Monty Python Explains AT&T’s Latest Moves

There’s no doubt that Monty Python and the Holy Grail is a comedy classic. Those who have appreciation of such things should watch it, and those who show classic films to their kids (and you know who you are) should definitely put it on their lists.  Now, picture AT&T as the chap hoisting the older fellow, and cast T-Mobile as the poor sod who insists, “I’m not dead.” AT&T is doing everything it can to kill off poor T-Mob, even to bopping it over the head and throwing it on the cart with its other victims of the Black Death.  That’s because the more AT&T can marginalize T-Mobile, the more its tenuous case to take over T-Mobile will remain on life support. Even in the face of the Justice Department taking the extraordinary step to go to court to block the takeover, AT&T isn’t backing down. It never does.

Friends Applying for Council on Foreign Relations Term Membership

For the past few years, I have been a Term Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. It’s a pretty amazing organization. I’ve seen speakers such as Secretary Clinton, Senator Lugar, and the founder of China’s leading search engine.  The Council also has some very talented and brilliant members, the most famous of which is either Angelina Jolie or Bill Clinton.

I received an email from the Council that was a call for nominations. And several of my friends have recently asked me about the Council and are applying for Term Membership. So this is my attempt to get the word out. I would love to have more members who have backgrounds in technology policy–or who are my old friends. Either one.

If you are interested in joining and I could be helpful in providing advice, please feel free to ask.

Applications are due October 1 for life Members and November 1 for Term Members. Details are here if interested.

Spectrum Policy For Innovation

The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation is hosting a panel discussion on Richard Bennett’s report “Spectrum Policy for Innovation.” Panelists include Larry Downes (Tech Freedom), Rick Kaplan (Wireless Telecommunications Bureau), Blair Levin (Aspen Institute), David Redl (Counsel, House Committee on Energy and Commerce), and Rhod Shaw (Alpine Group).

Kerr on CFAA’s “Exceeds Authorized Access”

Orin Kerr discusses the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act’s troubling language relating to the broad scope of information covered, and proposes a legislative fix to which both the DOJ and CFAA’s critics should be amenable.

New Look for the Site

The band and I decided to change our theme through WordPress.

I think this theme is cleaner and more in line with current trends in design than the previous one.

‘Cyber 9/11’: Serious Risk Or Inflated Threat?

Is it all just hype? Ten years after the Sept. 11 attacks, many lawmakers and intelligence officials say they fear the next such attack could be triggered with the click of a mouse.

Attribution: Vital For Offense; Irrelevant For Defense

So is attribution necessary? Yes and No. If you want to strike back, yes. If you want to stop an attack from being successful, no.  So simple, yet so problematic.  Correct attribution makes the attack justified. False attribution makes the attacking state an international pariah.

Flash Mob Violence and the Constitution

An interesting opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal today.  When large numbers of San Francisco residents, alerted by cellphone text messaging, appeared  on Valentine’s Day in 2006 to engage in a joyous public pillow fight, they began a yearly tradition that is regretted only by the public officials who are obliged to pay for the disposal of mountains of soggy feathers.

Yet participants in more recent public gatherings, also quickly assembled via electronic messaging, have acted far more dangerously and sometimes lawlessly. In doing so, they have raised difficult policy and legal issues, including questions relating to the role of the First Amendment.

Honored to Keynote the Open Video Conference this Weekend

This weekend, I am honored to be a keynote speaker at Open Video Conference 2011. I will be discussing how public policy affects the online video ecosystem. Before the keynote, I will also co-lead some sessions on “making the map” of the ecosystem. I will be leading the sessions with my friends Nick Bramble of Yale Law School and Sky Fernandes of Centripetal Capital, among others. I have a history of excellent co-leaders at the Open Video Conference; in 2009, with an overflowing room eating sandwiches, Tim Wu and I led about network neutrality and an open video ecosystem.

At OVC, I always learn far far more from the participants than I could ever teach them. The participants include leading techies, creatives, and visionaries shaping video on the Internet. I’m looking forward to the conference and thank the organizers for inviting me once again to contribute and learn.

Congratulations to @Twitter

Yesterday, Twitter announced the hiring of its Head of Global Public Policy–Colin Crowell. Colin is a veteran known to everyone in telecom and Internet policy circles. He’s creative, super smart, and strategic. And avid readers of this blog (hi mom!) will remember I praised Colin’s work at the FCC when he stepped out of government, after decades of service.

Congrats to him on the job, and congrats to Twitter on the hire.