Reminder: the NRA will score Holder contempt vote.
By: Moe Lane (Diary) | June 27th at 09:30 AM |
I’m not sure why I missed this at the time – the letter’s dated June 20th – but it’s official: “the NRA will consider this vote in [their] candidate evaluations.” That doesn’t guarantee a contempt charge passing the House, but only because a contempt charge was already guaranteed. For all the loose and charged rhetoric going around, if Speaker Boehner wasn’t going to let Oversight | Read More »
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 Well, the latter deal has been withdrawn from the FCC, so now what’s the hold up?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: FCC victimizes T-Mobile, SOPA in trouble, Google’s Net Neutrality admission?
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | December 3rd at 12:30 AM |
Remember: One of the victims of the joint Sprint/Justice/FCC Triple Alliance against AT&T is T-Mobile itself. T-Mobile has no 4G, no iPhone, and no clear plan for what to do if their right to sell off to AT&T is taken away by the big government wonder team. Nobody benefits when big government tramples the little guy. Even if FCC is clearly wrong, and it is, | Read More »
Tags:
4G,
Al Franken,
AT&T,
Carrier IQ,
Competition,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
Ed Markey,
FCC,
Google,
iPhone,
Justice Department,
Net Neutrality,
Privacy,
SOPA,
sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
T-Mobile
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,
Twitter
DoJ targets AT&T: The story behind the story [Updated]
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 31st at 02:30 PM |
Updated below… Today it was announced that the Department of Justice will attempt to block AT&T’s acquisition of T-Mobile. The deal is needed for technical and regulatory reasons to allow AT&T to compete in the 4G wireless market with Verizon, Sprint/Clearwire, and with the upcoming competitor LightSquared. So why is the Department of Justice calling it bad for competition? Enter R. Gerard Salemme. It’s not | Read More »
Tags:
4G,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
C Block,
Clearwire,
Competition,
Craig McCaw,
Culture of Corruption,
DTV,
Gerry Salemme,
ICO,
Justice Department,
Nextel,
R. Gerard Salemme,
Spectrum,
sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
T-Mobile,
Verizon,
XO
150+ Mexicans killed by Operation Fast & Furious?
By: Moe Lane (Diary) | June 21st at 09:30 AM |
Bob Owens over at Pajamas Media has done a good job walking through the utter disaster that was Operation Fast & Furious (short version: the US government deliberately let Mexican narco-terrorist groups get their hands on illegally-purchased firearms). But note this paragraph: The eventual — perhaps inevitable — death of a U.S. Border Patrol Agent killed by criminals armed with at least two “walked” AK-pattern | Read More »
Tech at Night: Jim DeMint does good, Texas races California to the bottom, FCC, AT&T, Copyright
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | May 14th at 04:11 AM |
House pressure on the FCC continues, with Friday’s hearings on FCC process reform, including testimony from all four active FCC Commissioners (Republican Commissioner Meredith Baker has quit the FCC). I associate myself with the remarks of Seton Motley on the preferred outcome of FCC Process Reform: “FCC ‘Process Reform’ Should Be About Reducing FCC Power. Oh, and making them obey the law.” Meanwhile, as much | Read More »
Tags:
AT&T,
Chuck Grassley,
Clearwire,
COICA,
Data Roaming,
Facebook,
FCC,
Google,
Internet,
Jim DeMint,
Justice Department,
Leap,
MetroPCS,
National Emergency Alert System,
Orrin Hatch,
Patrick Leahy,
Price Controls,
PROTECT IP,
Spectrum,
sprint,
T-Mobile,
Verizon,
wireless
Tech at Night: Google, FCC, Civil Defense spectrum
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 14th at 03:30 AM |
That’s one of the most boring and least unique Tech at Night titles ever, but I’m going to war with the links I have. Slade Gorton’s priorities are horribly wrong. I’m sorry, but that’s the way it is. On Tuesday the Greg Walden subcommittee held hearings on “Use of Spectrum with Public Safety.” I’ve already explained why I think the D Block of wireless spectrum | Read More »
Tags:
Ben Huh,
C-SPAN,
Civil Defense,
Cliff Stearns,
D Block,
FCC,
FISMA,
Free Press,
Free State Foundation,
George Soros,
glenn greenwald,
Google,
Google Apps for Government,
Greg Walden,
Justice Department,
Nancy Pelosi,
Public Safety,
Robert McChesney,
San Francisco,
San Francisco Democrat,
security,
Slade Gorton,
Spectrum,
wireless
The Just-Us Department
By: TobyToons (Diary) | March 4th at 08:00 AM |
Cross-Posts listed at: TobyToons.com (Conservative Political Cartoons)
Department of Justice: We hire Commies now!
By: Moe Lane (Diary) | September 25th at 04:00 PM |
Man, the Stephen Colbert thing must have been an unmitigated disaster for the Democrats: it actually shoved the Christopher Coates testimony on the New Black Panther Party situation onto the front page of the Washington Post. And not in an uniformly favorable way to the Department of Justice. To do a quick review: back in 2008 a couple of Black Panthers engaged in a little | Read More »
Tech at Night: Free Press, FCC, Google, LTE, RIM, Amazon, California
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 4th at 11:30 PM |
Tonight, we start with a longer note that requires some setup, so bear with me as I break from the usual format for a moment. ––– The FCC’s attempt to reclassify broadband as if it were a telephone service had already encountered opposition from a strong, bipartisan majority of Congress – not to mention usually Democratic allies like the AFL-CIO, CWA, IBEW, LULAC, MMTC, NAACP, | Read More »
Tags:
ADA,
afl-cio,
alan grayson,
amazon,
blackberry,
CALEA,
California,
Canada,
cia,
Facebook,
FCC,
FPPC,
Free Press,
Google,
Indonesia,
Internet,
Julius Genachowski,
Justice Department,
Kevin Werbach,
Kindle,
LTE,
matt stoller,
Net Neutrality,
saudi arabia,
sprint,
state department,
Twitter,
United Arab Emirates,
Verizon,
WiMAX