Tech at Night: A victory lap on Net Neutrality, plus more on Roaming, FCC
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 8th at 08:00 PM |
Today, the House of Representatives voted to repeal Net Neutrality. H.J. Res 37, a resolution invoking the Congressional Review Act to reverse the FCC’s Net Neutrality order, passed the House under H.Res 200 by a 241-178 vote. Republicans voted 236-0 for repeal, while Democrats voted 178-5 against repeal. The five Democrats? Boren of OK, Conyers of MI, Costa of CA, Peterson of MN, and Shuler | Read More »
Tech at Night: Net Neutrality, FCC, Wireless Roaming, Anonymous, George Soros
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 7th at 03:30 AM |
The final House vote is coming to repeal Net Neutrality via the Congressional Review Act. I’m pretty interested to see how many Democrats we can get in the House, because it may give a clue of how many Democrats we can get in the Senate. Remember: under the CRA we only need 51, not 60. I hope we don’t have to fire up the CRA | Read More »
Tags:
Anonymous,
AT&T,
Cell Phone Bill Shock Act,
Congressional Review Act,
CTIA,
FCC,
George Soros,
Internet,
National Broadband Plan,
Net Neutrality,
Roaming,
Sony,
sprint,
tea party,
Tom Udall,
Verizon,
wireless
Tech at Night: Net Neutrality, Sprint’s attempted looting, Copyright, Security, Internet Taxes
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 5th at 03:30 AM |
I’m late. No excuses. Let’s go. So the courts threw out Verizon’s challenge of Net Neutrality, rejecting the very clever argument made by Verizon that it wasn’t premature. So now we wait for the actual publication of Net Neutrality to take place. Well, to a point. The Republicans aren’t waiting and will vote this week in the full House to repeal Net Neutrality under the | Read More »
Tags:
amazon,
Anonymous,
AT&T,
Congressional Review Act,
copyright,
FCC,
Francis Cianfrocca,
Internet,
Net Neutrality,
PlayStation Network,
Rasmussen Reports,
Roaming,
Robert McDowell,
RSA,
SecurID,
security,
Sony,
sprint,
Verizon,
wireless
Tech at Night: Eric Schmidt, Google, AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, Sprint, Clearwire
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 2nd at 03:30 AM |
So yeah, Tech at Night. I should start it at some point shouldn’t I? Hours of Spelunky are fun on a Friday evening, combining the action of a classic NES game with the exploration, power growth, and vindictive shopkeepers of Nethack, but I have things to cover tonight, so let’s go. We’ll start with my own post, going over how Eric Schmidt really stepped in | Read More »
Tags:
Android,
ARRA,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
Clearwire,
Eric Schmidt,
Grand Moff Tarkin,
Internet,
LTE,
Net Neutrality,
NTIA,
Princess Leia Organa,
RUS,
Spelunky,
sprint,
stimulus,
T-Mobile,
Verizon,
WiMAX,
wireless
Tech at Night: Civil Defense in the D Block, Hugo Chavez, Google, Netflix, Amazon
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 31st at 03:30 AM |
Hello! As is my right, I’m going to start tonight by shamelessly promoting my own piece arguing for the assignment of the D block of wireless spectrum to civil defense and public safety. I keep calling it civil defense because we learned about the need for this after 9/11, and if the actions of the first responders after those attacks wasn’t wartime civil defense, I | Read More »
Tags:
9/11,
amazon,
Argentina,
Civil Defense,
D Block,
FCC,
Free Press,
FTC,
Google,
Hugo Chavez,
Internet,
Netflix,
Privacy,
security,
Spectrum,
Venezuela,
wireless
Tech at Night: Yet more AT&T, T-Mobile, FCC, Google, Net Neutrality
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 28th at 11:30 PM |
Remember when I seemed to write about Net Neutrality four times a week, which was really something when I was only posting three times? Well, the AT&T/T-Mobile deal is probably going to get that much discussion for now. Of course there’s nothing new yet. Discussion is all there is until government actually starts acting. My job is to find the interesting discussion, I suppose. So | Read More »
Tags:
3DS,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
Brussels,
Congressional Review Act,
Consent Decree,
copyright,
Douglas Holtz-Eakin,
European Commission,
European Union,
FCC,
Google,
Internet,
Julius Genachowski,
LTE,
Mike Wendy,
Net Neutrality,
Nintendo,
R4,
Seton Motley,
sprint,
T-Mobile,
tea party,
Tom Giovanetti,
Verizon,
wireless
Tech at Night: Consent Decrees, Darrell Issa, RSA, SecurID
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 25th at 11:30 PM |
After that flurry of activity online, we seem be having a bit of a slow Friday. It’s no wonder: we have a long fight ahead with respect to the AT&T/T-Mobile deal, a process that Mike Wendy calls Legalized Extortion. And when property rights are made contingent on acceptance of a goverment-dictated consent degree, it’s hard to argue with the thrust of Wendy’s point. Scary thought | Read More »
Tags:
amazon,
amazon tax,
Americans for Prosperity,
AT&T,
California,
Consent Decree,
copyright,
Darrell Issa,
Julius Genachowski,
Lime Wire,
Net Neutrality,
RIAA,
RSA,
SecurID,
T-Mobile
Tech at Night: AT&T, T-Mobile, FCC, Patents
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 24th at 03:30 AM |
So the top story this week is going to be the AT&T acquisition of T-Mobile USA. There’s a lot being said about it, about unions, about competition, but the story I’m seeing emerging is that this deal is about spectrum. AT&T sees in T-Mobile a way to get the spectrum it needs going forward. In fact, even power grabbing FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski said to | Read More »
Tags:
"Richard Blumenthal",
amazon,
amazon tax,
antitrust,
apple,
AT&T,
Bruce Schneier,
California,
China,
Chuck Schumer,
cingular,
copyright,
CTIA,
European Union,
Facebook,
FCC,
Frank Lautenberg,
Google,
Harry Reid,
Harvard Business Review,
Internet,
Joe Baca,
Julius Genachowski,
Loretta Sanchez,
Patents,
Patrick Leahy,
RSA,
SecurID,
security,
Sony,
Spectrum,
sprint,
T-Mobile,
Tom Udall,
U.S. Chamber of Commerce,
Verizon,
wireless
Tech at Night: AT&T, T-Mobile, Unions, FCC
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 21st at 11:30 PM |
So, read any good Tech posts lately? OK, I couldn’t think of a better way than that tonight to introduce a pair of RedState posts on the top story of the moment: AT&T’s announced plans to acquire T-Mobile USA from the Germans. It seems that there are two major conservative perspectives on this deal. One was described by LaborUnionReport on Sunday: if the non-union T-Mobile | Read More »
Tags:
afl-cio,
apple,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
CWA,
FCC,
fred upton,
Greg Walden,
Internet,
iPad,
iPhone,
iPod Nano,
Mary Bono Mack,
Net Neutrality,
NLRB,
right to work,
T-Mobile,
trade,
Unions,
wireless
Tech at Night: FCC Danger, Lefty Hypocrisy, Eric Schmidt, AT&T
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 19th at 03:30 AM |
Long week on my end, but thankfully it’s over as soon as I’m done writing this. But the top story is danger at the FCC. The regulator is still threatening to overstep its bounds and circumvent the Telecommunications Act, which strictly limits the amount of power the FCC has over Information Services. So now they want to redefine high-speed Internet access as something new and | Read More »
Tags:
Al Franken,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
Barbara Boxer,
Bias,
Commerce Department,
CPB,
Eric Schmidt,
Hypocrisy,
iPhone,
Julius Genachowski,
Net Neutrality,
Netflix,
New York Times,
Regulatory Reform,
Tethering,
wireless
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,
Twitter
Tech at Night: Welcome to Net Neutrality
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 15th at 03:00 AM |
Good evening. I’m going to start tonight with a clarification from Friday. While I identified last week’s Net Neutrality push poll with Consumer Reports, the poll was actually signed on by CR’s publisher, Consumers Union, and conducted by the Consumer Federation of America. As that one television network says, I have now made a report, and you can decide for yourself what to make of | Read More »
Tags:
Al Franken,
AT&T,
Barry Diller,
Congressional Review Act,
Consumer Federation of America,
Consumer Repurts,
Consumers Union,
FCC,
Internet,
Net Neutrality,
Qualcomm
Tech at Night: Net Neutrality, Search Neutrality, Consumer Reports push polling, Internet Tax
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 12th at 03:30 AM |
As I began work on tonight’s late Tech at Night, reports came out of an explosion at a nuclear power plant in Fukushima prefecture, Japan. As Japan continues to deal with an unimaginably strong earthquake and then a devastating tsunami caused by that quake, I hope nobody takes those special circumstances and tries to argue against clean, effective power generation technology in the general case. | Read More »
Tags:
antitrust,
Barack Obama,
Commerce Department,
Consumer Reports,
CTIA,
Darrell Issa,
Earthquakes,
FCC,
Federal Spectrum Relocation,
Free Press,
Fukushima,
Gigi Sohn,
Google,
Internet Tax,
iPhone,
Japan,
joe barton,
Julius Genachowski,
Mark Warner,
Marsha Blackburn,
MICC,
Microsoft,
Mike Lee,
Net Neutrality,
Olympia Snowe,
Polls,
Privacy,
Roger Wicker,
Ron Wyden,
Search Neutrality,
Sendai,
tea party,
wireless
Tech at Night: FCC, Net Neutrality, Amazon Tax Hypocrisy
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 10th at 02:30 AM |
I know nobody wants to talk about Net Neutrality right now when unions are the issue giving everyone warm feelings right now, but there were important hearings held Wednesday. Greg Walden’s House subcommittee held hearings on HJ Res 37, which disapproves of Net Neutrality to invoke the Congressional Review act and overrule the FCC’s power grab. On top of that, the FCC responded to the | Read More »
Tags:
4chan,
Anonymous,
California,
Commerce Department,
CREDO Mobile,
Derek Turner,
FCC,
fred upton,
Free Press,
Greg Walden,
HSPA+,
Internet,
Julius Genachowski,
Lee Terry,
Marsha Blackburn,
Net Neutrality,
sprint,
T-Mobile,
Unions,
WiMAX,
Working Assets
Tech at Night: Google, NLRB, FCC, Net Neutrality, Patents
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 8th at 12:07 AM |
Much to cover, and less time to cover it in! So many important things I don’t even know what to hit first. So, I’ll be biased and hit what I found out about from RedState. Google and the NLRB teamed up to promote unionization, with Google providing free ad space. That’s a problem for three reasons. First, the NLRB is supposed to be the impartial | Read More »
Tags:
"Cap and Trade",
Barack Obama,
CCIA,
Congressional Review Act,
copyright,
EPA,
FCC,
fred upton,
Google,
Greg Walden,
Harry Reid,
Internet Kill Switch,
James Risch,
Joe Lieberman,
Maria Cantwell,
Mike Crapo,
Net Neutrality,
NLRB,
obamacare,
Patent,
Patent Reform Act,
Patents,
Patrick Leahy,
Playstation 3,
Rand Paul,
Regulation,
Sony,
Susan Collins,
Unions,
Washington Examiner