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  • Here’s Exactly What’s Going To Happen When Bernanke Appears On The Hill Tomorrow

    ben bernanke

    Here’s an important heads up.

    Tomorrow at 10:00 AM Ben Bernanke will attending a hearing on “The Economic Outlook.”

    There’s always some nervousness before he speaks (will he all of the sudden sound more hawkish?).

    Let us give you a preview of some things that might come up:

    • On the deficit, Bernanke will say it’s a serious issue, but that it’s too soon to do anything about it. At some point it will have to be dealt with. You know, after everyone that’s in office now is out office.
    • On entitlements, Bernanke will say they have to be fixed. At some point.
    • That may involve some discussion or raising taxes (not his problem).
    • He’ll say the economy is strong…
    • But not so strong that we’re out of the woods yet (this will be the money line, when stocks will go nuts, because investors will know that this is a code word low rates).
    • If Ron Paul is there, that will produce something YouTube-worthy.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Android 2.1 now on more than a quarter of Android phones

    Android versions

    Here’s the latest look at the breakdown of Android operating system versions — fragmentation, if you will. More than a quarter of Android devices are now running Android 2.1 — that includes the Droid, Nexus One, Legend and Desire. A goodly number — 38 percent — are still on Android 1.5, and Android 1.6 makes up nearly 32 percent of the gene pool.

    By comparison, way back in December, Android 1.6 led the way at 52.2 percent, followed by Android 1.5 at 27.7 percent, and Android 2.0.1 (which had recently been released for the Droid) at 14.8 percent. [via Android Developers blog]

  • Do Neutral Wireless Networks Require an End to the Flat-rate Plan?

    The network neutrality debate — whether or not Internet Service Providers can discriminate against packets (GigaOM Pro sub req’d) or application providers — pits what the blogosphere often sees as the forces of good (Google, The Free Press) against the forces of evil (AT&T, Verizon, Comcast), while generally ignoring the technical realities or even clearly understanding the limits of said networks. So I was excited to see presented to the FCC this week a paper written by Scott Jordan, a professor of computer science at the University of California, Irvine, on whether or not one can or should apply net neutrality to wireless networks.

    The paper concludes that the differences between wireline and wireless networks do change the way network management is implemented, and suggests that by creating the equivalent of an open interface for the transport layers (layers 1-3 in the OSI model) of a wireless network would be enough to prevent ISPs from stifling competition on wireless networks. From an abstract of the paper:

    We address whether differences between wired and wireless network technology merit different treatment with respect to net neutrality. We are concerned with whether the challenges of wireless signals and mobility merit different traffic management techniques, and how these techniques may affect net neutrality. Although wireless networks require stronger traffic management, we find these differences are only at and below the network layer, and hence wireless broadband access providers can effectively control congestion without restricting a user’s right to run the applications of their choice.

    However, for Jordan the open interface would be tied to pricing, notably the amount a user is willing to pay for certain prioritization or types of traffic at the lower levels. He explains in the paper itself:

    In contrast, many current plans are not application-agnostic and are hence not consistent with an open interface. Some plans for smartphones include unlimited amounts of data, but restrict use to certain devices (e.g. prohibit tethering to a laptop) and to certain applications (e.g. permit web browsing and email, but prohibit file sharing, streaming, and VoIP). The goals of traffic management can be more efficiently obtained through an application-agnostic interface that allows users to choose their own applications and to match these applications to QoS options based on price.

    Not only does this mean the flat-rate mobile broadband plan is dead, but the onus is on the consumer to understand what she wants to do with her device and subscribe to the correct pricing plan. Already carriers are weighing how they will change mobile broadband pricing (GigaOM Pro, sub req’d) to more accurately reflect usage, so by providing a way to offer usage-based pricing in a way that could fit with network neutrality rules, this paper could help carriers implement such plans. It explains from a technical perspective why wireless networks should also abide by network neutrality regulations and how to do so in a manner that respects the constraints unique to wireless networks. So there’s something in here for both consumers and carriers to potentially dislike.

    Image courtesy of Flickr user pfly

  • The many faces of L.A.’s ultimate private eye: Who is your favorite Marlowe?

    Philip Marlowe is one of L.A.’s legendary fictional detectives.

    In The Times’ magazine, screenwriter Carol Wolper writes about her efforts to create for television a 2010 Marlowe that Raymond Chandler would recognize.

    "Many have tried to bring this character to the big and small screen, but success has been elusive," she wrote. "Yet the desire for another shot never goes away. Marlowe is like that person you keep trying to break up with because you know it won’t work out, but you can’t get her (or him) out of your mind."

    She concluded: "Maybe a 2010 Marlowe isn’t Caucasian. Or if so, maybe he’s not a complete loner. Maybe he has a pal. Maybe that pal is even female. As blasphemous as that may sound to die-hard noirists, maybe we can worship at the altar of Chandler without being a slave to the past."

    Check out her story here, which offers video samples of different actors portraying the private eye (Bogart, Gould, Mitchum, Garner). You can also vote on your favorite.

  • Hawaiian Airlines Tops Quality Study, American Eagle Falls Flat

    For the second year in a row, Hawaiian Airlines has topped a study that ranks 18 commercial carriers according to a formula that accounts for everything from on-time arrivals/departures to baggage handling to customer complaints. On the bottom end of the rankings was American Eagle.

    In addition to taking the overall top spot, Hawaiian Airlines also had the best on-time performance rating with 92.1% of their flights showing up when they were supposed to.

    Rounding out the top four spots — all of which remain unchanged from last year — in the joint Purdue University/Wichita State University study: AirTran at #2, JetBlue in the #3 slot and Northwest cruising in at #4.

    As mentioned, American Eagle did the worst this year, slipping two spots from 2008 to bring up the rear. While it’s overall score improved from the previous study, it wasn’t enough to keep pace with the other bottom dwellers who inched up a bit in 2009.

    Last year’s caboose airline, Atlantic Southwest, was the runner-up for the loser list. It was followed, in ascending order by Comair at #16, Delta — the nation’s biggest airline — at the #15 spot, and SkyWest at #14.

    Here’s the whole list from top to bottom:
    #1: Hawaiian Airlines
    #2: AirTran
    #3: JetBlue
    #4: Northwest
    #5: Southwest
    #6: Continental
    #7: Frontier
    #8: U.S. Airways
    #9: American
    #10: ExpressJet
    #11: Alaska
    #12: Mesa
    #13: United
    #14: SkyWest
    #15: Delta
    #16: Comair
    #17: Atlantic Southwest
    #18: American Eagle

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE ENTIRE REPORT [pdf]

  • ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’ Ferrari up for auction but Broderick says it’s not a real Ferrari

    If you were a big fan of the 1980s, then there is no way you don’t know the movie Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. The most famous scene from the movie was when Alan Ruck (known as Cameron Frye in the movie) beat the hell out of a Ferrari California Spyder, which hurt the feelings of many enthusiasts around the world. Well, worry not, because the only way Paramount Pictures allowed Ruck to beat the hell out of a Ferrari was simple: it wasn’t a Ferrari.

    The car was really a MG that was topped with a fiberglass Ferrari body to look like the real thing.

    The current owner of the car, Bonhams of London, is now ready to sell it. Bonhams expects the car to go for about $40,000 to $54,000 according to its online catalog.

    Click here to get prices on the 2010 Ferrari California.

    Nonetheless, Matthew Broderick, who played Ferris in the movie, recently told New York Magazine that he will not be bidding on the car. Why?

    “It was a kit car. We had a real Ferrari that we looked at in the garage, but when we drove, it was not real, and that’s what this is. My memory of that car is that it often didn’t start. That’s all I remember – which I probably shouldn’t say; I don’t want to bring the price down. But, uh, it was unreliable, that car.”

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: DriveOn


  • Lincoln Plans to Deliver Strong Derivatives Regulation

    In the past few weeks, Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.), the chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee, has become the unlikely point person on a debate on Wall Street arcana. Her committee is charged with producing the language regarding derivatives regulation for the broader financial regulation reform bill. Banks make billions in transactions fees on derivatives every year, and therefore have pushed back hard on a White House plan to put them on exchanges, improving pricing and volume transparency. It seemed that Lincoln might have waffled, but she released a letter to Politico today indicating the regulations will be strong:

    A new proposal … would require sweeping changes to the $450 trillion derivatives market, including forcing big banks to spin off “swaps desks” that handle the complex financial instruments — a more aggressive approach than either the White House or other congressional committees have advocated so far, according to the Arkansas Democrat and her aides.

    Lincoln’s plan is likely to burnish her standing with progressive groups inside the Democratic Party ahead of her May 18 Senate primary, where she is facing a challenger from the left. Lincoln drew fire from liberals in her party for opposing the public health insurance option in the recent health care reform bill.

    Her plan is due to be unveiled as soon as the end of the week. The Senate hopes to take up financial regulation reform by the end of the month.

  • Akon Blasts Christina Aguilera: “I Like Old Xtina Better”

    Aww snap! It seems Akon’s got a bone to pick with Christina Aguilera. The “Smack That”s star is growing tired of the persistent comparisions between the petite powerhouse and his protege, pop queen of the hour Lady Gaga. Christina — who drops her new LP Bionic this June — has been accused of swagger jacking Gaga since she emerged from a de facto maternity leave with blonde bangs and a saucy new look almost two years. Akon thinks its high time he weighed in on the debate, he thinks Christina is imitating Gaga when she should be in the studio working on tracks that showcase the impeccable voice that’s kept her in the limelight for more than a decade.

    “Aw man, that’s not even any competition,” Akon tells VIBE. “You are actually giving Christina too much credit. She always had her cool little look and way about how she went about things. But soon as Gaga came out everything switched up. Christina stepped out of her own shell to become something different. And the crazy thing is Christina is really talented. She has unlimited range when it comes to singing. Her voice is out of here. I just think she just needs to believe in herself more. I think sometimes she gets insecure because of all of the success Gaga has had not realizing that she was already successful before Gaga came out.”

    He adds that on Bionic, Christina should stick to the power ballads that show off her outstanding vocal range as opposed to the up-tempo dance anthems that are more Gaga’s staple.

    “I miss the old Christina Aguilera. I like the old one better than the new one. Honestly, Gaga and Christina could probably get together and do something that’s amazing. But that’s impossible if they are both trying to do the same exact thing musically.”

    Akon, Good Damn Day! Did the entire “Stripped” era totally escape you? Xtina was Lady Gaga eight years before Lady Gaga was Lady Gaga. Next!

  • Autoblog Podcast #174 – AOL Autos’ Reilly Brennan stops by

    Filed under: , , , , , , , ,

    Click above for the Autoblog Podcast in iTunes, RSS or listen now!

    Chris Shunk, Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Paukert and Dan Roth are joined by Reilly Brennan of AOL Autos. After discussing what’s in the Autoblog Garage, attention turns to the Ferrari 599 GTO, the ongoing Chevrolet Camaro-Ford Mustang V6 cage match, wacky interior awards from Ward’s Auto, Audi beating Mercedes in the most recent sales numbers, and the Daimler-Renault/Nissan tie-up. We hit some questions and then skedaddle just under the hour and twenty mark.

    Autoblog Podcast #174: with Reilly Brennan from AOL Autos


    In the Autoblog Garage:

    Audi A4 Avant
    Jeep Grand Cherokee Limited
    Mini John Cooper Works Cabrio
    Ford Escape Hybrid
    Mercedes CL550 4Matic

    News:

    Ferrari 599 GTO

    Mustang/Camaro V6 smackdown
    Ward’s Auto interior awards
    Audi outsells Mercedes
    Daimler and Renault/Nissan deal

    Hosts:
    Chris Shunk, Chris Paukert, Dan Roth, Sam Abuelsamid

    Guest:
    Reilly Brennan of AOL Autos

    Runtime: 1:18:02


    Get the podcast:
    [iTunes] Subscribe to the Autoblog Podcast in iTunes
    [RSS] Add the Joystiq Podcast feed to your RSS aggregator
    [MP3] Download the MP3 directly

    Feedback:

    Email: Podcast at Autoblog dot com
    Voicemail: 734-288-8POD (734-288-8763)

    Review the show in iTunes
    and take our survey

    Autoblog Podcast #174 – AOL Autos’ Reilly Brennan stops by originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 13 Apr 2010 16:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Reboot: Puma and Yves Béhar Spend Three Years Designing Super-Green Shoebox [Manufacturing]

    It’s hard to imagine something as simple as the shoebox being completely overhauled. But Puma and Fuseproject have done just that, in a design that will completely transform the brand’s supply chain—saving millions in electricity, fuel, and water. More »







  • Getting down with the Double Down: a pictoral essay

    I decided I had to buy a Double Down — the new KFC sandwich made of fried chicken breasts holding a center of bacony, cheesy, Colonel’s-secret-saucy goo. Here is how it went.

    I started at the KFC at the corner of MLK and JEL (Joseph E. Lowery Blvd.):

    double6I got my hot, greasy, Double Down-fragrant bag:

    double7I drove back to the office, all the while thinking, “Double Down, Double Down, Double Down! Dr. Atkins, I’m doing this for you!”

    I opened the bag at my desk and found this. Could it be the sandwich miracle I was hoping for?

    double5I opened it and, to my great surprise, I found this!

    double1

    Okay, kidding. I found this:

    double8

    I examined it from all angles:

    double4I gingerly peeked inside:

    double2Not so gingerly:

    double3Sauce, cheese, baconish strips — all melding into chicken crust. Double Down, dudes!

  • TurboTax vs. Simple Taxes

    On April 15, taxes are due. And for almost 30 percent of Americans, TurboTax or some other online software tax program will do the deed for them. Does TurboTax’s technical mastery of the tax code cause us to avoid reforming a system that is so fundamentally complex that even experts struggle to comprehend its effects and skewed incentives?

    Maybe. In a personal email, Bruce Bartlett wrote on the issue of TurboTax and tax reform. Here is his note, in full:
    ___
    “I have no doubt that TurboTax will declare support for tax reform and deny that it favors complexity even if it is good for business. This may even be true because one of the problems we have with the tax system today is what I would call fundamental complexity, which is the inability of experts to comprehend many aspects of the system, as opposed to technical complexity of the sort that TurboTax deals with very well.
     
    “The real point I was making in my comment, however, is that Washington tax-types tend to think of the income tax in discrete components or provisions. Thus they worry a great deal about things like the AMT. But average people hardly ever complain about the AMT as opposed to complaining about taxes in general. And my observation is that while people complain about complexity what really matters to them is what they pay. There’s no evidence that they are willing to pay much of anything to achieve simplicity and will tolerate a lot of complexity if it saves them taxes.
     
    “I suggested that TurboTax may explain why this is the case. It calculates one’s bottom line taxes relatively easily; so easily that one really has no idea what particular provisions of the tax code are saving them taxes and which ones are particularly screwing them. All they know or care about is the bottom line: how much did they pay and will they be getting a refund.
     
    “I’m not sure what this means for tax reform, but I am inclined to think that the promise of simplification is likely to have much less political support than it did in the past. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that one hardly ever hears about the flat tax any more because one of its prime selling points was simplicity (or at least the appearance of simplicity). You put that together with the fact that some 50% of filers pay nothing and it explains why Michael Graetz has never gotten any traction on his idea of replacing the income tax with a VAT. At least half of tax filers would be worse off.”
    ____





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  • America’s hidden power bill – Examining federal energy tax expenditures

    Center for American Progress’s Richard W. Caperton and Sima J. Gandhi have put together an excellent report on the remarkable waste of taxpayer’s dollars on perverse subsidies for the profitable fossil fuel industry. I am reposting the executive summary:

    The most important day of the year for the many energy companies that receive federal financial support isn’t the day the president releases his proposed budget, or the day appropriations bills get passed, or even the day when government checks get sent out. It’s tax day. Why? Because each tax day energy companies—electric utilities, oil refiners, renewable energy developers, coal miners, ethanol producers, and others—record billions of dollars worth of special tax credits and deductions.

    Tax expenditures—government spending programs that deliver subsidies through the tax code via special tax credits, deductions, exclusions, exemptions, and preferential rates—are the dominant type of federal support for the U.S. energy industry. Altogether, these spending programs amount to 60 percent of the government’s total support to the industry. These tax expenditures are functionally equivalent to direct spending, but they are often subject to less scrutiny.

    Energy-related tax expenditures serve a broad range of purposes, from promoting renewable electricity generation to encouraging domestic production of oil. But the question is, are these energy programs working? And is implementing programs through the tax code the best way to achieve government goals?

    The Center for American Progress demonstrated in “Audit the Tax Code: Doing What Works for Tax Expenditures” (released in conjunction with this paper) that tax expenditures suffer from a lack of transparency, evaluation, measurement, and oversight. Energyrelated tax expenditures are not immune to these problems, and in fact they suffer from the same shortcomings as other tax expenditure programs.

    The basic problem with tax expenditures is that they are often not thought of as a form of spending, which makes for a dangerous double standard. When considering spending policymakers ask themselves, “Is offering hard-earned taxpayer dollars as a subsidy to a private, profit-making company a good idea?” But if the spending is cast as a tax expenditure the assessment is different. Even though tax expenditures come at a cost to taxpayers— as with any other type of spending—they are viewed through a different, less critical lens. Viewing tax expenditures through the same lens as other government expenditures provides a clearer image of both how they support public policy and use public resources.

    Are these energy programs working? And is implementing programs through the tax code the best way to achieve government goals?

    This paper will adopt that lens to look at two energy-related tax expenditures: the percentage depletion allowance in the oil industry and the production tax credit, or PTC, in the wind industry. We also consider a program in which a tax expenditure was temporarily converted into direct spending: the cash grant in lieu of the investment tax credit, or ITC, for wind generation.

    We chose these three areas both for their political timeliness—the president’s budget proposes the elimination of some fossil fuel subsidies, and ITC provisions will expire unless renewed— and their size (these are all fairly large expenditures). Through these three examples we are able to explore the major issues in tax expenditure design and evaluation.

    Through this analysis, we find these tax expenditures lack accountability, transparency, and measurability, yet there is some indication that the wind-related expenditures are effective. We find little justification for the percentage-depletion allowance, but we do find that when tax expenditures are redesigned and offered as direct spending—as with the cash grant in lieu of the ITC—the program can be more effectively monitored and managed.

    Our analysis in the pages that follow illustrate that spending programs implemented through the tax code play an important role in supporting energy policies. Accordingly, these programs must be examined with the same level of scrutiny as direct spending. The following recommendations can help the government use its limited financial resources to most effectively promote desirable energy policies:

    • Tax expenditures need to be held to the same standards as other government spending. This means Congress should clearly state the goals of expenditures, should contain sunset provisions so that that they expire and are re-evaluated, and should require periodic reviews of their effectiveness. Any safeguard that is designed to prevent wasteful spending should also be applied to tax expenditures.
    • Tax expenditures are a form of government spending and should be considered as such. This includes not just considering tax expenditures and direct spending at the same time but thinking about them in the right way. Every time a legislator thinks about a tax expenditure, they should ask themselves, “Is it a good idea for the government to pay someone for this reason?” This will encourage legislators to explore direct spending alternatives when appropriate, which are often better policy tools.
    • Congress should provide a rationale for each tax expenditure. When Congress decides to provide financial support to an industry through either a tax expenditure or direct spending, they should state why the chosen method is better than the other.
    • Congress should hold agencies responsible for budgeting tax expenditures. Agency budget requests that are sent to Congress should include the tax expenditure spending programs that support their policy areas. Just as agencies are required to explain and report on their direct spending request, they should perform the same exercise on each tax expenditure within their purview. This exercise would hold agencies responsible for explaining how all forms of government spending it uses support its policy areas, and it would empower Congress with the ability to cohesively examine how spending streams work together.
    • Tax expenditures should be measured and evaluated. The government collects large amounts of data on many industries, but sometimes this data isn’t sufficient to evaluate a tax expenditure. If an evaluator finds that they don’t have appropriate data for the evaluation, there should be a clear process by which they can communicate that need to Congress. Congress should require beneficiaries of tax expenditures to report all data that is necessary for evaluation.
    • Congress should adopt standard practices for reviewing tax expenditures. A good start would be to ensure that each expenditure is covered by a requirement that the Joint Committee on Taxation, the Congressional Budget Office, or the relevant agency report on the expenditure’s history, size, and effectiveness.
    • The Department of Energy should be the agency instructed to assess all energy-related tax expenditures. In particular, the Energy Information Administration is probably the best office within the DOE to conduct this review. Additionally, EIA should periodically issue a report on federal financial supports for the energy industry.
    • The JCT and the Office of Management and Budget should agree on a standardized measurement system for tax expenditures. There may be value to both of their current methodologies, but congressional review would be easier if they used the same methodology. Congress should work with the JCT and the OMB to determine the appropriate system.

    Download the full report (pdf)

    Download the executive summary (pdf)

    Download to mobile devices and e-readers from Scribd

    Event: Government Spending Undercover

    This is part of Doing What Works, a project to help streamline and upgrade our government.

    See also:

  • Android 2.1 now blamed for some of Nexus One (and now Droid) screen ‘issues’

    Mars test picture

    See that picture up there? That’s the surface of Mars. And apparently it doesn’t look very good on the Nexus One. And now on the Motorola Droid. And quite possibly any device running Android 2.1. Why? Let’s discuss, after the break.

    read more

  • MEDIA ADVISORY: Tele-Press Conference on Environmental Risks Facing Major Business Sectors in South Asia

    WHAT:

    The World Resources Institute (WRI) and HSBC’s Climate Change Centre of Excellence will hold a Tele-press conference to discuss three new reports analyzing the environmental risks facing the electricity, food & beverage and building sectors in South Asia. The three-part series is meant to help journalists, analysts and investors understand how water scarcity and climate change will affect companies in each of the three sectors in India, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and the Philippines. The reports and other press materials will be released Friday morning at 7:00 a.m. U.S. EST. For more information or to RSVP, please contact Jessica Forres at 202-729-7736 or jforres@wri.org.

    WHEN:

    Friday, April 16, 2010
    7:00 a.m. to 8:00 a.m. U.S. EST

    HOW:

    (For journalists calling from outside the following countries,
    please call the U.K. or U.S. phone numbers)

    Thailand 001-800-1206-65086
    Malaysia 1-800-80-8104
    India 000-800-852-1221
    Indonesia 001-803-011-3503
    United Kingdom 44-20-7098-0715
    United States 203-480-8025 or 866-523-9995

    Participant Passcode: 4129433

    WHO:

    Piet Klop, acting director of WRI’s Markets and Enterprise Program
    Nick Robins, head of HSBC Climate Change Centre of Excellence
    Roshan Padamadan, analyst at HSBC Climate Change Centre of Excellence

  • Need a good logo at a decent price? Try IDesignYourLogo.com

    I-design-your-logo

    Excuse the cliché, but social media really is changing everything, including the basics of marketing that used to take weeks if not months to execute. Like logo design. That’s why IDesignYourLogo.com caught my attention. It’s a social-based service that designs one logo a day, for one company a day. Then the logo is promoted via social networks and the company’s blog. Here’s how IDesignYourLogo.com works: It started offering its services for $2 on March 1 and has been increasing by $2 every day, through next Feb. 28, when the price will be $730. Co-founder Dana Severson says the service uses social media as its "vehicle for building relationships and extending the logo design for clients into so much more than building a brand." So, are brands buying into the idea? Seems so. IDesignYourLogo.com is booked into May, according to Severson. Some initial clients include charities, a professional soccer player, an actress, a documentary film, a radio station and various other smaller companies/brands that have a small marketing budget to work with.

    —Posted by Elena Malykhina

  • Are Top Scientists Really So Atheistic? Look at the Data | The Intersection

    Elaine Howard Ecklund is a sociologist at Rice University; we cited her work on the topic of science and religion in Unscientific America. Now, she is out with a book that is going to seriously undercut some widespread assumptions out there concerning the science religion relationship. The book, soon to be out from Oxford University press, is entitled Science vs. Religion: What Scientists Really Think. And let me give you just a taste of her answers, from the book jacket (I haven’t dug in yet):
    In the course of her research, Ecklund surveyed nearly 1,700 scientists and interviewed 275 of them. She finds that most of what we believe about the faith lives of elite scientists is wrong. Nearly 50 percent of them are religious. Many others are what she calls “spiritual entrepreneurs,” seeking creative ways to work with the tensions between science and faith outside the constraints of traditional religion…..only a small minority are actively hostile to religion. Ecklund reveals how scientists–believers and skeptics alike–are struggling to engage the increasing number of religious students in their classrooms and argues that many scientists are searching for “boundary pioneers” to cross the picket lines separating science and religion. You can learn more about Ecklund’s …

  • TeaCupCake Cupcake Molds

    Teacupcakes!

    Some say that the origin of the word “cupcake” comes from the small cups used to measure ingredients out for them. I tend to think that the name might come from the fact that they may have been baked in small cups to get them down to size, since they are also called baby cakes from time to time. But even better than a cupcake is a cupcake that is actually baked in the cup that might be its namesake. If you don’t want to worry about how oven-safe your teacups are, don’t worry because Fred has it covered with some cute Teacupcake Cupcake Molds. These silicone molds look just like teacups, complete with handle and saucer to give them a very finished look when you serve them. They have a flat base and can easily stand up on a baking sheet unsupported while in the oven. Your cupcakes can – and should be – served right in their cups. If you want to do a tea-flavored cake, so much the better, but last time I checked hot chocolate and coffee go well in a cup and saucer, too.

  • Skype and colleagues to FCC: Declare yourself fit to regulate the net

    By Scott M. Fulton, III, Betanews

    Last week’s staggering defeat to Comcast in a landmark DC Circuit Court decision left the US Federal Communications Commission stripped of any “ancillary authority” it thought it had to regulate the practices of Internet service providers. As of now, it isn’t exactly clear just which government agency does have that authority.

    Rather than wait for Congress to make a decision on the matter — an event which may, arguably, never happen at all — a coalition of major Internet stakeholders, including Skype, Google, eBay, Amazon, Netflix, TiVo, and Facebook are calling on the FCC to take action. Quite literally, they want the Commission to convene a hearing declaring its intention to fill the gap left by the court’s removal of FCC authority…with FCC authority.

    In other words, the FCC may not be the best-suited to regulate the Internet under current US law…but no other candidates exist.

    “We think that time is of the essence here,” stated Markham Erickson, Executive Director of the Open Internet Coalition, in a press conference Tuesday morning. “While we’re not opposed to Congress getting involved in trying to address what happened with the Comcast decision, at the same time, the FCC needs to move quickly to open a proceeding to classify high-speed Internet access services as telecommunications services. In fact, that’s been the norm at the FCC for most of the history of essential communications platforms — that they’re treated as telecommunications services. If the FCC were to do that, it would be a fairly straightforward process of reversing the 2002 [Brand X] cable modem order, and it would re-establish the FCC’s legal authority, allowing it to move forward on the Broadband Plan, and the network neutrality rulemaking.”

    What Erickson is asking for is a complete U-turn — for the FCC to effectively declare Internet communications the same, from a legal standpoint, as telephone communications. The FCC steered clear of that interpretation in 2002 when, under the leadership of then-Chairman Michael Powell, it declared the type of service delivered to customers via cable modem as an information service, distinct and different from a telecommunications service.

    As the 2002 declaration reads (PDF available here), “In this proceeding, as well as in a related proceeding concerning broadband access to the Internet over domestic wireline facilities, we seek to create a rational framework for the regulation of competing services that are provided via different technologies and network architectures. We recognize that residential high-speed access to the Internet is evolving over multiple electronic platforms, including wireline, cable, terrestrial wireless and satellite. By promoting development and deployment of multiple platforms, we promote competition in the provision of broadband capabilities, ensuring that public demands and needs can be met. We strive to develop an analytical approach that is, to the extent possible, consistent across multiple platforms. For the reasons discussed…we conclude that cable modem service, as it is currently offered, is properly classified as an interstate information service, not as a cable service, and that there is no separate offering of telecommunications service.”

    That declaration effectively freed the FCC from having to resolve the issue of how, or whether, broadband carriers must be forced to open their services up to multiple Internet access providers. The same laws that forced the Bell System to open up its long distance lines to MCI, may have applied in compelling AT&T to offer Internet service from a menu of competitors. One of those competitors would have been a small firm called Brand X, whose name will forever grace the history books as the subject of the Supreme Court’s 2005 “Brand X Decision.” Overturning the appeals court, the nation’s highest court sided in favor of the FCC, in a decision authored by Justice Clarence Thomas and dissented solely by Justice Antonin Scalia.

    Scalia’s dissent was classic Scalia, complete with frequent alliteration, fluent vocabulary, and a pizza analogy. The point the justice made was that, from a consumer’s perspective, whether he receives service from a service provider or from a carrier, he receives service. The difference would be about as trivial as whether a pizza restaurant delivers food to customers’ doors, or hires a cab driver to do it instead.

    Since the delivery service provided by cable (the broad-band connection between the customer’s computer and the cable company’s computer-processing facilities) is downstream from the computer-processing facilities, there is no question that it merely serves as a conduit for the information services that have already been “assembled” by the cable company in its capacity as ISP. This is relevant because of the statutory distinction between an “information service” and “telecommunications.” The former involves the capability of getting, processing, and manipulating information…The latter, by contrast, involves no “change in the form or content of the information as sent and received.” …When cable-company-assembled information enters the cable for delivery to the subscriber, the information service is already complete. The information has been (as the statute requires) generated, acquired, stored, transformed, processed, retrieved, utilized, or made available. All that remains is for the information in its final, unaltered form, to be delivered (via telecommunications) to the subscriber.

    This reveals the insubstantiality of the fear invoked by both the Commission and the Court: the fear of what will happen to ISPs that do not provide the physical pathway to Internet access, yet still use telecommunications to acquire the pieces necessary to assemble the information that they pass back to their customers. According to this reduction…if cable-modem-service providers are deemed to provide “telecommunications service,” then so must all ISPs because they all “use” telecommunications in providing Internet functionality (by connecting to other parts of the Internet, including Internet backbone providers, for example). In terms of the pizzeria analogy, this is equivalent to saying that, if the pizzeria “offers” delivery, all restaurants “offer” delivery, because the ingredients of the food they serve their customers have come from other places; no matter how their customers get the food (whether by eating it at the restaurant, or by coming to pick it up themselves), they still consume a product for which delivery was a necessary “input.” This is nonsense. Concluding that delivery of the finished pizza constitutes an “offer” of delivery does not require the conclusion that the serving of prepared food includes an “offer” of delivery. And that analogy does not even do the point justice, since ” ‘telecommunications service’ ” is defined as “the offering of telecommunications for a fee directly to the public.”…The ISPs’ use of telecommunications in their processing of information is not offered directly to the public.

    What Erickson and his Coalition are requesting is for the FCC under Chairman Julius Genachowski to declare Internet service a “Title II” service under the existing Telecommunications Act, and effectively concede Justice Scalia was correct after all — a step which he says actually would not be unprecedented.

    Next: The FCC’s “spare tire”…

    The FCC’s “spare tire”…

    The Open Internet Coalition’s Markham Erickson believes that the FCC can salvage its ability to execute the Broadband Plan proposed earlier this year by Chairman Julius Genachowski, if it can declare itself the regulator of merit for Internet service under a different legal theory than the one struck down last week by the DC Circuit Court, in a ruling favoring Comcast.

    “I would almost look at reclassification as sort of a spare tire that lets the Commission move forward on its agenda, and Congress can always make a comprehensive fix to the Telecom Act at the same time,” said Erickson in response to a question from Betanews. Though he also suggested that Congress may not act at all, citing the fact that it took at least ten years for it to debate the last set of changes to the Telecommunications Act under the Clinton administration.

    Declaring the Internet a Title II service, Erickson suggested, would be “an elegant solution, in that it is a narrow approach that returns the FCC to narrowly regulating just the on-ramps to the Internet. At the same, I think, it protects the edge-based providers and the Internet as a whole from being put under regulation under a broader theory, and a more uncertain theory of ancillary authority under Title I [of the Telecommunications Act].

    “I actually think that the Comcast decision, in many ways, was a blessing,” he continued, “in that it’s really saying that the Commission needs to jettison the amorphous concept of ancillary authority, because it’s not clear exactly how far that extends into the Internet. If it refocuses on just the last-mile facilities of the Internet access provider, they would be on solid legal foundation. It’s also something that the Supreme Court mentioned in the Brand X Decision, that the FCC could of course revisit its decision and reverse its decision, and if they did so, they would be on solid legal foundation. It was Justice Scalia who dissented from affirming the FCC’s ruling in the cable modem order, saying quite clearly, the facilities [of] the Internet access provider are separate offerings that are telecommunications services, not information services.”

    Betanews asked Erickson, wouldn’t such a move by the FCC simply delay, or at least overlook, the inevitable necessity of Congress to make new law with regard to who should regulate the Internet, or parts of the Internet?

    “The Comcast court [DC Circuit] was clear that they were very skeptical of the use of Title I ancillary authority to regulate Internet access providers. I would make a distinction between regulating the Internet and regulating the last-mile facilities of the Internet access providers,” he responded. “But if the FCC were to classify these services as telecommunications services — which many of them were until they were reclassified as information services under Title I — under Title II, the Commission would have a solid legal foundation.”

    The DC Circuit order, Erickson noted, not only leaves the door open for the FCC to make that declaration, but suggests that it could still do so — not only leading the horse to water, but shoving its nose into the lake. “If the Commission revisits that [2002 Brand X] order, they would be on solid legal foundation. It’s not to say that Congress may not want to update the [Telecommunications] Act in and of itself. I don’t think it’s entirely necessary. I think that these are essential communications platforms, and telecommunications services under Title II have historically applied to essential communications platforms — that is, two-way communications where the facility provider that allowing for those two-way communications to happen, isn’t interfering in the communications.”

    Representing Skype’s interest in the affair (certainly a telecommunications service in the technical sense, and in some countries, the legal sense as well), its Senior Director of Government and Regulatory Affairs, Christopher Libertelli, told the press conference today that the bigger, traditional carriers such as Verizon and AT&T aren’t going to start regulating themselves — despite their public promises — in the absence of leadership from the FCC, or from somebody.

    “Carriers have long engaged in dialog around this idea of a voluntary code of conduct that would, I guess, substitute for a government policy,” Libertelli remarked. “And I think it’s interesting, because after the Comcast case, government has no policy in this space. It lacks subject matter jurisdiction, as the FCC lacks subject matter jurisdiction to enforce its Internet policy statement. So we should think about these efforts to do voluntary, industry-led enforcement mechanisms against this vacuum. The carriers know that it’s not sustainable for the chairman of the FCC to not have subject matter jurisdiction in this important area, and have no policy.

    “The key is enforceability,” he continued. “My job is to protect the Skype community. If you’re a Skype user, my job is to bring your concerns to the regulator should the carriers’ worst behavior block or degrade your conversation. So at some level, this whole Title I/Title II debate is about, where do consumers go? Title II is a mechanism that would provide consumers with a place to go to the FCC, to bring to regulators’ attention conduct that harms consumers. If this notion of a voluntary process lacks that essential enforceability feature, I think it’s going to fall short of establishing a real government policy in this area.”

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2010



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  • Mark Vlasic on the trial of Radovan Karadzic

    Radovan Karadzic on trial

    Over at The Huffington Post, Georgetown Institute for Law, Science, and Global Security Senior Fellow, Mark Vlasic writes:

    The long arm of justice caught up with Radovan Karadzic yesterday, as his former victims began to testify against him at a genocide trial at the United Nations war crimes tribunal in The Hague. Almost fifteen years after the Srebrenica genocide, when Bosnian Serb forces rounded up over 7,500 Muslim men and boys and slaughtered them in cold blood, thousands with their eyes blindfolded and their hands tied behind their backs, the former president of the Serb-controlled Bosnia, the man who presided over the worst massacre in Europe since the Holocaust, now finds himself in the very same dock that held former Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic. And as former president Karadzic sits between two UN prison guards in an international tribunal, one must wonder, is the end of impunity finally coming to a close?

    In 2002, I sat across from Slobodan Milosevic in the first war crimes trial of a head of state, ever. It was a historic trial — one supported by the United Nations and the international community — and one that only a few years earlier, I never thought would happen.

    You see, up until April 2001, when the Butcher of the Balkans was arrested at his Belgrade villa, it was almost presumed that if you were a terrible dictator, or a head of state bent on mass slaughter and destruction, you would never see the inside of a courtroom. Lesser functionaries, yes — they might go to trial — but the top officials, they were virtually untouchable. As presidents, they would likely die while in office, or escape to a well-appointed villa to live their lives in comfortable exile. But now, the very presumptions that have guided human history, in the short time I’ve been a lawyer, have changed… And we’ve almost taken it for granted.

    After the arrest and trial of Milosevic, came the arrest and trial of former president Saddam Hussein — the first war crimes trial of a Middle East leader in history — and the arrest of former president Charles Taylor of Liberia – and who now sits in the dock in The Hague.

    It seems that with every year, the dominos of impunity keep falling — first Europe, then the Middle East, then Africa. And they continue to fall:

    Chad’s exiled former president, Hissène Habré, is to stand trial at a special court in Senegal, while in Asia, another domino is falling.

    Khieu Samphan, the former president of the Khmer Rouge, is facing a UN-sponsored court in Cambodia for his part in “The Killing Fields” — and the slaughter of his own people nearly 30 years ago.

    Most recently, the International Criminal Court in The Hague has dropped another domino with its indictment of President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan. The question now is not if another president will ever be charged, but rather — when, and who is next?

    This is a fundamental change in the presumption. Unlike those of us that studied law and justice in the 20th Century — the next generation of prosecutors and foreign policy professionals — those graduating from universities and law schools in the 21st Century — will only know a world where such terrible dictators actually do stand trial. Such a presumption will embolden the next generation of leaders to act — and perhaps with time — bring a true end to impunity.

    Sixty years after the world’s experiment at Nuremberg — and after millions of lives shattered by war crimes, destruction, and perverted leadership, we should be cautiously optimistic that there is some hope for humanity — but only if we keep pressing the cause of justice. Let us hope we press on — and let us hope that future dictators take notice.

    Indeed. Let’s hope that would-be dictators do take notice.