Tech at Night: The ITU treaty is a failure of Obama to lead internationally
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | December 18th at 01:30 AM |

Hello again. Having been traveling from Wednesday to Friday for my employer, I did my best to get this out Friday night, but I crashed about a third of the way into my backlog of links. Then over the weekend my email server died. So, we catch up with Tech at Night on Monday!
We’ll start with the International Telecommunications Union. Reports came out that ITU anti-liberty proposals were backing off, but the effort is going in the wrong direction. A big chunk of the Anglosphere is against it, including the Obama administration.
The President is getting credit for this position from industry and House Republicans, but consider this: if the ITU’s secretary general didn’t see the Obama opposition coming then just how muted were Obama’s efforts to fix the treaty to begin with? This is a failure of the President to lead internationally.
Read More »Tags:
Anonymous,
Barack Obama,
China,
Clearwire,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
Dish Network,
Eric Schmidt,
FCC,
Google,
Internet,
Iran,
IRFA,
ITU,
Kim Dotcom,
Larry Page,
mike rogers,
New Zealand,
Pandora,
Patent,
Regulation,
Sales tax,
Sergey Brin,
Spectrum,
sprint,
Tech at Night,
Verizon,
Westboro Baptist Church,
ZTE
Tech at Night: Obama, not Google, politicized regulation. FCC needs a new direction.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 18th at 01:30 AM |

Google is a target now. The EU is threatening to do its people a disservice by trying to fight Google innovation as hard as they fight Microsoft innovation. Because here’s the thing: people who voluntarily use Google software are not at all the same as people who were snooped on by Google Street View vans. They’re not victims. They’re people choosing to sign their privacy away. The EU, in attacking Google, is restricting choice for Europeans.
Meanwhile, in the US, I have to disagree with Scott Cleland on Google’s FTC issues. Regular readers know I’m hard on Google when it’s warranted: in the Wi Spy mess, and in the Safari hack, I supported regulatory action against the firm. But the antitrust and Search Neutrality disputes are stupid, and are themselves political power grabs. The Obama regulators are themselves political power seekers. Google is not politicizing any process. Obama and his people already did.
Read More »Tags:
Ajit Pai,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
EU,
FCC,
FTC,
Google,
Innovation,
Internet,
Larry Page,
Net Neutrality,
Privacy,
Regulation,
Sirius XM,
Spectrum,
Tech at Night,
WCS Band
Tech at Night: Defending Google from a new accusation, even as I support accountability for the old
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 13th at 11:00 PM |
Time to defend Google: It’s unfair to attack them for excluding Youtube from its “anti-piracy” penalties, when they’re also excluding every other popular site driven by user-generated content. Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, and Youtube are four sites that, whether Google-owned or not, need to be indexed and valued to a degree. The point of the penalty is to punish illegitimate sites, not legitimate sites with some | Read More »
Tags:
apple,
Cryptography,
Eric Schmidt,
FBI,
FTC,
Google,
iPhone,
Kim Dotcom,
Larry Page,
Megaupload,
Privacy,
Safari,
Wikileaks,
youtube
Tech at Night: Tech bloopers, Samsung still losing in Germany, Obama and Holder strongarm AT&T
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 6th at 02:30 AM |
As Labor Day winds up out here, we have a brief Tech at Night tonight. Something to watch: Eric Schmidt is downplaying talk of Google wanting Motorola’s phone patents after Larry Page pretty much said the opposite. Who’s in charge here? HP sues its own partner over its own idea. Who’s in charge there? A Dutch court only found Samsung phones, not tablets, to infringe | Read More »
Tags:
apple,
Barack Obama,
Eric Holder,
Eric Schmidt,
EU,
Germany,
Google,
HP,
Larry Page,
Motorola,
Netherlands,
Patents,
Samsung
Tech at Night: Obama and Holder drop a bomb on jobs and competition, California tax battle continues
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 1st at 01:00 AM |
So much going on suddenly this week. Barack Obama and Eric Holder’s DoJ has decided to come after AT&T for its plans to merge with T-Mobile, possibly doing the bidding of donors while hindering jobs growth in America as well as nationwide 4G wireless Internet competition. Sprint’s not doing much to keep Verizon in check; we need AT&T to have the spectrum needed to do | Read More »
Tags:
4G,
amazon,
apple,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
California,
Competition,
Cybersecurity,
Department of Justice,
Eric Holder,
Gibson,
Gmail,
Google,
Internet,
Iran,
Larry Page,
Openwave,
Patents,
Regulation,
RIM,
sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
SSL,
T-Mobile,
Verizon,
Wal-Mart,
Wikileaks,
wireless
Tech at Night: Fighting an illegal tax in California, fighting unchecked regulation, and fighting the urge to regulate
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 30th at 01:00 AM |
As is usual, tonight I’ll give priority to the things we had posted at RedState, and mention those first. Especially My own post on the latest on the California Amazon Tax referendum, and more specifically on the plans of Democrats to nullify the constitutional referendum process, in service of their unconstitutional Internet sales tax. We need to pressure Republicans to vote the right away, at | Read More »
Tags:
4G,
amazon tax,
AT&T,
BART,
California,
Censorship,
copyright,
DNS,
EPA,
Facebook,
FCC,
FTC,
Google,
Internet Sales Tax,
Larry Page,
LTE,
New Deal,
Privacy,
PROTECT IP,
referendum,
Regulation,
T-Mobile,
Use Tax
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: Verizon, FCC, Net Neutrality, Google
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | January 22nd at 03:30 AM |
The big story as we close out this week is Verizon appealing the FCC’s Net Neutrality order. Verizon is choosing to go back to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals, the site of the last Net Neutrality legal fight. That was the Comcast v FCC case, lost by the FCC because the FCC simply doesn’t have the legal authority to do it. Some say it | Read More »
Tags:
Android,
Anna Eshoo,
copyright,
Eric Schmidt,
FCC,
fred upton,
Google,
Henry Waxman,
HTML 5,
Internet,
Java,
Larry Page,
Net Neutrality,
Privacy,
Verizon