National Association of Broadcasters,
Net Neutrality,
Parliamentary Privilege,
Patent,
Patent Troll,
PROTECT IP,
Ryan Giggs,
Ryan Giggs is an Adulterer,
Scotland,
Steven Crowder,
Sunday Herald,
Superinjunctions,
Tech at Night,
Twitter,
United Kingdom,
Universal Service Fund
Tech at “Night”: AT&T, Netflix, Net Neutrality, FCC, Twitter, Space Lasers
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 17th at 07:30 AM |
This edition of Tech at Night is unfortunately delayed. It’s almost 4am now as I’m able to start this (7am eastern) because I had a bout of Net Neutrality to deal with. All websites loaded at the same speed on my DSL: zero. Total downtime. So, late or not, let’s go. As I warned on Monday, Net Neutrality is forcing ISPs like AT&T to impose | Read More »
Tags:
Amazon,
AT&T,
California,
China,
FCC,
Fred Campbell,
Jay Rockefeller,
Jerry Brown,
Jim Langevin,
Lasers,
Net Neutrality,
Netflix,
Security,
Space,
Tech at Night,
Twitter
Technical note
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 18th at 01:08 PM |
Those of you with Twitter accounts that have an underscore (an _) in them should now be able to put your Twitter ID in your RS profile.
Tech at Night: Google, MySpace, Twitter, Privacy, FCC
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 16th at 01:00 AM |
I’ve worn myself out tonight making last minute preparations for my trip out to Austin for the RedState Gathering this weekend, so this will be brief. Additionally, Tech at Night will not appear on Friday because I will be in Austin and away from Safari, whose great RSS reader is the most important tool I use to complete my Tech at Night research. First off, | Read More »
Tags:
Deem and Pass,
Eric Schmidt,
FCC,
Google,
Internet,
MySpace,
Net Neutrality,
Privacy,
Tech at Night,
Third Way,
Title II Reclassification,
Twitter
Twitter Button open thread
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 12th at 12:58 PM |
Just a reminder to the RedState community: In your user profile, where you can set your display name and your signature, has been a blank for you to put in your Twitter ID. The Twitter buttons now on every post are using that feature. If you don’t have that Twitter ID filled in, anyone who posts your diaries to Twitter will see it credited to | Read More »