TeleTips Network 's Techdirt Comments

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  • Shocker: More Than Half The Money Paid Into High Cost Universal Service Fund Not Going To Provide Universal Service

    TeleTips Network ( profile ), 24 Feb, 2011 @ 02:02pm

    Re: USF to change to provide Internet

    @Jason.

    Just globally replace "phone service" with Internet Access". The article then becomes a forecast rather than a retrospective.

  • Al Jazeera Offers Up Egypt Coverage To Anyone Who Wants To Use It Under Creative Commons License

    TeleTips Network ( profile ), 31 Jan, 2011 @ 12:28pm

    Al Jazeera "gets it"?

    After reading so many stories of companies and individuals that get the Internet wrong as a distribution mechanism, it just feels great to read this. Certainly it's too soon to know if publishing via a Creative Commons license is the "right" approach. But the willingness to try seems both clued-in and refreshing. I hope it works. But even if it fails we would all learn more from it than we would from any type of the traditional reaction, litigation, regardless of the outcome.

    Al Jazeera is to be applauded and wished well for their creativity and willingness to experiment.

  • Congressional Hearing On Wikileaks Surprisingly Focuses More On Gov't Overly Secretive Actions

    TeleTips Network ( profile ), 16 Dec, 2010 @ 03:06pm

    Finally! US Government officials speaking sensibly about the reaction to these leaks.

    Slightly off topic, now that Mr. Assange has been released on bail, is his life in greater peril then when he was incarcerated? Wait, wait, hear me out.

    Follow, if you will, the plot of a movie like Conspiracy Theory or Enemy of the State or others of this genre. Government spokespersons wrap themselves in the flag and bemoan the insecurity of the times in which we live. Meanwhile, behind the scenes, a black ops team has been dispatched by a secretive government agency to eliminate the troublesome whistle-blower.

    Being out on bail makes Mr. Assange much more vulnerable to this scenario. Would-be assassins no longer have to penetrate the security of Wandsworth prison. Many more plausible "accidents" might befall him whilst free on his own recognizance. Sure, it's totally unlikely and it never happens. Let us hope an antidote to Polonium has been developed

  • Congressional Research Service Notes That There Are Serious Challenges To Charging Assange

    TeleTips Network ( profile ), 13 Dec, 2010 @ 01:43pm

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: No Worries

    The fear of being kidnapped off the street may have contributed to Mr. Assange's willingness to turn himself in to British authorities.

    Abducting him from British custody would be, it is to be hoped, more difficult than were he roaming about freely.

  • Congressional Research Service Notes That There Are Serious Challenges To Charging Assange

    TeleTips Network ( profile ), 13 Dec, 2010 @ 12:24pm

    tough to convict, but easily detained

    Although the research cited by the articles details how difficult it will be to convict Mr. Assange, a conviction need not necessarily be the desired outcome.

    By simply charging him and successfully extraditing him to the US, he may be held incommunicado for a painfully long time. Just ask any of the inmates still held at Guantanamo.

    A conviction is not necessary to establish a powerful deterrent to future whistle-blowers and publishers. The chilling effect on free speech is the desired outcome.

  • Operation Payback And Wikileaks Show The Battle Lines Are About Distributed & Open vs. Centralized & Closed

    TeleTips Network ( profile ), 09 Dec, 2010 @ 11:15am

    Re: Re: The Singularity must be stopped at all costs!!

    Agree with the Anonymous Coward, there is in this topic an element of "what is the right balance to strike between transparency and secrecy"?

    So when, and where, does that discussion occur? I've asked in previous comments "what are the general principles and guidelines that should enlighten decisions about what information should be classified and what should be released?

  • Imagine If The NY Times Had Ignored Wikileaks Cables

    TeleTips Network ( profile ), 09 Dec, 2010 @ 10:38am

    Follow the money

    I support @Anonymous Coward (comment 21), best look to the campaign contributors for Lieberman's motivation in attacking WikiLeaks.

    It is not mere cynicism to suppose that the heightened concern for "national security" exhibited by American politicians is a thin disguise for a morbid fear of being exposed as having accepted cash or other favors in return for supporting unethical, immoral or even illegal activities in the powerful and privileged positions they occupy.

    We as readers really must insist that the press treat this as the First Amendment issue that it is. The cowardice of the NYT and other mainstream media; reporting this story without taking a principaled stand, is understandable given the pressures to which Amazon, PayPal, EveryDNS et al have been subjected. But that understanding is not acceptance. "Grappling with the hardest issues of the day" must be more than a byline, it needs to be a core value.

    Matthew Ingraham is right!

  • Amazon Bows To US Censorship Pressure: Refuses To Host Wikileaks

    TeleTips Network ( profile ), 01 Dec, 2010 @ 09:19pm

    More than one issue

    Thanks Mike. I agree Lieberman's intervention was out of line and possibly criminal. When he took office didn't Joe swear to uphold the constitution? About the actual publishing of the docs, I can understand the breadth of opinion. Myself, my default position is that more transparency is better, and those advocating secrecy bear the burden of proof. The amount of press the doc release has gotten has been impressive, as has been the restrained diplomatic responses. Since pretty much every Diplomatic Corps has been implicated, they all seem to be treading softly. Hence, little downside. It seems like a big win all around.