Blog

  • Pluromed Raises $1.1M

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    Pluromed, a Woburn, MA-based maker of medical devices, has raised $1.1 million of a planned $3.9 million equity offering, from 16 investors, according to an SEC filing. Founded in 2003, Pluromed develops devices designed to control bleeding in a range of surgeries, from cardiac and vascular to reconstructive procedures, that can also be used to treat kidney stones. The company, which was unavailable at press time for further comment on the new funding, received a $500,000 loan last year from the Massachusetts Life Sciences Center, an agency in charge of implementing the state’s $1 billion plan for advancing the life sciences industry.












  • Barack Obama Delivers His Withering Smackdown To Wall Street

    obama-cooper-union

    12:17: And that’s it. Nothing too radical.

    12:16: “I ask you to join me, not only because it’s in the interest of your industry, but because it’s in the interest of your country.”

    12:15: Obama quotes from a Time Magazine 1933 article.

    “Through the great banking houses of Manhattan last week ran wild-eyed alarm.  Big bankers stared at one another in anger and astonishment.  A bill just passed … would rivet upon their institutions what they considered a monstrous system…  Such a system, they felt, would not only rob them of their pride of profession but would reduce all U.S. banking to its lowest level.”  That appeared in Time Magazine – in June of 1933.  The system that caused so much concern and consternation?  The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation – the FDIC – an institution that has successfully secured the deposits of generations of Americans.

    12:12: Always tension between laissez-faire  desires and need for rules.

    12:11: Closing comments… I have laid out a set of reforms. Let’s face it, we also need reform in Washington.

    12:09: Final key: say on pay, limting bonuses.

    12:09: “Unless your business model depends on bilking people, there’s little to fear from these new ruls.” (Good line)

    12:07: “This bill would enact the strongest consumer protections ever.”

    12:06: Good sign. Things are moving forward.

    12:05: There is a legitimate role of derivatives. References airline fuel hedging. He’s okay with the vanilla stuff.

    12:04: Reform will bring new transparency. Many practices were so complex, people inside the firm didn’t understand.

    12:02: The bill will enact the Volcker rule. Calls out “tall guy” siting in the front row.

    12:02: “What’s not legitimate is to propose that the legislation is going to encourage future bailouts.”

    12:01: Talking Lehman fallout and collateral damage.

    11:58: Calls out lobbyists and financial sector workers in the audience.

    11:57: Some on Wall Street forgot that behind every dollar traded, there’s a family looking to buy a house…

    11:56: “I believe in a strong financial sector… a free market was never meant to be a free license to take whatever you can get.”

    11:55: Financial crisis was a major contributor to the recession.

    11:53: America is adding jobs again. But we haven’t truly recovered yet.

    11:53: “Our country has been through a terrible trial.”

    11:52: It’s good to be back in Manhattan, a few blocks from Wall Street.

    11:51: He’s staring early and thanking attendees.

    ————

    We’ll be covering the speech LIVE at 11:55.

    Right now it’s just an empty podium.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • The Downfall of Hitler Parodies: Videos Removed From YouTube in Copyright Action | Discoblog

    This week, YouTube began trying to obliterate one of the most popular internet memes of all time, the Downfall parodies featuring an enraged Adolf Hitler, after a copyright claim by the German production house that owns the movie’s rights.

    The parody videos all use a clip from the 2004 German film Downfall about Hitler’s final days. In the clip, Hitler–played by actor Bruno Ganz–lashes out at his staff when he is told that he cannot win the war. As with any foreign film, the movie came with subtitles.

    Over the years, fun-seekers have replaced the original English subtitles with absurd substitutes. So instead of ranting about the war, the subtitles express Hitler’s rage over Kanye West’s famous outburst, his toilet being clogged, or the collapse of the real estate market. The satirical videos have been hugely popular over the years, with some clips racking up hundreds of thousands of views. But the clips apparently didn’t just generate a lot of laughs, they also irritated the company that owns the rights to the film, prompting the company to ask YouTube to take them off the site.

    The company, Constantin Films, also noted that they had received complaints from Jewish groups about the distasteful nature of the spoofs. Indeed, Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League, told the Associated Press that the league was “delighted” at this piece of news.

    “We find them offensive,” said Foxman of the videos. “We feel that they trivialize not only the Holocaust but World War II. Hitler is not a cartoon character.”

    Some have argued that since the videos are parodies, they are protected under “fair use,” the legal doctrine that holds that the use of copyright-protected works for purposes such as parody and education may be considered “fair,” writes the Associated Press. However, YouTube’s content policy also specifies that if a copyright holder asks, they will remove the material from the site.

    The site is also blocking people from uploading new Downfall parodies. TechCrunch reports that when someone tried to upload a new Hitler spoof on the missing iPhone 4G, they got the following message:

    This video contains content from Constantin Film, who has blocked it on copyright grounds.

    Related Content:
    80beats: Italian Court Convicts Google Execs for Hosting Illegal Video
    Discoblog: Movie & Music Trade Groups Suggest Orwellian Measures to Stop Piracy
    Discoblog: Sweet Blogger O’ Mine, You’re Under Arrest
    DISCOVER: The Intellectual Property Fight That Could Kill Millions


  • Massey Deep Miner Speaks Out on Safety

    Our piece this morning describes the reluctance of Massey Energy workers to criticize the company for fear of losing their jobs in a part of the country where there are criminally few employment alternatives. As a result, it’s next to impossible to find miners or their families willing to talk to reporters about Massey’s safety ethic, particularly in those communities closest to the Upper Big Branch project in Raleigh County, where 29 miners were killed this month in a deep mine blast.

    But don’t tell that to Jordan Freeman. The West Virginia-based filmmaker and environmental activist recently conducted this interview with a Massey deep miner. And while the identity of the miner is concealed, his message is nonetheless pretty damning.

    “Production was the name of the game,” he says. “At all costs we’ve got to get X amount of footage outside at the end of every shift — for what they would say to be, to where they could stay in the business, to keep the revenue rolling.

    “For me, I felt like that lump of coal was important that a human being’s life.”

    With more and more stories appearing like this, it’s getting tougher and tougher for Massey to lay a credible claim to their alleged commitment to safety.

  • The Regions the Housing Market Recovery Might Leave Behind

    Housing sales should rise a strong 5 percent in March, housing economists say, with the rush fueled by the end-of-the-month expiry of the first time homebuyer’s tax credit. All in all, 5.3 million Americans will purchase a new home. But The Associated Press story injects a note of caution:

    Still, some housing market experts predict the market will take a dramatic “double-dip” once the government’s supports are gone. But others argue that there is enough pent-up demand to keep the market chugging. And prices have fallen dramatically since the boom years — as much as 50 percent in some places. So buyers can pick up bargain-priced foreclosures.

    The most prominent housing expert anticipating a double-dip is Robert Shiller, the Yale professor and co-creator of the Case-Shiller housing index. In a recent New York Times piece, he argued that the optimism might be premature, particularly given the end of the Federal Reserve program to buy billions’ worth of mortgage-backed securities and Obama’s homebuyer tax credit programs. “Momentum may be on the forecasts’ side,” Shiller wrote. “But until there is evidence that the fundamental thinking about housing has shifted in an optimistic direction, we cannot trust that momentum to continue.”

    But momentum where? Bargain-priced foreclosures where? A double-dip where? These articles describe the national housing market, but increasingly it is more useful to think regionally. A national recovery — underpinned by rising consumer and investor confidence and returning employment, if slowed by the end of Obama’s housing-market programs — seems a decent bet. But in certain areas, severe difficulties look likely to continue and even worsen.

    I wrote about this in part yesterday, in response to David Leonhardt’s excellent New York Times column on how in many parts of the country the rent ratio implies it is an advantageous time to buy a house. It is in most places. But in a few regions — namely, central southern California, Florida, Michigan and Nevada, plus to a lesser extent Georgia — all signs are that the housing market will not be recovering any time soon. Why? The answer lies in their housing markets as well as in their broader economies.

    For one, their residential real estate markets are still in a state of decline. Places like the Inland Empire and Las Vegas and Ft. Myers have the highest concentration of shadow inventory, foreclosed homes that banks have not put back on the market. Moreover, they have increasing rates of foreclosures and delinquencies, implying falling home values to come.

    Compounding the problem is that those regions also do not have the fundamentals for broader economic recovery either. They suffer from high, high rates of unemployment. In some cases, their population bases are actually shrinking. And households remain highly indebted. With no construction boom on the horizon — indeed, they tend to have excess housing and commercial real estate stock — these places seem stuck in a vicious downward cycle.

    That means, while a broad-based and slow recovery helps turn the housing market around in the majority of states, things look parlous for an already hard-hit minority.

  • Audi RS5 disponible próximamente en Estados Unidos

    Interesante noticia para todos los norteamericanos, acaba de ser confirmado que el nuevo Audi RS5 se comercializará próximamente en Estados Unidos y Canadá. Más concretamente, llegará a los concesionarios apartir del mes de Septiembre.

    En Europa estará disponible desde el próximo mes de Junio. Se podrá adquirir a un precio final de 78.000$. Audi también ha confirmado que sólo pondrá a la venta variantes con equipamiento de gama media-alta que incluiran por ejemplo el software Dynamic Ride Control.

    Related posts:

    1. Audi R8 Spyder V8 próximamente
    2. Audi RS5, vídeo disponible
    3. Audi S5 Sportback, ya disponible
  • Join Vinod Khosla, Jerry Brown, Google and More at Green:Net Next Week

    The second annual Green:Net conference, the only event that examines the intersection of greentech and IT, will be held next Thursday, April 29th at the Mission Bay Conference Center in San Francisco. From the entrepreneurs that make up the backbone of America’s innovation economy to the leaders of forward-thinking U.S. utilities to the investors that funded the Internet revolution, the speakers at Green:Net 2010 will be focused on one thing: how the Internet and IT can be leveraged to save the planet. At the same time, attendees will learn how to create huge new technology markets and spearhead the green economy.

    Friends of GigaOM receive a $75 discount. So hurry and get your discount ticket now!

    To preserve our future, we have to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and energy consumption. The Internet, computers and communication networks are ideally suited to help with this task, including via the smart grid, connected cars, software for resource management and greener data centers. Following a sold-out first-year event, we’re proud to once again be gathering together the brightest minds, ideas and entrepreneurs for Green:Net 2010.

    Topics include:

    • So the Smart Grid Will Be Huge, Now What? — Who are the innovators, and what software and network technologies will usher in the next generation of the power grid?
    • The New Networked Car — Is the next major mobile technology platform for green applications your car?
    • Carbon Policy Is Coming, and Software Is Gonna Save You — Will we see the emergence of new software giants in this space?
    • How the Internet Giants Are Moving Into Energy – Google and Microsoft have slowing moved into offering energy services; what’s the attraction and what are their plans?
    • Switching Atoms for Bits: The Web and Dematerialization — Did you know that a Kindle can reduce carbon emissions?
    • Dot-com Investors Turn to Cleantech — Get a map of the opportunities and the funds chasing deals at this session.

    Green:Net 2010 speakers include:

    • Jerry Brown, Attorney General for the State of California
    • Vinod Khosla, Founder of Khosla Ventures
    • Steve Jurvetson, Managing Director at Draper Fisher Jurvetson
    • Bill Weihl, Google’s Green Energy Czar
    • Mike Harrigan, NRG Energy’s VP of Electric Vehicle Services
    • Pedro Pizarro, Southern California Edison’s EVP of Power Operations
    • Dian Grueneich, Commissioner for the California Public Utilities Commission
    • Laura Ipsen, SVP and GM, Smart Grid, Cisco
    • Eric Dresselhuys, EVP, Silver Spring Networks

    Companies include:

    • Ford Motor Co.
    • Microsoft
    • Google
    • Nissan
    • General Motors
    • SAP
    • IBM
    • Cisco
    • Greenpeace International

    And many, many more. For a full listing of speakers and topics visit our Green:Net 2010 web site.

    Act quickly now to lock in the lowest price and get your seat. We look forward to meeting you at Green:Net 2010!

  • Ron Paul on Hardball

    By Matt Hawes

    Later today, Congressman Paul will be interviewed in studio on MSNBC’s Hardball with Chris Matthews at 5:30 pm eastern. 

    Update:

    Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

     

  • LG Tripling OLED Production As Sony Sounds The Death Knell [OLED TV]

    Sony may be winding down its OLED operations in Japan, but over in South Korea OLED is big business for LG—with news coming in today saying they’re investing a whopping $225.7m into tripling production. But who’s buying? More »







  • White House to provide $452M for retrofits

    Greenwire: Twenty-five states, local governments and nonprofits will split $452 million to retrofit energy-inefficient homes and office buildings, Vice President Joe Biden will announce this afternoon.The money comes as part of the $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, which President Obama signed into law 16 months ago. The stimulus package earmarked roughly $80 billion for clean-energy and energy-efficiency projects.

    The so-called “Retrofit Ramp-Up” funding commitments to be announced today at the White House will help the 25 states, local governments and nonprofits swap out building insulation, windows and lights, among other things. Grantees will offer building owners low- or no-interest loans for retrofits that may be repaid through property tax or utility bills.

    The Energy Department will use the program’s financing and retrofit models to develop best-practice guides that other cities could adopt. Replicating such efforts nationally could save homes and businesses about $100 million in utility bills annually, as well as leverage about $2.8 billion in from the private sector and create about 30,000 jobs during the next three years, administration officials claim.

    “This investment in some of the most innovative energy-efficiency projects across the country will not only help homeowners and businesses make cost-cutting retrofit improvements but create jobs right here in America,” Biden notes in prepared remarks.

    The 25 grantees and their grant amounts: Austin, Texas ($10 million); Boulder County, Colo. ($25 million); Camden, N.J. ($5 million); Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning ($25 million); Greater Cincinnati Energy Alliance ($17 million); Greensboro, N.C. ($5 million); Indianapolis ($10 million); Kansas City, Mo. ($20 million); Los Angeles County, Calif. ($30 million); Lowell, Mass. ($5 million); state of Maine ($30 million); state of Maryland ($20 million); state of Michigan ($30 million); state of Missouri ($5 million); Omaha, Neb. ($10 million); state of New Hampshire ($10 million); New York State Research and Development Authority ($40 million); Philadelphia ($25 million); Phoenix ($25 million); Portland, Ore. ($20 million); San Antonio ($10 million); Seattle ($20 million); Southeast Energy Efficiency Alliance ($20 million); Toledo-Lucas County Port Authority ($15 million); and Wisconsin Energy Conservation Corp. ($20 million).

    Read more>>

  • Goodwill and Dell’s electronic recycling expands to take in X-box and Zune

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Looking to move that aging game equipment out of the garage?

    The recycling service, Reconnect, set up by Dell and Goodwill Industries, is expanding with the help of Microsoft to collect more than PCs and computers.

    Now the free collection service, available at nearly 2,000 Goodwill locations, also will accept Microsoft entertainment products like Xbox, Zune and their accessories, Round Rock, Texas-based Dell announced today.

    Microsoft will be participating and contributing to the program to help consumers recycle more easily.

    “The world consumes more electronic products every year, so it’s important to dispose of or recycle these items responsibly,” said Brian Tobey, corporate vice president at Microsoft, in a statement.

    “Recycling of our consumer hardware products is a major part of Microsoft’s commitment to minimizing our environmental impact and that of our customers.

    Reconnect has diverted more than 96 million pounds of e-waste from landfills and created about 250 green jobs since its launch in 2004, according to Dell and Goodwill.

    Goodwill employees disassemble the computers and equipment, selling the component parts. Some equipment is reburbished and resold. The program supports Goodwill’s job training mission and employs people with employment challenges.

    “Electronics recycling needs more awareness and more industry participation,” said Mike Watson, senior manager of Dell Global Recycling Services. “The Reconnect program exemplifies what sustainability practices can mean to our communities – extended life for technology and a successful life for our citizens. We’re glad to have Microsoft’s support.”

    To find a Goodwill electronics recycling center and check the list of equipment accepted see  the Reconnect website.

  • Google: We’re ‘no longer investigating’ Nexus One 3G issues

    Nexus One 3G issues

    Well, there you have it.  According to Google employee “Ry Guy,” the search giant is “no longer investigating” the 3G issue that has plagued several Nexus One owners since the launch in January.  Originally blamed on T-Mobile’s 3G coverage footprint, a February OTA software update failed to fix the issue.  As it stands, Google is recommending that “changing your location or even the orientation” of the phone could solve the problem.  Given that the forums are buzzing with comparisons to other T-Mobile phones, the remaining finger could be pointed at HTC and potential build issues.

    Needless to say, the comments aren’t going over well with Nexus One users, with many in the forums threatening to sell their devices and move on.  I’m particularly interested to see how users and prospective customers respond, given the fact that the issue appears to be outside of the software realm.  With Google spearheading the Nexus One campaign, will they take the PR hit, or will all eyes be on HTC?

    Via Engadget


  • Death and Taxes 2011 Shows Where Your Money Is Going [Infographics]

    You paid your taxes, the government got your pesos, and here’s where the President wants to spend them in 2011. Death and Taxes keeps being my favorite chart every year. Guess who gets the biggest cake piece (again). More »







  • Droid owners, have you lost your messages?

    droid sms

    Open your text messages application on your Droid, and notice it’s, well, empty? Apparently a new known issue that has been plaguing a group of Droids is this rather random deletion of your SMS and MMS messages from your device. This means that all of those lovey dovey texts you sent your significant other, all the pictures of your friends drinking at the bar while your working, or the video of the guy walking into the street sign are now gone, vanished into thin air. Unfortunately there is no simple way to just back these up so they are able to be restored, unless your all fancy and keep current nandroid backups of your device (if you happen to know what that is), or if you, say, used Google Voice. Well, in all seriousness, if you have seen this issue, or happen to know any magic fixes, please, share your experience with us in the forums. [code.google.com via Consumerist]

  • Oh Please, The GM Bailout Was A Failure, And No The Taxpayer Hasn’t Made Money

    (This is a guest post from the author’s blog.)

    GM repaid $6.7 billion in US loans and another $1.4 billion in Canadian government loans. So where does that leave GM? Let’s take a look.

    Please consider Gas in the tank: GM repays $8.1B in gov’t loans:

    Fallen giant General Motors Co. accelerated toward recovery Wednesday, announcing the repayment of $8.1 billion in U.S. and Canadian government loans five years ahead of schedule.

    Much of the improvement comes from GM slashing its debt load and workforce as part of its bankruptcy reorganization last year. But the automaker is a long way from regaining its old blue-chip status: It remains more than 70 percent government-owned and is still losing money — $3.4 billion in last year’s fourth quarter alone. And while its car and truck sales are up so far this year, that’s primarily due to lower-profit sales to car rental companies and other fleet buyers.

    The U.S. government still owns 61 percent of GM. The automaker is counting on a public stock offering to allow the U.S. government to begin recouping its remaining $45.3 billion investment. The Canadian government’s $8.1 billion stake, which equals a 12 percent ownership interest, also could also be unlocked if GM sells shares to the public.

    GM lost $88 billion between 2004, when it last turned a profit, and last year when it declared bankruptcy. It endured years of painful restructuring, closing 14 factories and shedding more than 65,000 blue-collar jobs in the U.S. through buyouts, early retirement offers and layoffs.

    GM received $52 billion from the U.S. government and $9.5 billion from the Canadian and Ontario governments starting in 2008. At first the entire amount of U.S. aid was considered a loan as the government tried to keep GM from going under and pulling the fragile economy into a depression.

    But during bankruptcy, the U.S. government reduced the loan portion to $6.7 billion and converted the rest to company stock. Canadian governments also converted part of their debt to shares, reducing its loan balance to $1.4 billion. The final installments on those loans were repaid Tuesday, comfortably beating a 2015 deadline.

    GM wiped out most of its staggering $95 billion debt in bankruptcy, closing last year with $15.8 billion in debt. As it was reorganized, the United Auto Workers agreed to concessions, including a plan to shift $50 billion in retiree health care costs to a union-run trust. New hires and white-collar workers now don’t get the same rich health benefits.

    GM’s planned stock offering hinges on the company posting a profit. GM posted a $3.4 billion loss for the fourth quarter of 2009, but its operations in Asia, South America and other regions made money.

    GM’s Pension Plan Underfunded by $27 Billion

    Inquiring minds are wondering GM’s Pension: A Ticking Time Bomb for Taxpayers?:

    General Motors Corp. may no longer be the world’s biggest automaker, but it still operates the country’s largest pension fund. The threat to its pension plans has always been an issue, but it took on a new urgency when GM disclosed April 7 that its plans were underfunded by more than $27 billion, with more than half of that being owed to U.S. workers and retirees. Across town, a post- bankrupt Chrysler faces its own pension shortfall. Moreover, a report last week from the Government Accounting Office (GAO) says the pension crisis in the auto industry could create an unprecedented crisis for the federal Pension Benefit Guarantee Corp., a government-sponsored organization to backstop company pensions.

    Could taxpayers really be on the hook for UAW pensions?

    Yes. GM could face a funding crisis in 2013 or 2014 when, under the current projections, the automaker will be required to make more than $12 billion in contributions to its pension funds to keep them solvent, according to the GAO analysis.

    The funding could easily become a serious challenge for the PBGC, which says it is now facing $168 billion in possible plan terminations across a range of companies, many of them auto suppliers. The PBGC is privately funded, but since it was created by an act of Congress and its board of directors consists of the Secretaries of Labor, Commerce and Treasury, it’s possible that the U.S. Government would step in if the agency came up desperately short of funds.

    What happens to GM and Chrysler pensioners if the PBGC takes over the funds?

    The retirees could face dramatic cuts. The PBGC promises a certain level of benefits, but $35 billion of the two automakers’ promised pension benefits fall beyond the PBGC guarantees.

    GM Summary

    • GM is still Government Motors.
    • The US Government converted $45.3 billion in loans to a 70% ownership position.
    • The Canadian Government converted an $8.1 billion stake into 12% ownership.
    • GM lost $3.4 billion in the 4th quarter of 2009.
    • GM still has $15 billion in debt.
    • GM has $27 billion in unfunded pension liabilities.

    Until GM IPOs we will not know an approximation of taxpayer losses. Moreover, those losses do not include the pension time bomb.

    With GM still losing money on top of all those issues why did GM repay TARP? The likely answer is to get out from under TARP restrictions on CEO and executive pay.

    With the Obama administration crowing about the “success” of this bailout, let’s go back to the beginning, to those $45 billion in loans. Had the government not made those loans (now converted to equity), GM would have gone bankrupt just as it did. GM would likely be producing cars just as it is now, taxpayers would not be out $45 billion, and GM would not be Government Motors.

    The bailout was a total and complete failure.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Alcatel-Lucent Demonstrates 300 Mbps DSL

    When it comes to Internet connections, the future is bright. As in, it’s made of light, fiber optics, to be exact. But fiber optics is still pretty expensive and if there’s one thing that telecommunications companies hate, it is spending any of their hard earned money. Why fix it if it’s not broken is the motto, which is why a lot of pe… (read more)

  • Worst Company In America Final Four: Comcast VS Cash4Gold

    Well, well, well, what do we have here? It’s our nation’s largest cable company and harbinger of mergepocalypse doom, Comcast, VS a certain little company from Florida.

    Just to recap: Comcast is about to merge with NBC, forming an unprecedented voltron-like-creature comprised of both content and distribution channels that has everyone, including Al Franken, former NBC employee, freaking out. Also, they have some other problems.

    Cash4Gold… well, just browse this information.

    Which company deserves a spot in the finals?


    This is a post in our Worst Company In America 2010 series. The companies competing for this honor were chosen by you, the readers. Keep track of all the goings on at consumerist.com/tag/worst-company-in-america. Print the bracket, here.

  • Legal Exploit Enables Tracking and Spying via Cellular Networks

    Activate the cone of silence.
    Don your tinfoil hat.
    Pull the bedsheets up.

    Now that you’ve taken the necessary precautions, I have to tell you some bad news: two researchers have found a way to exploit the mobile phone system in order to locate pretty much anyone they want. That means you, Carmen. All those years of hiding have been for naught. They’ll be here any moment now. This is the end: they’ve found you.

    The exploit enables anybody with the right equipment and know-how to find out a person’s private mobile phone number, and track their location (via celltowers, not GPS). Using another exploit, it is possible to listen to their voicemail messages.

    Interestingly, these exploits are within the bounds of the law. Thankfully (I suppose), they can’t monitor phone calls or read text messages, but this is clearly still a cause for concern.

    The hacks are done through exploiting a series of weak-points across various telephony systems in the world. The details of the techniques are outlined over at CNET, and are worth a read.

    A talk on the exploit (entitled “We Found Carmen San Diego”) was given at the Source Boston security conference on Wednesday.

    The worst part of all this is that it seems that nothing is being done to fix it, and, in fact, it may not even be universally fixable.

    I think now is the time time to pull those bedsheets up a little higher.


  • A broadband plan of sorts goes forth, with muted net neutrality

    By Scott M. Fulton, III, Betanews

    The strategy being employed by the Federal Communications Commission, as put forth yesterday, is to treat its loss to Comcast in DC Circuit Court two weeks ago not as a defeat of its ability to implement the entire Broadband Plan…and then hope that no one puts up any new roadblocks toward deploying at least most of it.

    The priorities the FCC put forth during yesterday’s open hearing are perhaps the ones that would generate the least friction from possible opponents. One of these priorities is reflected in a major rule change yesterday with respect to what regulators originally thought should be an oxymoron: home roaming.

    Specifically, this has to do with whether a wireless carrier that has limited coverage in a given area because it’s building out in that area, may be free to roam its service to other, more established carriers in that same area. A 2007 FCC order made a clear exception against this practice, in what seemed at the time to make some sense: A carrier should use its own spectrum in areas where it owns spectrum.

    An unintended consequence of this exception was apparently a disincentive for carriers to build out in rural areas, feeling that they would be servicing customers there at a clear disadvantage until they had become completely established.

    “With this decision, we continue to strive to adopt policies that balance competing interests, including — promoting competition among multiple carriers; ensuring that consumers have access to seamless coverage nationwide; and providing incentives for all carriers to invest and innovate by using available spectrum and constructing wireless network facilities on a widespread basis,” reads the FCC order published yesterday (PDF available here). “Upon reconsideration, we find that an up-front, categorical exclusion of home roaming from the automatic roaming obligation does not strike the best balance in furthering these goals. As a result of our decision, home roaming will be subject to the automatic roaming requirement and, as a common carrier service, is subject to Sections 201 and 202 of the Act. We will apply the same general presumption of reasonableness to requests for home roaming that we apply to other requests for automatic roaming, and take into account the competing interests when addressing roaming disputes on a case-by-case basis.”

    That reversal put the Commission’s most outspoken Republican, Robert McDowell, in a good mood.

    “The good news today is that we agree on a new course,” McDowell wrote yesterday (PDF available here). “Specifically, we recognize that the better, simpler path is to eliminate the home market exclusion completely. We also clarify that wireless carriers have statutory rights to complain, even if they seek automatic voice roaming arrangements within a home market. By setting forth factors that the Commission will consider in the event of a complaint, we provide a framework that will provide both sides — the host and the requesting carriers — with greater incentives to succeed in negotiating roaming agreements based on reasonable terms and conditions. We allow market forces to drive flexible deals among market players to give consumers the benefit of seamless, nationwide voice services.”

    But a disparity still remains, and McDowell was not one to take his eye off of it: The wireless service rules to which the 2007 exception originally applied, were written in the days when “wireless” and “telephone” were considered synonymous. Yesterday, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski cited the Broadband Plan as one of the driving forces behind removing the exception — and the broadband plan deals with information service. On April 6, after the DC Circuit handed down the Comcast decision, Commissioner McDowell did nothing to hide his glee, saying, “I hope this decision will provide certainty in the marketplace, and will not lead to the unnecessary classification of broadband service as a monopoly phone service under Title II of the [Telecommunications] Act.” That put McDowell’s stake firmly in the ground against any attempt at reclassifying Internet service as a way of regulating net neutrality.

    The problem is, if the FCC can’t really regulate information services under Title I, then it can’t also do something that McDowell may very much appreciate: essentially the opposite of the exception, granting a mandate that carriers must negotiate automatic data roaming agreements. So in his commentary on the ruling yesterday, McDowell asked an open-ended question:
    “With respect to the Further Notice on data roaming, for some time now, I have requested that interested parties submit for our consideration a legal analysis setting forth the means to this end. The question is simple: Given that, in 2007, the Commission classified wireless broadband services as Title I without dissent, is there a legally sustainable path to mandate automatic data roaming? I have sought this analysis well before the DC Circuit’s recent ruling in the Comcast case, which casts even more doubt on our jurisdiction in this area. I strongly encourage all commenters to give us their analyses of how the Comcast decision affects our ability to regulate data roaming.”

    Also yesterday, the FCC took the next step in a strategic move away from its support of CableCARD, the technology that’s supposed to enable cable and satellite TV subscribers to fully utilize the capabilities of their digital signal — for example, to digitally record programs they’re permitted to record. In a new Notice of Inquiry yesterday (PDF available here), the Commission conceded its existing stance on the technology — which consisted mainly of a requirement for service providers (MVPDs) to include it but not really to support it — was a complete failure.

    “The Commission’s rules require cable operators to support only one-way plug-and-play capability for retail CableCARD devices. This largely reflects the absence of a proven market for two-way services when negotiations began, and a desire within the industry to achieve consensus on how to assure access to the most basic services first and not await the conclusion of negotiations regarding access to new services that might be introduced later,” the NOI reads. “Accordingly, the Commission’s rules do not require cable operators to provide access for retail devices to two-way services such as interactive program guides, pay-per-view, or video-on-demand services, which were nascent services in 2003 and would have required complex and lengthy technical consideration. For that reason among others, retail CableCARD devices have not been able to offer all of the cable services available to subscribers who lease their set-top boxes from the cable operator. This is partially responsible for the failure of the CableCARD solution to create a strong retail market for navigation devices.”

    That move prompted positive response (PDF available here) from the Commission’s other Republican, Meredith A. Baker: “As we consider a long-term solution, I hope that we recall valuable lessons from the CableCARD regime. First, our technological mandates come with significant costs. By one estimate, the cost of CableCARD compliance for the cable industry alone — costs passed on to cable consumers — has totaled nearly one billion dollars. Second, we should be careful not to mandate particular technological solutions that would freeze into place the current state of technology. We need to craft flexible rules that foster continued investment and innovation both on the network and device level. We should also not inhibit the ability of MVPDs to continue to invest in innovative devices and offerings. There are numerous promising collaborative efforts in home network and industry standard setting bodies to provide consumers with greater flexibility and options in how to view their video content. Hopefully, that spirit of collaboration between MVPD and consumer electronics companies will carry over to our consideration of a post-CableCARD regime.”

    Not lost on anyone, however, including Baker, was the fact that any new “two-way” technology would involve the invocation of the “I” word. So in her comment yesterday, she suggested that since the subject involved the regulation of program distributors — which everyone agrees are under the FCC’s purview — then perhaps this should not be framed as part of the Broadband Plan.

    “The National Broadband Plan framed this issue as one of broadband adoption. I agree that our set-top box policy does relate to broadband, but I believe that it relates primarily to broadband deployment, not adoption,” Baker wrote. “In order to provide higher speeds and more advanced broadband offerings, cable operators need to reclaim spectrum dedicated to video programming without eliminating the hundreds of video channels available to subscribers today. We should be vigilant that our set-top box policy does not unintentionally frustrate the efforts of cable operators investing in their next-generation broadband networks by putting up roadblocks to an affordable transition to all-digital operations or raising uncertainty about investment in more efficient technologies like switched digital video.”

    The Commission remains aware that it might not be able, under its current mandate, to regulate net neutrality — a fact that commissioners cannot sweep under the rug. So the question of “how the Internet’s openness can best be preserved” will be put to a panel of experts next Wednesday, including the CTO of T-Mobile, a chief researcher for Yahoo, and the chief commercial officer for Clearwire.

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2010



    Add to digg
    Add to Google
    Add to Slashdot
    Add to Twitter
    Add to del.icio.us
    Add to Facebook
    Add to Technorati



  • Get a Facebook ‘Like’ Button on Any Website With This Chrome Extension

    Facebook’s recently launched “Like” feature, which aims to make the whole web more social, is the most actively discussed topic right now. Webmasters across the world seem to be debating whether to implement the feature or not. Buy if you use Google Chrome, you don’t need to wait to see your favorite website implement the feature.

    The Google Chrome extension let you ‘Like’ any website with a couple of clicks. Once you install the add-on from here, a small facebook icons appear next to your address bar. Clicking on that button while browsing any website would allow you to show your likeness for the website and also display recent activity from your friends. However, you do need to be logged in to Facebook to access this feature, if you are not, a pop-up window will ask you to do so first.

    Facebook Like

    Whenever you ‘Like’ a webpage, the activity will show in your Facebook feeds, so make sure you don’t click on any websites that you don’t want to show up on your Facebook profile. It is a great little tool to make your browsing more social and share good stuff from across the web with your Facebook friends.

    [Via DownloadSquad]

    Get a Facebook ‘Like’ Button on Any Website With This Chrome Extension originally appeared on Techie Buzz written by Tehseen Baweja on Thursday 22nd April 2010 11:32:24 AM. Please read the Terms of Use for fair usage guidance.

    Don’t miss these Related Posts:

    Join Techie Buzz on Your Favorite Social Networking Sites