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“AT&T and T-Mobile: Listen before your judge,” CNET News.com, March 20, 2011. On the day AT&T announced its planned merger with T-Mobile USA, Larry laid out some of the main issues that have since dominated the debate over the transaction and its compliance with U.S. antitrust law. His article was quoted in Slate.com, WSJ SmartMoney, and Cato at Liberty. |
Monthly Archives: May 2011
SOTN/Communicators
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“The Communicators at State of the Net,” C-SPAN, March 19, 2011. Larry was interviewed at State of the Net 2011 for C-SPAN’s “The Communicators.” Follow the link for the video. |
ICE Seizures/TorrentFreak
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“Five Reasons Why the US Domaian Seizures are Unconstitutional,” TorrentFreak, March 12, 2011. In a much-reprinted article, Larry’s legal analysis of domain name seizures by the Department of Homeland Security is quoted extensively. |
Forbes/Utopianism
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“Is Digital Utopianism Dead?,” Forbes.com, March 10, 2011. Reflecting on more than 10 years working with Internet technologies, Larry asks again why it is that open always wins and closed always loses, and why that matters to Internet policy. |
What the Protect IP Act says about the current state of the Internet content wars
I’ve written two articles on the Protect IP Act of 2011, introduced last week by Sen. Leahy (D-Vt.).
For CNET, I look at some of the key differences, better and worse, between Protect IP and its predecessor last year, known as COICA.
On Forbes this morning, I have a long meditation on what Protect IP says about the current state of the Internet content wars. Copyright, patent, and trademark are under siege from digital technology, and for now at least are clearly losing the arms race.
The new bill isn’t exactly the nuclear option in the fight between the media industries and everyone else, but it does signal increased desperation.
I’m not exactly a non-combatant here. Increasingly, everyone is being dragged into this fight, including search engines, ISPs, advertisers, financial transaction processors, and, in Protect IP is passed, anyone who uses a hyperlink.
But as someone who earns his living from information exchanges–what the law anachronistically calls “intellectual property”–I’m not exactly an anarchist either (or as one recent commenter on CNET called me, a complete anarchist!).
The development of an information economy will stabilize and mature at some point, and, I believe, the new supply chain will be richer, more profitable, and give a greater share of the value than the current one does to those who actually create new content. (Most of the cost of information products and services today is eaten up by middlemen, media, and distribution.)
But it’s not an especially smooth or predictable trajectory. Joseph Schumpeter didn’t call it creative destruction for nothing.
Larry to speak at PII 2011 in Santa Clara, CA
Larry will be participating next week at the annual Privacy, Identity and Innovation conference in Santa Clara, CA. Larry’s panel kicks off the event on Thursday, and includes panelists from Microsoft, Reputation.com and (formerly) Facebook. We’ll be discussing “Privacy, Personal Data and Publicness: Where Are We Heading?”, moderated by The Wall Street Journal’s Julia Angwin.
The rest of the agenda suggests another insightful and valuable conference.