Tech at Night: ECPA may yet be worth a look. Robert McDowell to leave FCC. Resist comprehensive copyright reform.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 21st at 03:30 AM |

Well, just last time I mentioned I had so little to talk about. I guess everything was lying in wait for tonight.
Top story appears to be the Electronic Communications Privacy Act. I’ve been skeptical since Leaky Leahy has been pushing it, and he’s pushed many a bad tech idea in the Senate. But Mike Lee is also backing it, as is apparently Jim Sensenbrenner. So it’s worth considering. It may actually be that Leahy isn’t trying to expand the state or weaken the nation here.
Also, Robert McDowell is leaving the FCC. It’s up to Ajit Pai to get stuff done, now.
Read More »Tags:
copyright,
ECPA,
Europe,
Glass,
Google,
Internet Sales Tax,
Jim Sensenbrenner,
Mike Lee,
Patrick Leahy,
Robert McDowell,
Sales tax,
Tech at Night,
wireless
Tech at Night: Google Reader popularity again proves nobody cares about privacy. Catch my latest on Aaron Swartz.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | March 16th at 12:00 AM |

More proof people don’t care about privacy: Google announces a service is ending, and the competitor I use to prepare Tech at Night becomes flooded to the point of unusability Wednesday night. People just don’t care what Google is doing.
The Street View WiSpy scandal didn’t scare people off, even as Texas hits Google for those offenses. Glass excites them. The shift toward human biases doesn’t raise questions. People love Google’s services, and privacy doesn’t enter into the equation. So keep regulation out.
Make sure you catch my recent RedState post on Aaron Swartz, and how the blame casting against his prosecutor is not only unfair, it’s wrong.
Read More »Tags:
aaron swartz,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
China,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
Google,
MetroPCS,
Sales tax,
Spectrum,
Street View,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
Texas,
Unlocking,
wireless,
WiSpy
Tech at Night: Fact versus fiction on broadband in America. Kim Dotcom weighs in with a new site.
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | January 22nd at 01:00 AM |

New Zealand continues to let fugitive Kim Dotcom waddle free as his successor to Megaupload has launched. The US shut down his previous service, hosting files for law breakers, and now New Zealand is letting him start over with a new service. I look forward to people using it to infringe on New Zealand copyrights, and to distribute tools for stealing from New Zealanders.
It’s amazing how detached from reality left-wing tech policy gets. Connectivity is better and faster than ever thanks to the 4G wireless revolution, as Media Freedom points out. I guess that’s why when firms like Comcast try to expand access even further, they have to try to talk it down.
Read More »Tags:
broadband,
comcast,
FCC,
Gigabit,
Incentive Auctions,
Kim Dotcom,
Mega,
Megaupload,
New Zealand,
Spectrum,
Tech at Night,
Universal Access,
wireless
Tech at Night: RSC and Copyright, Purges have consequences
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | December 8th at 10:30 AM |

Gotta love it: I go to take a nap before Tech at Night but… oops, somebody forgot to press the Start button on that 2 hour timer. So, suddenly it’s Tech at Saturday Morning!
So yeah, we’ll start with a story that actually got me mad: the ongoing story of that now-famous RSC paper on copyright. There are conflicting reports out there, but most I’m seeing suggest there’s a real change going on at RSC, the same way there’s been a purge of a certain wing of the party elsewhere in the House.
I’m disappointed by all of this. If the RSC is going to oppose copyright reform the same way most of us oppose anarchic anti-copyright views, then the RSC is aligning itself with the most extreme perpetual-copyright views held by groups like MPAA. If there is to be no compromise, then I cannot work with them either, since my views have been declared to be in opposition to RSC.
Purges have consequences. It’s time we stopped pretending RSC is anything but an organ of the RSC establishment now. They’re clearly not speaking for the conservative reform wing of the GOP, as they once did long ago.
Read More »Tags:
Ajit Pai,
Barack Obama,
copyright,
FAA,
FCC,
IP Revolution,
ITU,
Kim Dotcom,
New Zealand,
Purges,
RSC,
Tech at Night,
wireless
Tech at Night: Obama failing to stop a bad ITU process; Free riding to be encouraged on data roaming
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | December 6th at 02:30 AM |

Nobody wants the ITU treaty to go anywhere. Not Net Neut backers. Not House Republicans and House Democrats. But the Obama administration is failing to do anything about it. Remember when we were told electing Obama was the key to great international respect? Not so much…
Read More »Tags:
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
Eric Schmidt,
Google,
Internet,
ITU,
Net Neutrality,
Regulation,
Roaming,
Safe Web Act,
Tech at Night,
Transparency,
Verizon,
wireless
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.
Read More »Tags:
Ajit Pai,
apple,
Barack Obama,
BitTorrent,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
FCC,
FDR,
Franklin Roosevelt,
FTC,
Google,
Kim Dotcom,
Low Power FM,
Megaupload,
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?
Read More »Tags:
antitrust,
Barack Obama,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
EU,
FCC,
FISA,
FTC,
Google,
hurricane,
Hurricane Sandy,
ITU,
Jimmy Wales,
Privacy,
Regulation,
Special Access,
Tech at Night,
Unions,
Wikimedia Foundation,
Wikipedia,
wireless
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.
Read More »Tags:
Barack Obama,
California,
Cybersecurity,
Facebook,
FCC,
FTC,
Internet,
Jerry Brown,
Julius Genachowski,
LightSquared,
LTE,
Mitt Romney,
Moonbeam,
Privacy,
Regulation,
Tech at Night,
VOIP,
wireless
Tech at Night: Potentially promising FCC moves on Spectrum and the Spectrum Screen
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 29th at 01:30 AM |

Top story: the FCC is moving forward with spectrum auctions, providing incentives for television stations to auction off their spectrum for wireless Internet use. We could see the auctions completed by the end of 2014.
Everyone admits there’s a spectrum crunch, and on the right and left of the FCC they say it’s a difficult question of how to transfer spectrum to alleviate it. Greg Walden is right though that this is good “if implemented well.” Bruce Mehlman of iia calls it “a terrific start” and that’s also true.
Read More »Tags:
Barack Obama,
Brazil,
Censorship,
Competition,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
Executive Order,
FCC,
Google,
Google Fiber,
Greg Walden,
Incentive Auctions,
Innovation,
Kim Dotcom,
MetroPCS,
Mitt Romney,
New Zealand,
Regulation,
Royalties,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
Spectrum Screen,
sprint,
Sprint Nextel,
Tech at Night,
wireless,
youtube
Tech at Night: Anonymous hackers still lie, Obama administration still plans to ignore Congress
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 11th at 02:00 AM |

Out of control. It seems like only defeating Barack Obama in an election will truly stop this administration. Sure, for now they’ve been scared off of the Internet Tax, but with Net Neutrality and the Cybersecurity Executive Order still brewing, the Obama administration has more power grabs up its sleeves than we should ever have allowed.
Read More »Tags:
Anonymous,
apple,
AT&T,
Barack Obama,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
dmca,
FAA,
FBI,
FCC,
GoDaddy,
Internet Tax,
Journals,
Net Neutrality,
Open Access,
Safe Harbor,
sprint,
T-Mobile,
Tech at Night,
Trans-Pacific Partnership,
Transparency,
Verizon,
wireless
Tech at Night: The FCC gets adversarial with the wireless industry
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 6th at 12:00 AM |

Some have said that the Obama administration is saving up disastrous regulation for the second term, but the FCC is wasting no time. Not content to obstruct wireless innovation with painfully limiting spectrum policy, FCC is now duplicating FTC efforts and playing speed advertising nanny.
Duplicative regulation protects nobody. It’s adversarial.
Read More »
Tech at Night, 5am edition: Embattled Harry Reid fails on Lieberman-Collins, property rights online must be protected, Reagan.com email
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 7th at 03:30 AM |
We had no Tech at Night on Friday becuase I was at the Gathering in Jacksonville. Hope those who went enjoyed it, and that those who weren’t able to attend can make it next year! So, Harry Reid offered to let Republicans fix Lieberman-Collins. Republicans took him up on that, and he was unhappy. So he tried to ram it through after all. Republicans objected, | Read More »
Tags:
Barack Obama,
comcast,
Competition,
Cybersecurity,
Cybersecurity Act,
Darrell Issa,
FTC,
Google,
Harry Reid,
Internet,
kay bailey hutchison,
Lieberman-Collins,
Mary Bono Mack,
multistakeholder,
nasa,
Ron Johnson,
Scripps Howard,
SOPA,
Spectrum,
vint cerf,
Wikileaks,
wireless,
youtube
Tech at Night: Cybersecurity compromise rightfully stalling, Mike Enzi right on Marketplace Fairness Act
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | July 17th at 01:30 AM |
Please read: A personal appeal to Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales. You mad, bro? With that business out of the way, back to Tech at Night. I for one am glad that Jon Kyl and Sheldon Whitehouse are having trouble coming up with a compromise. The Lieberman-Collins bill favored by Harry Reid and Barack Obama is terrible and just an awful, huge power grab. We’re better | Read More »
Tags:
Anonymous,
Barack Obama,
Cable Act,
CISPA,
copyright,
Cybersecurity,
Cybersecurity Act,
Harry Reid,
Internet Sales Tax,
Jim DeMint,
Jimmy Wales,
Jon Kyl,
Lieberman-Collins,
Marketplace Fairness Act,
Mike Enzi,
Sales tax,
SECURE IT,
Sheldon Whitehouse,
Spectrum,
Steve Scalise,
wireless
Tech at Night: How about stopping both global and national Internet regulation?
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | June 21st at 12:30 AM |
WCITLeaks having some success, possibly, as WCIT itself starts talking about openness. When even pro-Internet-regulation folks oppose UN or ITU regulation of the Internet, it needs sunshine for public evaluation. Mary Bono Mack’s response is the right one: oppose all government meddling, not just the UN or ITU.
Tags:
apple,
Chappaquiddick,
Chripify,
Chuck Schumer,
comcast,
Competition,
FEC,
Google,
Internet,
ITU,
Mark Warner,
Mary Bono Mack,
Regulation,
RUS,
South Korea,
UN,
WCIT,
WCITLeaks,
wireless
Tech at Night: Retransmission Consent, Spectrum, Reid making threats on Cybersecurity
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | June 14th at 01:30 AM |
When Jim DeMint and Steve Scalise first started talking about reforming the regulated relationship between broadcasters and cable companies, oh the fits that were thrown. Even a certain conservative group jumped out in front complaining. But look: these regulations are worth big bucks to the side they favor, and the negotiation deadlocks they produce don’t help the public, they only force everyone to deal with | Read More »
Tags:
Anonymous,
Barack Obama,
Broadcasters,
Cable,
comcast,
Cybersecurity,
Darrell Issa,
Department of Justice,
Digital Bill of Rights,
digital libertarians,
Dish Network,
FCC,
FTC,
Harry Reid,
Jim DeMint,
John Boehner,
Lieberman-Collins,
LTE-Advanced,
Must Carry,
Privacy,
Retransmission Consent,
Spokeo,
Steve Scalise,
Telecommunications Act,
Verizon,
wireless