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,
Twitter,
Unlicensed Spectrum,
Wordpress
Tech at Night: The Return. Also, we still need to kill SOPA.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | January 5th at 01:00 AM |
I’m back. I ended up taking an extended Christmas break because well, I liked having a break, plus there wasn’t a whole lot going on anyway. But, back to work! Lamar Smith and Chris Dodd still want to censor the Internet, by pushing the SOPA bill that we need to defeat. Why is it bad? Victims get no due process, ISPs have the burden of | Read More »
Tags:
Android,
Anonymous,
apple,
Censorship,
Chris Dodd,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
Darrell Issa,
FCC,
Google,
I hate Nazis,
ICANN,
ITC,
Lamar Smith,
Microsoft,
MPAA,
Nazis,
NPD,
Open,
PATENT WARS,
Patents,
RIAA,
Righthaven,
Ron Wyden,
SOPA,
TLD
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,
Trademarks,
Twitter,
Verizon,
wireless
Tech at night: Net Neutrality, ICANN, Basic security
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 2nd at 11:00 PM |
Welcome to the remarkably early Tech at Night tonight. When I have my initial preparation done by 6pm, I’m not going to stay up until midnight to do the actual writing. Not gonna do it. Wouldn’t be prudent. We start with some mild bad news: the resolution disapproving of Net Neutrality has been delayed. Fred Upton is getting recognition for his active work challenging the | Read More »
Tags:
Andrew McLaughlin,
Barack Obama,
FCC,
fred upton,
Google,
Greg Walden,
ICANN,
Internet,
Net Neutrality,
security,
vint cerf
Reading the FOIA releases of the Andrew McLaughlin Emails IV
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | June 18th at 10:39 PM |
Welcome to the fourth and final part of the series (See I, II, and III to get up to speed with what’s going on here). Brief summary: Andrew McLaughlin is Deputy White House CTO, and has been reprimanded by the White House for inappropriate relations with his former employer, Google. Due to a Google Buzz security hole, wide-eyed observers at Big Government noticed that McLaughlin | Read More »
Tags:
Alan Davidson,
Andrew McLaughlin,
BigGovernment.com,
Clearwire,
FOIA,
Google,
Google Buzz,
Haiti,
IANA,
ICANN,
Internet,
Michael Terrell,
Rod Beckstrom,
vint cerf,
white house
Reading the FOIA releases of the Andrew McLaughlin Emails I
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | June 15th at 10:21 PM |
Via InsideGoogle.com I’ve come across the Andrew McLaughlin emails released via FOIA requests (Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3). I’d meant to make a 5 part series of my reading through them for signs that McLaughlin was inappropriately acting as an agent of Google from his job as White House CTO (which is an accusation that Darrell Issa is not letting drop quietly, internal | Read More »