Tech at Night: Netflix proves me right on Net Neutrality. DoJ on Swartz.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | January 19th at 02:30 AM |

Remember when they told you Net Neutrality was needed? Remember when we said it was really about favoring online firms over telecoms? Told you so, told you so, told you so. Netflix now blocking select ISPs, trying to use market power in order to bully their way to sweetheart bandwidth deals, knowing ISPs can’t fight back under Net Neut regs, aka the Open Internet order.
PS Told you so.
It remains ridiculous that the Aaron Swarz suicide continues be politicized to the point that we’re putting innocent prosecutors under pressure, pressure that defies cross-examination due to the death of the key witness.
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aaron swartz,
Barack Obama,
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Instagram,
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Mega,
Megaupload,
Net Neutrality,
Netflix,
New Zealand,
Privacy,
SOPA,
Tech at Night,
Video Games
Tech at Night: The pre-inauguration slump. The anti-SOPA coalition is feared.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | January 8th at 01:00 AM |

Slow month so far. Last Tech at Night was quick, and so will this one be a short trip through my browser windows.
The anti-SOPA coalition could return, because it’s the one weird time that the left wing also seems to have an anti-regulatory element to it. Legislators are right to fear it.
I like this: Darrell Issa investigating FTC and how its Google investigation leaked just so much to the public. Whose agenda was served there?
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Tech at Night: Sales tax deal is dead. Silly video privacy law gone. Obama makes life harder.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | January 3rd at 02:30 AM |

Hey La-Mulanites! I’m Neil, and let’s play Tech at Night.
Anyway. Yeah, I took a break, as you may have noticed. It turns out between Christmas, New Year’s and the Fiscal Cliff, not much happened for me to cover, anyway! So let’s get started.
Two legislative notes: the outmoded video privacy law passed, while the so-called Marketplace Fairness Act is dead in the water. I always said its best chance was President Romney and a Republican Senate, but now that’s not happening. Poor Amazon, bargaining with states on the assumption this would happen.
And in case you forgot, a Cybersecurity executive order would be a bad thing, per Marsha Blackburn and Steve Scalise.
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amazon,
apple,
Cybersecurity,
Darrell Issa,
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EU,
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FCC,
FTC,
Internet,
Internet Sales Tax,
LTE,
Marketplace Fairness Act,
Net Neutrality,
PATENT WARS,
Privacy,
Regulation,
Ron Wyden,
Sales tax,
Samsung,
Tech at Night
Tech at Night: In the post-landline era, there is no phone monopoly. Out of touch privacy regulation coming.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | December 20th at 02:30 AM |

It’s amazing to me that at this point we’re still pretending there’s a phone monopoly. Competition exists. Yes, it’s obvious that nobody has a monopoly on phone service anymore. The assumption that there’s a monopoly is detached from the reality of the modern market. People routinely go without landlines these days, and there’s even competition for those!
FCC is at least pretending to investigate the need to deregulate and prepare for the IP Revolution in phone service. We’ll see if they rig it to get what they want out of it, though. No, I’m not very optimistic about second term Obama regulators.
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Barack Obama,
Cybersecurity,
FCC,
FTC,
Google,
Internet,
ITU,
monopoly,
Privacy,
Special Access,
Tech at Night,
Telephone
Tech at Night: Google gets its way against Obama, to everyone’s surprise?
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | November 29th at 03:30 AM |

Apologies. I’ve had some technical issues tonight, and after twice nearly losing my list of links to work through… I’ll do my best, but I’m not really feeling it at this point. So sorry if I’m subpar tonight.
Two Google wins going on. Larry Page talked with FTC on antitrust and now the left is shrieking that sanity may prevail on this. Google isn’t a search monopoly. Amazon, eBay, IMDB, sites like these ensure it. Even if Bing and Duck Duck Go are having trouble breaking through, domain-specific search matters, a lot, and Google has to compete with that, or die.
That said, it’s ridiculous that Google was allowed to hack people’s browsers, store information surreptitiously, and instruct the browsers to send that information to their servers at later times. This directly against the expressed wishes and policies of the users involved. All they have to do is pay Obama his 20 pieces of silver, and they even get to keep the data.
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Barack Obama,
Chuck Grassley,
Darrell Issa,
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Google,
ICPA,
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IRFA,
ITU,
MetroPCS,
Patrick Leahy,
Privacy,
Reddit,
Regulation,
Safari,
Spectrum,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night
Tech at Night: Obama’s Cybersecurity is the new Global Warming
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | November 3rd at 04:35 AM |

Surprise:Obama’s cybersecurity plans don’t actually fix anything, they just expand government. And yet the administration shamelessly attempts to use the crisis of storm Sandy to try to achieve this end.
At this point the administration’s cybersecurity efforts are as delusional and straw-grasping as its global warming efforts. Though what’s sad is that unlike global warming, there actually is a kernel of truth there that we as a nation could be acting on, but Obama is distracting us with his attempts to expand government.
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Ajit Pai,
apple,
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BitTorrent,
copyright,
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FDR,
Franklin Roosevelt,
FTC,
Google,
Kim Dotcom,
Low Power FM,
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MetroPCS,
NPR,
Patents,
Privacy,
Tech at Night,
Tethering,
Verizon,
wireless
Tech at Night: Hurricane Sandy thoughts, Cybersecurity inconsistency from the administration
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | November 1st at 02:00 AM |

Hello all. I was without power for 25 hours after Sandy, and so I’m a bit behind. So tonight’s edition of Tech at Night is going to be put together a bit quickly. Sorry about that. By the way, while obviously a hurricane can take out wireless towers, wireless was vital for keeping me in touch with the world when I was without power at home. It was great. I’m not sure exactly what good FCC monitoring could do though, except to use a crisis to expand the role of the state.
Watch as the administration plays games: on one hand it tries to use Iranian attacks on banks as an excuse to legislate cybersecurity mandates, instead of attacking Iran back, while on the other hand it opposes cybersecurity mandates at the ITU! How about we oppose all cybersecurity mandates, guys?
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Barack Obama,
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FISA,
FTC,
Google,
hurricane,
Hurricane Sandy,
ITU,
Jimmy Wales,
Privacy,
Regulation,
Special Access,
Tech at Night,
Unions,
Wikimedia Foundation,
Wikipedia,
wireless
Tech at Night: Ajit Pai comes to RedState on IP Transformation, FCC Reform Needed, Copyright Reform Needed Too?
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 27th at 02:30 AM |

Regulation must keep up with the needs of modernization. That’s a point new FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai came to RedState to make, particularly with respect to the Internet transformation going on in telecommunications. As the world “goes IP,” and puts everything on the Internet, regulators must adapt. Make sure to read it. Ajit Pai would have a particularly important role as a reformist regulator should Mitt Romney win.
Regulation today just doesn’t make much sense sometimes, a point Broadband for America makes. The point about ‘edge’ vs ‘core’ of the Internet is important. The firm that sits between you and Google is as important to you as Google. They’re all pieces of the puzzle.
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Ajit Pai,
Android,
apple,
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dmca,
Do Not Track,
FCC,
Google,
Internet,
Internet Explorer,
iOS,
iPad,
Kim Dotcom,
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Microsoft,
Mitt Romney,
New Zealand,
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PATENT WARS,
Privacy,
Regulation,
Royalties,
Samsung,
Streaming,
Tech at Night,
Windows,
Yahoo
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.
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AT&T,
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Innovation,
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Larry Page,
Net Neutrality,
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WCS Band
Tech at Night: FCC’s own snooping scandal? Also, Collins turns on Obama on cybersecurity
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 11th at 12:30 AM |

Remember the Google Wi-Spy Street View scandal? A seemingly-harmless survey of the country turned into a massive snooping operation, and the FTC smacked them for over 20 million dollars. Well, not only is FCC now wasting money with a survey of Internet speeds, but it turns out that the FCC program runs the risk of warrantless snooping of its own!
We need strong, reformist regulators to be appointed in the next administration to stop stuff like this.
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Barack Obama,
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copyright,
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eff,
European Union,
FCC,
Huawei,
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New Zealand,
Olympia Snowe,
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Safe Web Act,
SECURE IT,
Susan Collins,
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War on Terror,
Wi-Spy
Tech at Night: Reformist regulators are needed to undo the Obama damage
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 2nd at 12:00 AM |

I don’t think it’s ever too soon for conservatives to start pressuring Mitt Romney to appoint reformist regulators, because the Obama regulators are bad news, retarding innovation and growth. Per Fred Campbell, “If the FCC had adopted the eligibility restrictions proposed by PISC in 2007, the United States would not have achieved the LTE leadership touted by current FCC Chairman Genachowski.”
Also remember, the same White House talking about a power-grab of a Cybersecurity executive order can’t even secure itself. If Barack Obama issues the EO, that’s another thing Mitt Romney must repeal DAy One.
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California,
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LTE,
Mitt Romney,
Moonbeam,
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Regulation,
Tech at Night,
VOIP,
wireless
Tech at …. Night? : Racist spectrum? ; How to undo the Obama damage
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 27th at 09:30 AM |

Oops. Went to bed before putting up Tech at Night last night. Sorry about that! Special morning edition instead!
Even as House extremists are effectively calling it racist to free up spectrum in America, the IIA has it right that we need the FCC to be serious about this.
So here’s an action point for anyone interested: tell Mitt Romney that he needs to appoint strong, reformist regulators not just to stop the bleeding in all regulatory agencies, but actually to roll back the disastrous Obama years. Repeal and replace. It’s not just for Obamacare anymore.
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Barack Obama,
COPPA,
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Kim Dotcom,
Megabox,
Megaupload,
Mitt Romney,
Privacy,
Regulation,
Spectrum,
Tech at Night
Tech at Night: Obama and FCC power grabs in Cybersecurity and Spectrum; FCC spying
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 22nd at 06:30 AM |

Wow: For a year FCC was tracking the movements of its speed testers without telling them! Privacy! Transparency!
Meanwhile the administration continues to try to do things on its own, without bothering to check that part of the Constitution that says how a bill becomes a law. Remember, the Lieberman-Collins Cybersecurity Act failed in the Senate. It has no business becoming an executive order. It also turns out that they are also looking to grab power when it comes to spectrum, which isn’t great news given the FCC’s obstruction and opposition to the use of efficient market allocation.
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China,
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Italy,
Marco Rubio,
Net Neutrality,
Privacy,
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UN
Tech at Night: FTC slays the Myspace Beast; Obama planning rule by decree on Cybersecurity
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 13th at 03:30 AM |

It is done! Privacy is saved in America? The huge looming threat of Myspace has been defeated by FTC! Don’t you feel so much safer now that the dynamic, active regulators of the Obama administration have clamped down on a competitor of Facebook?
Shame on me. Remember when I went with the claim that Anonymous took down GoDaddy? Well, It may have been an opportunistic claim.
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Barack Obama,
Cybersecurity,
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Dan Coats,
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FTC,
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Lieberman-Collins,
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