Tech at Sunday Morning: We now know why the MetroPCS / T-Mobile deal went through. What to do about Google Glass.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | May 19th at 05:30 AM |

Had some work to do Friday night, so this this became Tech at Sunday Morning!
I still don’t see it passing the House after Mike Enzi’s winners and losers talk poisoned the well, but conservative governors want MFA passed for good reason. Ask Scott Walker.
Remember when the T-Mobile/MetroPCS deal flew through the Obama administration without a hitch? I think we now know why: it meant the end of the MetroPCS challenge to Net Neutrality. How convenient.
Stealth recording technology. What could go wrong? Of course, if you don’t like Google Glass, the real thing to do is to let property owners ban it on their own property. Problem solved.
Read More »Tags:
anarchists,
Anonymous,
australia,
Bitcoin,
Censorship,
FBI,
Google,
Google Glass,
IRFA,
Lulzsec,
MetroPCS,
MFA,
mike rogers,
Mt. Gox,
Net Neutrality,
Pandora,
Privacy,
Sales tax,
Scott Walker,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night
Tech at Night: A bad week for anarchists. Democrats selectively urgent about privacy.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 27th at 04:00 AM |

Crime Watch: Lulzsec bigshot gets taken down in Australia, and an Anonymous gang member is on trial for multiple rape at an Occupy event. Bad week for anarchists. Heh.
Democrats tuning their rhetoric for the moment: IMMEDIATE ACTION needed on Do Not Track, even as it’s taken YEARS to do anything on outdated ECPA email rules which now may include a warning requirement, and it wasn’t even Jay Rockefeller who got off his tail to get that done.
Read More »Tags:
Ajit Pai,
Anarchy,
Anonymous,
australia,
Cybersecurity,
Do Not Track,
ECPA,
FCC,
IP Revolution,
Jay Rockefeller,
Lulzsec,
Privacy,
Regulation,
Spectrum,
Tech at Night
Tech at Night: Is ACTA a problem, and the return of Internet Kill Switch lite?
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | January 31st at 02:07 AM |
There’s a lot of fear going around about ACTA, the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, a plurilateral agreement under the WTO between the US, the EU, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Japan, South Korea, and Morocco. Some of the fears look real, some don’t. For example, even though it was negotiated in secret, the text is easily available. Another false complaint is that it’s another SOPA, when | Read More »
Tags:
ACTA,
australia,
Canada,
Carrier IQ,
China,
Chuck Grassley,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
Edward Markey,
European Union,
Internet Kill Switch,
Ireland,
Japan,
kay bailey hutchison,
Lisa Murkowski,
Mary Bono Mack,
Megaupload,
Morocco,
New Zealand,
Privacy,
Saxby Chambliss,
Singapore,
SOPA,
South Korea,
Thailand,
Trademark,
Twitter,
WTO
Tech at Night: Spectrum Dishonesty at the Obama FCC, SOPA alternative emerges, AT&T Kulaks targeted further
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | December 10th at 02:30 AM |
There’s a new story developing. I’ve touched on it now and then, but the pieces are coming together. The FCC temporarily blocked the AT&T/Qualcomm deal to let AT&T buy spectrum using the excuse that they wanted to evaluate it together with the AT&T/T-Mobile deal. Well, the latter deal has been withdrawn from the FCC, so now what’s the hold up? It turns out that the | Read More »
Tags:
4G,
America Invents Act,
apple,
AT&T,
australia,
Barack Obama,
Chuck Grassley,
copyright,
Dana Rohrabacher,
Darrell Issa,
Energy and Commerce,
Eric Holder,
FCC,
France,
Galaxy Tab,
Internet,
iPhone 4S,
Julius Genachowski,
Justice Department,
LightSquared,
Michael Copps,
OPEN Act,
Patent,
PATENT WARS,
PROTECT IP,
Qualcomm,
Ron Wyden,
Samsung,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Spectrum Screen,
T-Mobile,
Transparency,
wireless
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,
Verizon
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,
United Kingdom,
WiMAX,
wireless
The Cost of Political Pseudo-Science Shown In Two Examples.
By: Repair_Man_Jack (Diary) | June 6th at 03:00 PM |
Surely it’s time for climate-change deniers to have their opinions forcibly tattooed on their bodies. – Richard Glover (HT:National Times.Com) Richard Glover and Dr. Donald Brown are two very different men, in different nations, who work towards a common goal. Each man believes that human pollution has driven a series of chemical and physical changes in the Earth’s atmosphere. Each man believes this will damage | Read More »
Tech at Night: Net Neutrality, FCC, Republicans charge ahead
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | February 5th at 02:00 AM |
Forgive me if I’m not as engaging as usual tonight. Firefox robbed me of a good 20 minutes of time tonight. Firefox 3, what was supposed to be faster and better than ever, had taken up so much memory it was slowing my whole system, and then it took forever to restart. Of course, now they’re saying Firefox 4 will be better this time. Really. | Read More »
Tags:
australia,
Barack Obama,
britain,
China,
Cybersecurity,
eff,
Egypt,
FCC,
Firefox,
fred upton,
Internet,
IPv4,
Joe Lieberman,
Net Neutrality,
NoScript,
Oversight,
Safari,
saudi arabia,
socialism,
Susan Collins,
Verizon,
WEP,
WPA
Tech at Night: Google, Daily Kos, Australia, Nuclear Power, Fraud, DRM
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 19th at 02:00 AM |
Previously we covered Chris Bowers working over at Daily Kos on a linking scheme to manipulate Google’s search service. Now we come across a new attack on the company, a plan to manipulate click tracking the firm does to figure out what links are most interesting to its users. Of course, the Daily Kos folk want to smear Republicans using Google. Again, we look to | Read More »
Tags:
australia,
Barack Obama,
britain,
Chris Bowers,
Civilization V,
Climate Science,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
Daily Kos,
dmca,
DRM,
Energy,
Energy Independence,
Global Warming,
Google,
Googlebomb,
Internet,
Internet Kill Switch,
kay bailey hutchison,
Net Neutrality,
nuclear power,
Politico,
Steam,
Valve
Tech at Night: Al Franken, Free Press, Trade, California
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 20th at 11:30 PM |
How do you know when the Net Neutrality proposals of the neo-Marxist group Free Press are really out there? When the 31337* Al Franken is building his mailing list off of promoting the radical fringe’s version of the Net Neutrality agenda, you know you’re off in loony land. Reading his poorly thought out rhetoric gives the same effect. He claims that we need massive government | Read More »
Tags:
31337,
ACLU,
Al Franken,
amazon,
australia,
California,
FCC,
Free Press,
greenpeace,
Internet,
Media Freedom,
Net Neutrality,
North Carolina,
taxes,
Toilet Paper,
trade