Monthly Archives: March 2012

We Robot News 3/23/12

Our third speaker promo is online: Patrick Hubbard on “Regulation of Liability for Risks of Physical Injury From ‘Sophisticated Robots’”.

Posted in Robots | Comments Off on We Robot News 3/23/12

In NYC, a Work in Progess

I’m in New York for a lightning visit, attending New York Law School’s Internet Law Works in Progress Conference tomorrow.

If I read the program right, I get 25 minutes to talk, and 5 minutes for audience reaction, which is probably the inverse of how I’d wish it were for a work in progress session…

Posted in Talks & Conferences | Comments Off on In NYC, a Work in Progess

Harold Feld’s Insanely Long Field Guide To The Verizon/SpectrumCo/Cox Deal

Do you want to think of yourself as a well-informed citizen when it comes to technology issues? If so, you probably need to read Harold Feld’s explanation of the Verizon/SpectrumCo/Cox Deal.

In reading this, please keep in mind that in the many years I have been acquainted with Harold Feld, I have never seen anything that would tend to brand him as an alarmist.

A choice bit:

And before you could say “dangerous levels of spectrum concentration,” the former mortal enemies had become total BFFs — just like Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Fallon, but in reverse. In fact, Verizon Wireless and cable multisystem operators (“MSOs” as we say in telecom) are so into each other now that they simultaneously entered into agreements to become exclusive resellers of each other’s products and to jointly develop a whole bunch of new technologies together. The companies insist these three side agreements are totally, completely and utterly unrelated to the spectrum sale and that unrelated side agreements are just the natural love child of freaky four-way spectrum hook ups.

A few weeks later, Verizon graciously offered to buy out Cox’s AWS spectrum so that Cox could get out of the wireless business. And, in what can only be an amazing coincidence for utterly independent agreements that should in no way make anyone think that the major cable players are colluding with their Telco/Wireless chief rival, Verizon and Spectrumco offered to let Cox in on the same three agreements to become exclusive resllers and become a member of the “Joint Operating Entity” (JOE) to develop all these cool new technologies.

So you see, it’s all totally innocent, and does not in the least look like a cartel agreeing not to compete, dividing up markets, and setting up a Joint Operating Entity so they can continue to meet and discuss their business plans on an ongoing basis while developing a patent portfolio to use against competitors like DISH and T-Mobile. In fact, these three side agreements are so harmless and so completely independent of the spectrum sale that Verizon and the MSOs initially refused to give them to the FCC. When they finally did agree to put them in the record under protest, they cut a whole bunch of stuff out. Because really, as Verizon and the cable MSOs said in their response, what one mega-corp says to four of its largest competitors is really no one’s business.

Verizon will actually resell the cable MSO video services they used to (and in theory still do) compete against, while the MSOs will resell Verizon’s mobile wireless service. On top of that, they will get together as part of the “JOE” to discuss each other’s business, facilitating further cooperation. Finally, the technology developed by these one-time-rivals will be used to disadvantage competitors, much the same way Comcast is currently using its TV Everywhere certification to keep HBO On The Go off devices that facilitate ‘cord-cutting’, like Roku.

But there’s so much more…the really wonky stuff starts like this:

We can divide the substantive issues into three main categories: (a) Spectrum concentration issues that come from pumping up one of the top two wireless carriers with even more primo spectrum; (b) whether the side deals represent an illegal division of relevant markets between competing firms or, even worse, the formation of an actual cartel (a term I do not use lightly); and, (c) all kind of angsty, big picture stuff about whether the whole theory of the Telecom Act of 1996 really works and we can have facilities based competition, or whether Susan Crawford is right and we are doomed to a dystopian future where a cable monopoly controls our broadband and thus our digital future — except for the mobile part which will be controlled by an AT&T/Verizon Duopoly. But since they will be part of the new Communication Cartel, that won’t really matter.

And it does go on. Yes, it is insanely long. But he’s got me believing it’s a Big Deal.

For example,

The parties agree to form a “Joint Marketing Entity” (JOE) “for the development of technology to better integrate wireline and wireless products and services” (to quote the official press release). To translate: the largest residential broadband providers, who also happen to be among the largest residential video, and the largest mobile services provider, will sit down to jointly develop technologies on how to better integrate their supposedly competing services. You know how Google, Apple, Microsoft, and RIM are all involved in this “mobile patent war?” Imagine if, instead of each of them trying to develop competing wireless operating systems and technologies, they said: “Hey, we’re the four biggest developers of mobile operating systems. Instead of competing, lets pool all our patents together and not let anyone else license them from us except on terms we all agree to use. We’ll meet in a back room every month, talk about all our future development plans, and make sure that we develop patented technologies and proprietary standards for where we plan to take the industry going forward.” Why would that possibly raise any concerns?

I could go on, but then this would become an insanely long summary.

Read it.

Posted in Law: Internet Law | Comments Off on Harold Feld’s Insanely Long Field Guide To The Verizon/SpectrumCo/Cox Deal

We Robot News 3/22/12

Our second speaker promo is online: Kate Darling on, “Extending Legal Rights to Robots Based on Anthropomorphism”

Today’s link:

noodls® › gateway to facts | We Robot

Posted in Robots | Comments Off on We Robot News 3/22/12

We Robot News 3/21/12

We’ve got our first speaker promo up: Neil Richards and William Smart on “How Should the Law Think About Robots?” Many to follow.

Today’s links:

Posted in Robots | Comments Off on We Robot News 3/21/12

Charles Simic is Shrill

Here’s how The Age of Ignorance begins:

Widespread ignorance bordering on idiocy is our new national goal. It’s no use pretending otherwise and telling us, as Thomas Friedman did in the Times a few days ago, that educated people are the nation’s most valuable resources. Sure, they are, but do we still want them? It doesn’t look to me as if we do. The ideal citizen of a politically corrupt state, such as the one we now have, is a gullible dolt unable to tell truth from bullshit.

An educated, well-informed population, the kind that a functioning democracy requires, would be difficult to lie to, and could not be led by the nose by the various vested interests running amok in this country. Most of our politicians and their political advisers and lobbyists would find themselves unemployed, and so would the gasbags who pass themselves off as our opinion makers. Luckily for them, nothing so catastrophic, even though perfectly well-deserved and widely-welcome, has a remote chance of occurring any time soon.

And believe me, that’s only the beginning.

(Title is a reference to the Shrillblog (The Offical Blog of the Ancient and Hermetic Order of the Shrill), now in need of updating.)

Posted in Politics: US | Comments Off on Charles Simic is Shrill