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: 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
An Easy Way to Stop Filibuster Reform
By: Brian Darling (Diary) | December 6th at 07:30 PM |
Liberal Democrats are going to take a run at the Filibuster in January. The have adopted idea that the Senate is not a continuing body and that the rules can be changed with a simple majority of Senators voting in a new Congress, in January, to adopt new rules. This interpretation of the Senate rules ignores the clear rules of the Senate and long tradition | Read More »