Publication Homepage2018-09-06T17:07:19-04:00

February 26, 2010

What happens to the art when the artist can’t make a living from his or her work?

By |February 3rd, 2010|Categories: Blog, Tech Regulation|Tags: , , , , |

Why do we choose the products we choose, when there are so many alternatives? Viewers gravitate to the music, movies and art of professionals so it behooves us to allow those professionals who simply work harder and for longer on their craft to enjoy the fruits of that labor.

January 22, 2010

Principles vs. protection – Hillary Clinton on Internet Freedom

By |January 22nd, 2010|Categories: Blog, Uncategorized|

Yesterday, I attended Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s policy address on Internet Freedom at the Newseum in Washington, DC. I wanted to know from the Secretary what the State Department would do to help a U.S. tech company with a subsidiary in China whose employees are being taken to jail and whose equipment is being hauled away because the company refuses to give information about its users to the Chinese government.

Microsoft Launches Corporate/Government Cooperation on Cloud Computing – New Policies Could Help Protect Human Rights Online

By |January 20th, 2010|Categories: Blog, Uncategorized|

Today, Microsoft General Counsel Brad Smith discussed the potential for cloud computing in the future and how government can help at the Brookings Institution. Smith suggested that there was a lot to be done to achieve a safe and open cloud for business and consumers, including the need to update privacy and transparency laws to better reflect our portable data world.

December 17, 2009

The Unfortunate Irony of Yesterday’s FTC Lawsuit Against Intel

By |December 17th, 2009|Categories: Blog|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |

As most readers know by now, the Federal Trade Commission ignored the pleas of ACT and 37 member companies for caution, and filed a lawsuit against Intel yesterday charging that the company has abused its dominant position in the computer chip market. What you may have missed yesterday, however, is the rather ironically timed announcement from the Obama administration that it is launching new policies to spur more manufacturing it the United States.

Go to Top