A place for private communication and uncensored info. The establishment of the U.S. Postal Service was one of the most visionary civil liberties ideas of its time. It was deeply rooted in George Washington’s belief that a strong state and society can only exist if every citizen has access to uncensored information and can freely communicate, ... MORE
Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts
10 Great Points In Rand Paul’s Patriot Act Attack
by Matt Welch. I don't know whether Rand Paul's ongoing Senate talkfest will succeed in running out the clock on the Patriot Act,
or (as he is seeking) opening up a debate and amendment process, but I
do know that—just like his 2013 exercise—these have been some of the
most invigorating hours on C-SPAN in recent memory. Warrants need ... MORE
Labels:
amendment,
executive order,
Internet,
Patriot Act,
resistance,
snooping,
surveillance,
warrants
Thomas Sowell: Anti-Trust Law And Lawlessness
Law should not be sacrificed to political expediency. We all make mistakes and some of us learn from them. What is even better is to learn from other people's mistakes, where they pay for those mistakes while we learn free of charge. Many Americans who say that we should learn from other people, especially Europeans, mean that ... MORE
How 10 years Of YouTube Transformed The Internet
A laissez-faire approach to copyright. It all began with a 19-second video clip recorded at a zoo. One of the founders of YouTube, Jawed Karim, uploaded the video on April 23, 2005, showing him describing the length of an elephant's trunk. "Anyone could be a star and there was no gate keeper," CNET.com senior editor Bridget ... MORE
Labels:
copyright,
information,
innovation,
Internet,
laissez fare,
regulation,
technology,
video,
YouTube
How To Break The Internet
by Geoffrey A. Manne & R. Ben Sperry. "Net neutrality" sounds like a good idea. It isn't. As political slogans go, the phrase net neutrality has been enormously effective, riling up the chattering classes and forcing a sea change in the government's decades-old hands-off approach to regulating the Internet. But as an organizing principle for the ... MORE
Labels:
control,
FCC,
government,
Internet,
net neutrality,
overreach,
politics,
regulation,
restrictions
NSA Doesn’t Need To Spy Your Calls To Learn Your Secrets
by Bruce Schneier. Governments and corporations gather, store, and analyze the tremendous amount of data we chuff out as we move through our digitized lives. Often this is without our knowledge, and typically without our consent. Based on this data, they draw conclusions about us that we might disagree with or object to, and that can impact ... MORE
Labels:
eavesdropping,
government,
information,
Internet,
metadata,
NSA,
privacy,
spying,
surveillance
Brendan Sasso: Internet Providers Sue to Kill Net Neutrality
Opposition to the FCC power grab. Telecom companies filed a pair of lawsuits Monday in an attempt to
reverse the Federal Communications Commission's new net neutrality
rules. The suits are expected to be the opening shots in a long legal war against the controversial regulations. USTelecom, which represents AT&T, Verizon, and other ... MORE
GOP Senators Rip FCC's Net Neutrality Decision
by Grant Gross. Ted Cruz: "An abuse of its authority." The U.S. Federal Communications Commission's new net neutrality rules could open the door to rate regulation and could drive some small broadband providers out of business, some Senate Republicans said Wednesday. Some Republican members of the Senate Commerce, Science and ... MORE
Labels:
bureaucracy,
FCC,
freedom,
GOP,
government,
Internet,
net neutrality,
regulation,
restrictions
Lawrence W. Reed: Internet at the Speed of Government
Government always quick to fix what is not broken. Last month, the Federal Communications Commission launched a historic power grab over
the Internet, euphemistically known as “net neutrality,” based on a
Great Depression-era law to regulate public utilities. While
entrepreneurs are pursuing cutting-edge business models and ... MORE
Labels:
central planning,
control,
government,
incentives,
Internet,
net neutrality,
politicians,
regulation
6 Ridiculous Myths About Legal Internet Gambling Busted
by Michelle Minton. Should the United States government ban online poker? One billionaire casino owner thinks so. In the quest to convince Americans that they shouldn't be able to do what they want with their own money in their own homes, proponents of the ban have spent big bucks and spread big lies. Below are some of the biggest whoppers. ... MORE
Labels:
gambling,
incentives,
Internet,
jobs,
online,
politics,
prohibition,
regulation,
revenue,
terrorism
NY Times Editorial: The President's Weak Privacy Proposal
Codifying bad behavior. President
Obama has said that the country needs a strong privacy law so consumers
can protect personal information from advertisers, Internet firms,
employers and other businesses. But the country is not going to get it
from Mr. Obama. The bill his administration recently offered will do
little to help individuals while giving ... MORE
Andrew Napolitano: A Lone Wolf President
Can the president rewrite federal laws? Can he alter their meaning? Can he change their effect? These are legitimate questions in an era in which we have an unpopular progressive Democratic president who has boasted that he can govern without Congress by using his phone and his pen, and a mostly newly elected largely conservative Republican ... MORE
Labels:
ammunition,
executive order,
FCC,
federal,
illegal aliens,
Internet,
law,
net neutrality,
Obama
Net Neutrality Is A Triumph of the Ruling Class
by Jeffrey Tucker. A triumph of “free expression and democratic principles”? How stupid do they think we are? It’s been painful to watch the gradual tightening of government
control in the name of net neutrality. The Federal Communications
Commission’s decision to rewrite the rules and declare the Internet as a
public utility seals the ... MORE
Labels:
control,
FCC,
government,
Internet,
limitations,
power,
regulation,
restrictions,
rules,
takeover
FCC Chair Appears To Be Hellbent On Internet Takeover
by Andrew Johnson. Two prominent House committee chairs are “deeply disappointed” in Federal Communications Commission chairman Tom Wheeler for refusing to testify before Congress as “the future of the Internet is at stake.” Wheeler’s refusal to go before the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday comes on the eve of the FCC’s vote on ... MORE
Labels:
bureaucracy,
FCC,
government,
Internet,
regulation,
secrecy,
takeover,
transparency,
tyranny
Mark Cuban Says Net Neutrality Will ‘Fuck Everything Up’
by Dawn Chmielewski. Billionaire investor and ABC “Shark Tank” star Mark Cuban unloaded on the Federal Communications Commission’s plan to fundamentally change how it oversees the open Internet. “That will fuck everything up,” said the voluble Cuban in remarks Wednesday at the Code/Media conference at The Ritz-Carlton, Laguna Niguel, Ca. ... MORE
Labels:
consumer,
FCC,
government,
Internet,
media,
net neutrality,
online,
regulation,
restrictions
Tammy Bruce: FCC, FEC Look To Ruin The Internet
The left lifts its boot toward the free flow of information. We knew this was coming. Within the last couple of weeks, both the Federal Communications Commission and the Federal Election Commission
declared their intention to regulate the Internet. Fascists always
explain their actions as efforts to either make something more
efficient, ... MORE
Labels:
deception,
dishonesty,
FCC,
FEC,
government,
Internet,
online,
politics,
regulation,
restrictions
Holding Data Hostage: The Perfect Internet Crime?
by Tom Simonite. Every so often someone invents a new way of making money on the Internet that earns wild profits, attracts countless imitators, and reshapes what it means to be online. Unfortunately, such a shift took place last year in the world of online crime, with the establishment of sophisticated malicious software known as ransomware as a ... MORE
John Stossel: Trust
Just check the ratings. Trust — society depends on it. For most of history, our ancestors lived in clans with other family
members, or in small villages. Everyone pretty much knew who was
trustworthy. People behaved better because they wanted good
relationships with family members and neighbors. It's one reason that
today we trust ... MORE
Labels:
economics,
free market,
government,
incentives,
integrity,
Internet,
rating,
voluntary exchange
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