Tech at Night: No, I don’t believe people care about privacy. Also, copyright roundup.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | January 29th at 03:00 AM |

Sorry for the lack of Tech on Friday. I was sick and doing my best to sleep it off. I’m at about 95% now, so let’s catch up.
How do I know privacy regulation and legislation are bad ideas? Nobody actually cares. Sure, they talk like they care, but until people start taking proactive steps and act like they’re taking it seriously, I know it’s just talk. Just like how everyone says they hate Congress, but love their own representation.
So yeah, if you’re moaning about Google on your Blogger site, and emailing to your friends about it from your Gmail account, and using Google Maps to get directions to your privacy rally… I don’t take you seriously.
Read More »Tags:
Ajit Pai,
Antigua,
AT&T,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
dmca,
Glee,
Google,
IP Revolution,
Jonathan Coulton,
Kim Dotcom,
Library of Congress,
Marketplace Fairness Act,
Mega,
New Zealand,
Privacy,
Sony,
Tech at Night,
United Kingdom,
WTO
Tech at Night: Harry Reid is an ineffective legislative leader
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 16th at 12:00 AM |
I guess legislatively it’ll be slow going the rest of this year, thanks to the elections. So Tech at Night just may be shorter for a while to come. That’s good for my sleep schedule, I believe. Though the aftermath continues of Harry Reid’s failure to ram through the Lieberman-Collins Cybersecurity Act, as John McCain, Kay Bailey Hutchison, and other Republicans criticized Harry Reid for | Read More »
Tags:
Anonymous,
Barack Obama,
comcast,
Cybersecurity,
Cybersecurity Act,
demand progress,
FCC,
GPS,
Harry Reid,
John McCain,
kay bailey hutchison,
Lieberman-Collins,
Privacy,
Sony,
Spectrum,
Verizon
Tech at Night: Amazon Taxes march on, FCC colludes with Marxist activists
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | June 4th at 03:30 AM |
I am so sick of California. While it’s good that the “privacy” bill didn’t make it out of the Senate, it’s not so good that the Amazon tax is going on to the Senate. Texas: Don’t be like us. Defeat your Amazon tax in SB 1. And the hacks go on: Anonymous attacks.. Iran?, its apparent offshoot lulzsec attacked PBS and Sony, but leaves itself | Read More »
Tags:
4chan,
amazon tax,
Anonymous,
AT&T,
California,
Clearwire,
Cybersecurity,
FCC,
Free Press,
George Soros,
Internet,
LightSquared,
Lulzsec,
Michael Copps,
Open Society Institute,
OSI,
pbs,
Privacy,
Public Knowledge,
RSA,
SecurID,
Sony,
sprint,
T-Mobile,
Texas
Tech at Night: Amazon taxers try to circumvent the Perry Veto, Dana Rohrabacher fights a patent disaster, and more House business
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | June 2nd at 03:00 AM |
Lots to cover tonight, thanks in part to skipping Monday for Memorial Day. But of course I’ll start with my own post on the AT&T/T-Mobile deal, explaining from the ground up why the George Soros/Sprint arguments contradict themselves. Government should get out of the way, especially state governments like California’s getting too big for their britches. It’ll be better for all of us who buy | Read More »
Tags:
amazon tax,
Anthony Weiner,
appeasement,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
BitTorrent,
California,
Competition,
CTIA,
Cybersecurity,
Dana Rohrabacher,
fairness doctrine,
FCC,
fred upton,
Funimation,
George Soros,
Greg Walden,
GRID Act,
Incentive Auctions,
Internet,
Microsoft,
Open Society Institute,
OSI,
Patent Reform,
Patents,
Patrick Leahy,
rick perry,
Sony,
Spectrum,
sprint,
T-Mobile,
Texas,
WHO Cancer,
wireless
Tech at Night: Dodd-Frank kills innovation, Cybersecurity marches on, Lodsys patent trolling
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | May 16th at 09:00 PM |
Good evening. Care for your latest dose of regulation crushes innovation and competition? If you’re unhappy about the lack of innovation in America for mobile payments like they have in Japan, blame the Dodd-Frank bill. It prevented the wireless industry from getting together and making it happen. But we sure stuck it to the bankers, eh? Our faces are sure spited from cutting off our | Read More »
Tags:
App Store,
apple,
Barney Frank,
Censorship,
Chris Dodd,
Clipper,
Cybersecurity,
dodd-frank,
Innovation,
Internet,
iOS,
Lodsys,
Mobile Payments,
Patent Troll,
Patents,
PlayStation Network,
PROTECT IP,
Regulation,
Sony,
wireless
Tech at Night: Net Neutrality, FCC, Patents, Copyrights, Sony, Anonymous
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | May 5th at 03:30 AM |
Good evening. Or Good morning on the East Coast, as it’s unfortunately approaching 5am there as I start tonight’s edition. A big story is that the House Judiciary Committee will get into the game of watching the FCC, following in the footsteps of the Energy and Commerce, and Oversight committees. Commissioner Robert McDowell and Chairman Julius Genachowski are among those set to testify before Bob | Read More »
Tags:
4chan,
Android,
Anonymous,
antitrust,
Bob Goodlatte,
Competition,
FCC,
Google,
Internet,
Java,
judiciary committee,
Julius Genachowski,
Net Neutrality,
Oracle,
Patents,
PlayStation Network,
Robert McDowell,
Software Patents,
Sony
Tech at Night: Amazon Internet Tax, Privacy, Google
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 26th at 12:30 AM |
California’s Democrats, having refused to get tough with the unions who coincidentally will fund their re-election campaigns, are still determined to raise taxes. So they continue to push for an unconstitutional Amazon Tax on the Internet that just might cost the state more than it brings in, in the long run. They’re playing with “thresholds” to try to focus the bill on specific companies like | Read More »
Tags:
4chan,
amazon,
amazon tax,
Anonymous,
apple,
C-SPAN,
California,
Dick Durbin,
Firesheep,
Internet,
Internet Tax,
Melissa Yu,
Net Neutrality,
pccc,
Playstation 3,
PlayStation Network,
Privacy,
Sony
Tech at Night: Google, Microsoft, Net Neutrality
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 12th at 03:30 AM |
In case you missed the great news Friday, Net Neutrality was repealed in the House. The resolution now must go to the Senate, where under the Congressional Review Act it cannot be filibustered, so it only needs 51 votes. And while I do hope that the House will follow up by attempting to repeal the redistributionist data roaming regulations passed last week, other work must | Read More »
Tags:
AnyDVD,
Barack Obama,
Bluray,
copyright,
D Block,
DVD,
Fair Use,
FISMA,
Free Press,
George Hotz,
Google,
Greg Walden,
Handbrake,
Microsoft,
Net Neutrality,
Playstation 3,
Sony,
Spectrum,
Susan Crawford
Tech at Night: Net Neutrality, FCC, Wireless Roaming, Anonymous, George Soros
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 7th at 03:30 AM |
The final House vote is coming to repeal Net Neutrality via the Congressional Review Act. I’m pretty interested to see how many Democrats we can get in the House, because it may give a clue of how many Democrats we can get in the Senate. Remember: under the CRA we only need 51, not 60. I hope we don’t have to fire up the CRA | Read More »
Tags:
Anonymous,
AT&T,
Cell Phone Bill Shock Act,
Congressional Review Act,
CTIA,
FCC,
George Soros,
Internet,
National Broadband Plan,
Net Neutrality,
Roaming,
Sony,
sprint,
tea party,
Tom Udall,
Verizon,
wireless
Tech at Night: Net Neutrality, Sprint’s attempted looting, Copyright, Security, Internet Taxes
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | April 5th at 03:30 AM |
I’m late. No excuses. Let’s go. So the courts threw out Verizon’s challenge of Net Neutrality, rejecting the very clever argument made by Verizon that it wasn’t premature. So now we wait for the actual publication of Net Neutrality to take place. Well, to a point. The Republicans aren’t waiting and will vote this week in the full House to repeal Net Neutrality under the | Read More »
Tags:
amazon,
Anonymous,
AT&T,
Congressional Review Act,
copyright,
FCC,
Francis Cianfrocca,
Internet,
Net Neutrality,
PlayStation Network,
Rasmussen Reports,
Roaming,
Robert McDowell,
RSA,
SecurID,
security,
Sony,
sprint,
Verizon,
wireless
Tech at Night: AT&T, T-Mobile, FCC, Patents
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 24th at 03:30 AM |
So the top story this week is going to be the AT&T acquisition of T-Mobile USA. There’s a lot being said about it, about unions, about competition, but the story I’m seeing emerging is that this deal is about spectrum. AT&T sees in T-Mobile a way to get the spectrum it needs going forward. In fact, even power grabbing FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski said to | Read More »
Tags:
"Richard Blumenthal",
amazon,
amazon tax,
antitrust,
apple,
AT&T,
Bruce Schneier,
California,
China,
Chuck Schumer,
cingular,
copyright,
CTIA,
European Union,
Facebook,
FCC,
Frank Lautenberg,
Google,
Harry Reid,
Harvard Business Review,
Internet,
Joe Baca,
Julius Genachowski,
Loretta Sanchez,
Patents,
Patrick Leahy,
RSA,
SecurID,
security,
Sony,
Spectrum,
sprint,
T-Mobile,
Tom Udall,
U.S. Chamber of Commerce,
Verizon,
wireless
Tech at Night: Google, NLRB, FCC, Net Neutrality, Patents
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 8th at 12:07 AM |
Much to cover, and less time to cover it in! So many important things I don’t even know what to hit first. So, I’ll be biased and hit what I found out about from RedState. Google and the NLRB teamed up to promote unionization, with Google providing free ad space. That’s a problem for three reasons. First, the NLRB is supposed to be the impartial | Read More »
Tags:
"Cap and Trade",
Barack Obama,
CCIA,
Congressional Review Act,
copyright,
EPA,
FCC,
fred upton,
Google,
Greg Walden,
Harry Reid,
Internet Kill Switch,
James Risch,
Joe Lieberman,
Maria Cantwell,
Mike Crapo,
Net Neutrality,
NLRB,
obamacare,
Patent,
Patent Reform Act,
Patents,
Patrick Leahy,
Playstation 3,
Rand Paul,
Regulation,
Sony,
Susan Collins,
Unions,
Washington Examiner
Tech at Night: Copyright, COICA, Google, Net Neturality, Internet Kill Switch
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | February 24th at 03:30 AM |
On Monday I did the first half of my catchup work. Now we’ll do the second half. And one of the big issues coming up is copyright. Over the last thirty years, copyright in America has been radically reformed. While traditionally it worked as patents still do work, as a temporary grant of monopoly enforceable in civil courts, we’ve gradually moved them into the realm | Read More »
Tags:
Barack Obama,
COICA,
copyright,
Eric Holder,
Google,
Internet,
Internet Kill Switch,
John Stossel,
MPAA,
Napster,
Net Neutrality,
Privacy,
RIAA,
Sony,
Street View,
WiSpy
Tech at Night: Al Franken, Google, Net Neutrality, Copyright
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 21st at 02:55 AM |
I skipped Tech at Night on Friday because I was in Austin for the Red State Gathering 2010, but I’m back now, so here we go. We start off with what would have been the lead story on Friday, too: Net Neutrality hero and all around socialist gasbag Al Franken is now under a cloud of suspicion for ethics violations, violating Senate rules to spend | Read More »
Tags:
Al Franken,
Competition,
copyright,
Culture of Corruption,
deem and pass,
Disney,
FCC,
Free Press,
Google,
HDCP,
HDMI,
Hypocrisy,
Internet,
Len Britton,
nbc universal,
Net Neutrality,
Orrin Hatch,
Patrick Leahy,
Search,
Sony,
Steamboat Willie,
Third Way,
Title II Reclassification,
Verizon,
Viacom