The beauty queen view of modern America
By: John Hayward | June 18th at 03:33 PM |
Who knew that a beauty pageant could be brimming with so much socio-political insight? The Miss USA pageant on Sunday gave us not one, but two, remarkable observations on the state of the Union. First, here’s Miss Alabama, Mary Margaret McCord, offering her thoughts on the surveillance state: “I think the society that we live in today, it’s sad that if we go to the | Read More »
Tech at Night: More on the Playstation 4. Kids don’t belong on the Internet.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | June 13th at 04:00 AM |

Heh, the Playstation 4 is pro-used games and cheaper, right? Not so fast. The PS4 simply didn’t include the Eye and will let publishers restrict used games after all. Told you EA didn’t stop online passes because they were suddenly fine with used games.
Kids don’t belong on the Internet, because predators are out there. Even if your kid is high school aged, Be careful!
Read More »Tags:
apple,
Competition,
Department of Justice,
EA,
FISA,
Iowa,
Marketplace Fairness Act,
Pandora,
Playstation 4,
Privacy,
Sales tax,
Sony,
Spectrum,
Spotify,
Tech at Night,
terry branstad,
Used Games,
video
The end-user license of liberty
By: John Hayward | June 11th at 06:12 PM |
One of my favorite Dilbert cartoons showed the hero’s laconic office mate, Wally, discovers to his horror that agreeing to the Microsoft End User License Agreement meant he would have to spend several months of indentured servitude as a towel boy at Bill Gates’ pool. I thought of it when hearing the sarcastic suggestion today that we might all have unknowingly agreed to the NSA’s | Read More »
Google Needs Extra Time to Spy on Your Kids
By: Ben Howe (Diary) | May 22nd at 12:30 PM |
It seems that Google is constantly falling afoul of conservatives, consumers, pundits, regulators and really everyone else on earth (except for the Obama campaign) for its privacy-infringing tendencies. It got hammered for “alleged” spying in the Safarigate scandal, where it wound up agreeing to a record-breaking $22.5 million fine in connection with charges it surreptitiously tracked Apple Safari users who Google had said could opt | Read More »
Tech at Night: Apple negotiates while Pandora lobbies. Chinese attacks continues.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | May 20th at 10:30 PM |

You know what happens when you use other people’s email services, such as Yahoo or Google? You become especially vulnerable to attacks on your privacy, including the ability of the government to search your email provider’s computers. The ECPA is a red herring, really. Sure, we an tweak it, but when you use somebody else’s computer, I’m not sure you should have much of an expectation of privacy.
Hey, look: While Pandora spends money lobbying to try to change the law to rig the system, Apple is negotiating to get what it wants for Internet radio like a free market participant should.
Read More »
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: The terrorists strike back against CISPA. Privacy silliness?
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 29th at 08:30 PM |

So back on Saturday it came out that CISPA supporters were being threatened, and now today it comes out that Mike Rogers was “SWATted”. That is, the Anonymous-tied anarchists tried to kill him by lying to the police about him.
I said recently that the radicals opposed CISPA, and were lying about it by saying it was the new SOPA, because they didn’t want American networks to be more secure. Sounds like these criminal, radical gangs really do feel threatened. This is why we must pass a similar bill, and the Senate does the nation a disservice by not doing so.
Read More »
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: ECPA email bill and MFA sales tax bill appear to have Senate support.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 22nd at 11:30 PM |

Some legislative action still ongoing: the Senate looking to fix the ECPA, an email search law that was written to the technology of the time, and now defies the expectations of its framers.
I was told Amazon and eBay would like the sales tax compact, but eBay is coming out against it, spamming its users. But the Senate continues to support it.
Read More »Tags:
Anonymous,
Bill of Rights,
Censorship,
Cybersecurity,
ebay,
ECPA,
Email,
Facebook,
FCC,
Google,
Privacy,
RKBA,
Sales tax,
Second Amendment,
Tech at Night,
WiSpy
Tech at Night: CISPA moves on. Ayotte takes on the Sales Tax. Google defeats Viacom.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 20th at 04:30 AM |

So yes, CISPA passed the House. Unsurprisingly, Anonymous isn’t happy, what when as things stand Lulzsec already is getting hammered. Greater information sharing is a threat to online anarchists, as well as foreign private and state actors.
The bill now goes to the Senate, where Jay Rockefeller may stall on an ego-driven separate bill. I think the bill’s a good idea. It’s not perfect, but not all of the criticisms floating around are correct. In particular, SOPA is a red herring, and totally unrelated. CISPA is about information sharing, not regulation.
Read More »Tags:
Anonymous,
CISPA,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
dmca,
ECPA,
Google,
Internet Sales Tax,
Jay Rockefeller,
Kelly Ayotte,
Lulzsec,
Privacy,
Sales tax,
Viacom
Tech at Night: CISPA gets amended but not quite as I wanted. FISMA reform quietly passes.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 18th at 03:30 AM |

So the House did not pass the amendment to CISPA that they probably should have passed, but the House did act to find a compromise that would ensure our needs are met, while addressing the privacy issues some have.
While the above-linked criticisms are legitimate, it is the case that not that all privacy criticisms of CISPA are legitimate. “Privacy” has become the vague catch-all for left-libertarian positions that “for the children” has become for progressives. All too often there’s no actual meat to the criticisms. Heck, half the people complaining about privacy would tell you that CISPA is the new SOPA, when the two bills are entirely unrelated. It’s baseless scaremongering designed to defeat Republican efforts and clear the field for Jay Rockefeller and Barack Obama to act.
I do plan to say more very soon on CISPA, explaining why we should pass the bill. Watch RedState.
Read More »
Tech at Night: Fox confirms my theory about Aereo. CISPA advances.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 11th at 12:00 AM |

CISPA continues to remain the big story right now. It’s moving on, though some are concerned that it was effectively renegotiated in back room meetings. It needs scrutiny before passage, I’m thinking. It’s probably a decent but watered-down bill at this point, but let’s look before supporting at this point. We need a good cybersecurity bill, not just any old thing.
Which is exactly what Jay Rockefeller is up to: flailing about, expanding government willy-nilly, in the name of cybersecurity. The SEC? Doing Cybersecurity? Insane.
I like the idea of the Internet Freedom bill, though. The global trend is away from freedom online, and it’s up to us to try to do something about it. The idea that the bill would hurt Net Neutrality is just a bonus.
Read More »Tags:
Aereo,
Barack Obama,
CISPA,
Cybersecurity,
Email,
Fox,
freedom,
Google,
Internet,
IRS,
Net Neutrality,
Privacy,
Tech at Night
Tech at Night: Cybersecurity matters thanks to China, even if the Anonymous gang is a bunch of idiots.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 5th at 10:15 PM |

I have a charity event I’m participating in tomorrow (I’m the one doing The Legend of Zelda and Zelda II), and I’d like to have slept for it, so this may be briefer than usual.
Looks like a push for real patent reform is brewing. After the lawyer- but not innovation-friendly America Invents Act was signed by Barack Obama, we’ve been left with a need to fix the actual problems with the US patent system. the i2Coalition and Google are backing anti-Patent Trolling ideas. There’s got to be a way to continue to reward small-time inventors without allowing the fakes to abuse the system.
Do Americans have a duty to diminish the security of their communications to ease government spying? Some seem to think so, as we’re reminded of in the flap over Apple’s iMessage being more secure in its encryption than government would like. Let me remind you though that any back door that government can exploit, China and Anonymous can, too.
Read More »Tags:
America Invents Act,
Anonymous,
apple,
China,
CISPA,
Cybersecurity,
DPRK,
Google,
i2Coalition,
iMessage,
North Korea,
Patent,
Patent Trolls,
Privacy,
Tech at Night,
Twitter
Tech at Night: Odds and ends on security and regulation
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 3rd at 11:15 PM |

Here we go again. The Weekend-at-Bernies-ificatoin of Aaron Swartz continues. He made an example of himself to become an anti-copyright martyr, and now we’re supposed to degrade property rights online to give him his way anyway. Pass.
Computer Fraud and Abuse is a problem, but foreign threats are an issue, too. That’s why we also need to pass CISPA which started off as the low-regulatory, small-government alternative to the Democrat power grab, if you recall. Funny how the so-called libertarians only rally agains the GOP proposal, and stayed silent against Lieberman-Collins last time.
Read More »Tags:
aaron swartz,
Anonymous,
broadband,
CISPA,
Computer Fraud and Abuse,
Cybersecurity,
EU,
Google,
Innovation,
Lieberman-Collins,
North Korea,
Privacy,
Regulation,
Tech at Night
Tech at Night: The Internet Sales Tax roll call. Obamaphone survives. Do people care about Privacy?
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 26th at 03:30 AM |

Jeff Flake. Jeff Sessions. Ron Johnson. Tim Scott.
Ted Cruz. Marco Rubio. Mike Lee. Rand Paul.
I’m generally pleased with all eight of these guys being in the Senate. They were on opposite sides of the sales tax compact amendment vote, though. If you look at the way Governors split on the issues, you’ll see similar responses. Effective conservative Governors have fallen on both sides, including neighbors Haley Barbour and Bobby Jindal.
I’m fine with the compact. It’s Constitutional and merely lets states preserve existing revenue streams, without having to defy basic economic reality by unilaterally cooperating in the rewrite-the-sales-tax Prisoner’s Dilemma. That is, any one first state that shifts from buyer-owes to seller-owes in sales tax, creating the marketplace of sales taxes that compact opponents favor, automatically creates a disincentive for businesses to set up shop there.
So, we pass the compact as the best practical solution.
Recently at RedState: Ajit Pai on Robert McDowell is worth a read. Then there’s Seton Motley on Marco Rubio challenging Internet regulation.
Read More »Tags:
Ajit Pai,
Bobby Jindal,
Claire Mccaskill,
FCC,
Google,
Internet Sales Tax,
Lifeline,
Marco Rubio,
Net Neutrality,
Obamaphone,
Privacy,
Robert McDowell,
Sales tax,
Tech at Night