Tech at Night: Harry Reid is an ineffective legislative leader
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 16th at 12:00 AM |
I guess legislatively it’ll be slow going the rest of this year, thanks to the elections. So Tech at Night just may be shorter for a while to come. That’s good for my sleep schedule, I believe. Though the aftermath continues of Harry Reid’s failure to ram through the Lieberman-Collins Cybersecurity Act, as John McCain, Kay Bailey Hutchison, and other Republicans criticized Harry Reid for | Read More »
Tags:
Anonymous,
Barack Obama,
comcast,
Cybersecurity,
Cybersecurity Act,
demand progress,
FCC,
GPS,
Harry Reid,
John McCain,
kay bailey hutchison,
Lieberman-Collins,
Privacy,
Sony,
Spectrum,
Verizon
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,
Twitter
Tech at Night: Kill SOPA. Now.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | December 24th at 02:15 AM |
Nothing in this post shall be construed to impose a belief that Lamar Smith would round up every American into MPAA-run detention centers if Chris Dodd suggested it would be good for big business. Does that sound like a stupid way to begin a post, and does it suggest that I’m about to say the opposite? Well, that’s how the Manager’s Amendment version of SOPA | Read More »
Tags:
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
Chris Dodd,
Chuck Grassley,
FCC,
GPS,
heritage foundation,
Internet,
Lamar Smith,
LightSquared,
MPAA,
Qualcomm,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Transparency
Tech at Night: Free Press finally answers Blackburn, SOPA vs OPEN, FCC Reform
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | December 22nd at 03:30 AM |
It seems like forever ago that Marsha Blackburn challenged Free Press to transparency in the group’s funding. Why should it take eight months to respond if Free Press has nothing to hide? Keep the Web OPEN. It’s a simple statement, but it’s one I support. The difference between SOPA and OPEN has been made clear to many thanks to Darrell Issa’s leadership. It’s unclear with | Read More »
Tags:
Barack Obama,
Censorship,
Chuck Grassley,
Darrell Issa,
Eric Holder,
FCC,
Free Press,
George Soros,
GPS,
Internet,
Julius Genachowski,
LightSquared,
Marsha Blackburn,
Maxine Waters,
OPEN Act,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Transparency
Tech at Night: We won a battle on SOPA; LightSquared heating up; OBAMA shows sense on privacy
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | December 17th at 02:30 AM |
Wednesday night I put off all Tech at Night topics except for SOPA because the critical mark up votes in Committee were coming up. We weren’t supposed to be able to stop SOPA, but we could at least raise awareness, put up a fight, and prepare for the floor votes. And sure enough, the vote to keep the Internet censorship provisions went in favor of | Read More »
Tags:
Anonymous,
Barack Obama,
Chris Dodd,
Chuck Grassley,
Coase Theorem,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
Darrell Issa,
FCC,
George Soros,
GPS,
Internet,
Jared Polis,
Jason Chaffetz,
Julius Genachowski,
Lamar Smith,
LightSquared,
Michelle Obama,
MPAA,
NTSB,
OPEN Act,
Privacy,
Sanjiv Ahuja,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Spectrum Screen,
Zoe Lofgren
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,
Verizon
Tech at Night: Rural coalition questions John Deere on LightSquared; FCC, Obama, and SOPA picking winners and losers in industry
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | December 8th at 02:30 AM |
The FCC’s excuse for delaying the AT&T/Qualcomm spectrum deal was to work on the AT&T/T-Mobile deal. The latter has been withdrawn, so what’s the excuse now? AT&T and Sprint both get bad reviews. Sprint’s Nextel deal went through. AT&T’s T-Mobile deal is getting blocked. Hmm. Looks shady, which is why I support Chuck Grassley’s push for FCC transparency involving LightSquared, even though so far their | Read More »
Tags:
AT&T,
Chuck Grassley,
Connect America Fund,
dan lungren,
FCC,
Google,
Google Wallet,
GPS,
Hollywood,
Internet,
Internet Kill Switch,
John Deere,
LightSquared,
Net Neutrality,
Nextel,
Qualcomm,
Slippery Slope,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
Subsidies,
T-Mobile,
Transparency,
Universal Service Fund,
Universal Service Fund Reform,
Verizon
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/Users Coalition,
Universal Service Fund,
Universal Service Fund Reform
Tech at Night: Rage against terrible, big government priorities in DC, Extrajudicial Internet seizures coming, Lightsquared vs GPS
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 13th at 03:00 AM |
Oh for crying out loud. For all that Washington talks tough about getting Americans access to high speed Internet, the “supercommittee” wants to tax new spectrum licensees. That’s just what we need: make it more expensive to build out America’s wireless infrastructure in order to pay for the President and his Cabinet to hand out money to their friends and political supporters. Isn’t that special? | Read More »
Tags:
"Richard Blumenthal",
4G,
Al Franken,
America's Broadband Connectivity Plan,
Amy Klobuchar,
apple,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
blackberry,
Budget,
CDMA,
Censorship,
Competition,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
Democrats,
Eric Schmidt,
Google,
GPS,
GSM,
iCloud,
IIA,
Internet,
iOS,
iPhone,
iPhone 4S,
LightSquared,
PROTECT IP,
RIM,
Senate,
Spectrum,
sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
Supercommittee,
taxes,
Universal Service Fund,
Universal Service Fund Reform,
Verisign,
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:
"Richard Blumenthal",
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,
Sheldon Whitehouse,
socialism,
Steve Jobs,
sunlight foundation,
Univeral Service Fund Reform,
Universal Service Fund
Tech at Night: LightSquared vs GPS, Geoff Davis and Rob Portman fight regulation
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 4th at 12:00 AM |
So, LightSquared. Some say that in some nebulous way, the firm is getting unreasonable and possibly illicit support from the Obama administration. I still don’t see it though, especially after listening in on a briefing of LightSquared’s today. The briefing discussed in depth the issues LightSquared has had with GPS manufacturers. LightSquared that they’re trying hard to be a “good neighbor” and have worked with | Read More »
Tags:
AT&T,
Competition,
Eric Holder,
Eric Schmidt,
FCC,
Geoff Davis,
Google,
GPS,
Interference,
Internet,
LightSquared,
Lillian Cunningham,
Motorola,
Motorola Mobility,
Net Neutrality,
reins act,
Rob Portman,
Search Neutrality,
sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
T-Mobile,
Washington Post,
wireless
Tech at Night: AT&T, T-Mobile competition roundup, Verizon sues the FCC over Net Neutrality for keeps this time [Fixed]
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 30th at 11:30 PM |
So, Net Neutrality has been published. Now nothing can stop Verizon’s lawsuit over the illegal power grab. Remember: the FCC has tried this before, when they went after Comcast. They lost. It’s not unreasonable to expect them to lose again. Meanwhile, federalism continues to be trashed as Puerto Rico jumps into the game. They don’t want to pay taxes but they want to block our | Read More »
Tags:
AT&T,
comcast,
Competition,
Department of Justice,
FCC,
Google,
GPS,
Kansas,
LightSquared,
Motorola,
Motorola Mobility,
Net Neutrality,
Puerto Rico,
T-Mobile,
Verizon
Tech at Night: LightSquared, AT&T, T-Mobile, Google
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 22nd at 03:30 AM |
I’ve basically got three topics for tonight’s edition. It’s sad that two of them are government antitrust actions. I suppose elections do have consequences, and one key consequence of Barack Obama’s election is corporatist selection of winners and losers in the marketplace. The third main topic: Alleged corruption. I’m still playing the role of skeptic on accusations that the Obama administration is playing favorites in | Read More »
Tags:
4G,
antitrust,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
Cellular South,
Competition,
corruption,
Darrell Issa,
Department of Justice,
FCC,
FTC,
Google,
GPS,
iPhone,
LightSquared,
Oversight,
Patents,
Radio Shack,
sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
T-Mobile,
Verizon,
wireless
Tech at Night: TN’s Haslam wants CA’s job killer tax, Al Franken too extreme for MN, Astroturf hits the FCC, Google roundup
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 16th at 03:30 AM |
Hello again to those I saw in Charleston over the weekend, and hope to see you next time to those who weren’t able to make it! While I return to California and get settled in again, it seems that some are leaving the state for good, and the hostile business climate is why. This includes the punitive Amazon Tax which has made it impossible for | Read More »
Tags:
AES,
afl-cio,
Al Franken,
amazon tax,
Android,
apple,
astroturf,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
BART,
Bill Haslam,
California,
COPPA,
Cryptography,
Cybersecurity,
DES,
FCC,
FTC,
Google,
GPS,
Internet Sales Tax,
Larry Page,
LightSquared,
Microsoft,
Minnesota,
Motorola,
Net Neutrality,
Open Source,
San Francisco,
Search Neutrality,
sprint,
T-Mobile,
taxes,
Tennessee,
Unions,
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,
Terrorism,
Tim Wu,
Twitter,
wireless