February 2008

So here we have one of the world’s leading pornographers lecturing Google & Yahoo about doing more to protect kids for online porn. Just bizarre. Next thing you know, Larry Flynt and Hugh Hefner will be lecturing pay TV operators for not doing enough to stop people from viewing adult VOD channels!

But before Mr. Hirsch makes silly statements like “None of the search engines and portals, but particularly Yahoo and Google, has taken any significant steps” to keep children from viewing online pornography, perhaps he should click on the “Safe Search” buttons on each of those sites to see what each search provider already offers. As I pointed out in my book on “Parental Controls & Online Child Protection,” those safe search tools are surprisingly effective in rooting out most of that porn that Mr. Hirsch and his colleagues produce.

Update: Harold Feld and I often clash on issues, but he’s an incredibly gifted writer and it shows in this absolutely hilarious response to the Hirsch episode. The first paragraph is just priceless:

Every now and then, hypocrisy reaches a level of such cognitive dissonance that it approaches the level of art — or perhaps really low humor. Such is the case of Vivid Entertainment co-founder Steven Hirsch, who recently expressed his deep concern that Google, Yahoo! and other search engines may expose children to porn. Hirsch called on search engines to “erect strong barriers” to children finding pornography. No doubt he also offered to “increase the size of their filtering package” so that their defenses against “naked porn stars and exxxplicit sex acts” could be “rock hard.” Sadly, his personal emails to Eric Schmidt and Jerry Yang on the subject keep getting caught in their spam filters.

Was It Illegal or Not?

by on February 15, 2008 · 4 comments

I’m confused about how the argument for telecom immunity is supposed to go. Here’s the National Review editorial board’s argument:

Regardless of what Democrats think about the legality of the program, it is grossly unfair and counterproductive to strike out against the telecoms. The telecoms acted patriotically and in good faith. Indeed, every federal appellate court to rule on the issue — including the specialized appellate court created by FISA — has held that FISA did not and could not strip the executive branch of its constitutional authority to order surveillance, without judicial participation, in order to protect the United States from foreign threats.

So if the courts all think that the president has an inherent power to engage in warrantless surveillance, and that that includes the power to immunize telecom companies for doing things that would otherwise be against the law, why haven’t AT&T and Verizon made that argument in court? And if the courts already agree with the conservatives’ legal theories, then why can’t Congress just wait for the telecoms’ ultimate victory as the cases are thrown out constitutional grounds?

The argument for retroactive immunity is fundamentally in conflict with the rule of law. If what the telecom firms did was legal, no immunity is necessary. If what the telecoms was illegal, then they shouldn’t have done it, with or without “assurances” from the White House. The fact that they’re pushing so hard for immunity is evidence enough that they, at least, believe that what they did was probably against the law.


On this week’s show, TLF contributors Cord Blomquist of CEI, Hance Haney of the Discovery Institute, Jerry Brito of the Mercatus Center at GMU, and Adam Thierer of PFF talk about several hot tech policy issues that have been in the news recently. First, we discuss the latest activity on the Net neutrality front, with ongoing filings at the FCC and new legislation introduced in Congress. Second, we debate possible outcomes in the Microsoft-Yahoo merger proposal. Finally, we highlight some recent efforts to tax and regulate video games at the federal and state level.

There are several ways to listen to the TLF Podcast. You can press play on the player below to listen right now, or download the MP3 file. You can also subscribe to the podcast by clicking on the button for your preferred service. And do us a favor, Digg this podcast!

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FISA Nonsense

by on February 15, 2008 · 2 comments

I’ve been reading a lot of coverage of the FISA debate this week. And I’m getting a little tired of reading commentary from right-wingers who have no clue what they’re talking about:

Instead of enjoying the flexibility necessary for real-time intelligence gathering, government officials would be forced to revert to the antiquated standards of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which requires the approval of a special court even to monitor terrorist targets overseas.

In the first place, FISA has been updated repeatedly since the September 11, 2001, so the idea that it’s “antiquated” is silly. Don’t listen to me, listen to the president: “The new law [in 2001] recognizes the realities and dangers posed by the modern terrorist. It will help us to prosecute terrorist organizations — and also to detect them before they strike.”

In the second place, FISA does not, and never has, required a warrant to eavesdrop on foreign communications. FISA only comes into play when intercepting communications between foreigners and Americans, or when conducting surveillance entirely within the United States.

Laskin continues:

One of the signal virtues of the PAA is the fact that it provides liability protection to private companies, like telecoms, who cooperate with the government and aid surveillance efforts. Companies like AT&T already face multibillion dollar lawsuits from leftist activist groups like the Electronic Frontier Foundation, who charge that the companies broke the law by assisting government efforts to prevent terrorist attack. With the expiration of the PAA, these companies will lose their legal protections. In the current litigious climate, it is more than likely that they will simply stop aiding the government in its intelligence work.

The Protect America Act, which was passed last August, did not include retroactive immunity. That’s why there are pending lawsuits against the telecom companies from those “leftist activist groups.” The PAA does include prospective liability protection, which will indeed expire on Saturday. However, the idea that this will cause telecom companies to stop “cooperating” is absurd. Telecom companies cooperate with eavesdropping not out of the goodness of their heart, but because (once the executive branch has gotten the appropriate warrant) they’re legally required to do so. That will continue to be true after the PAA expires.

And on we go:

To be sure, the version of the PAA bill that passed the Senate is far from perfect. For one thing, the bill vastly expands the role of the FISA court in surveillance work, a prospect that should alarm anyone concerned about intelligence agents’ ability to respond rapidly to potential threats.

I’m not sure what he’s referring to. It’s true that the Senate legislation would require the executive branch to make various disclosures to the FISA court. But given that it simultaneously eviscerates the requirement to get a warrant to for foreign-to-domestic communications, I don’t see how it could plausibly be considered an expansion of the FISA court’s role. And these reporting requirements certainly wouldn’t degrade agents’ ability to respond rapidly to potential threats because it gives the government several days after the fact to submit the appropriate reports to the government. Probably the most stringent requirement is the one requiring the Attorney General to send a copy of each “certification” he signs to the FISA court within 5 days. Running off a copy of an order and sending a courier over to drop it off hardly seems like an intolerable burden.

I could go on, but you get the point. The problem is that most readers have neither the time nor the patience to research these issues themselves. So conservative pundits can just make stuff up, and most of their readers won’t know the difference. It’s very frustrating for those of us who are actually familiar with the underlying facts.

“We will not stand here and watch this floor be abused for pure political grandstanding at the expense of our national security.”

-Minority Leader John Boehner

The NYT Gets It Right

by on February 14, 2008 · 0 comments

Wow. I’ve been beating up a lot on the Democrats for their spinelessness lately, so this is really refreshing:

“The president’s presentation this morning was, I think, basically dishonest,” said Representative Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland, the majority leader.

Intelligence officials could continue intercepting suspect communications even if the deadline passes, Mr. Hoyer said. In pushing so hard for immunity for the utilities, he added, the Bush administration is “very nervous about what might be disclosed” if the lawsuits against the companies are allowed to continue.

“To some degree, therefore, I think it is a cover-up,” Mr. Hoyer said.

And just this morning, I was complaining about the alarmist tenor of the press coverage, so this is refreshing too:

The lapsing of the deadline would have little practical effect on intelligence gathering. Intelligence officials would be able to intercept communications from Qaeda members or other identified terrorist groups for a year after the initial eavesdropping authorization for that particular group.

If a new terrorist group is identified after Saturday, intelligence officials would not be able to use the broadened eavesdropping authority. They would be able to seek a warrant under the more restrictive standards in place for three decades through the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

Notice how that first paragraph isn’t even preceded by “Democrats claim…” or some such. It just flat out states that the White House is basically wrong. Which is true, but usually journalists feel that objectivity requires them to give “both sides” of any debate, even if one side is obviously nonsense. We need more journalism like this, that calls a spade a spade.

[NB: Updated; please see concluding paragraphs.]

As a matter of policy, we should favor love. It generates many private and public benefits. Individuals or communities short of love suffer terribly. Those rich in it thrive.

Please allow me to offer one small step towards encouraging love: An uncopyrighted (and thus public domain) card. Folding it for your love will prove your devotion, as the folds present a nice little origami challenge. A personalized card beats a store-bought one by a mile, too. Add messages inside and out, lock the heart up, hand it over, and brace yourself for some lovin’.

Folding Heart Card

Here are some details:

Folding Heart Card

Folding Heart Card

If I might geek out for a moment, I’d like to offer some pertinent observations about copyright law. That I’ve uncopyrighted Folding Heart Card by no means guarantees that those who copy it will escape all liability. I have placed in the public domain only mywork of authorship—the image and the folds portrayed above. Another might claim copyright privileges over the same work, or some part of it. I claim Folding Heart Card as an original, but I must also admit that, by definition, unconscious copying remains a risk. So while I encourage you to copy the work as you see fit, and thereby honor both my love and your own, you must assume full responsibility for the outcome. I think, on net, you’ll like the results.

Continue reading →

I wanted to make sure that everyone saw the filings that Richard Bennett and George Ou made this week to the FCC in the proceedings regarding broadband network management policies. They are excellent. [Richard and George have both been guests on the TLF podcast and discussed these issues here and here in detail.] I thought I’d clip a few of the highlights here, but make sure to read them all the way through.

Here’s some of what Richard had to say:

The four prongs of the Policy Statement do not include a “right to be free of delay” or a “right to
infinite bandwidth”, and in the real world someones ox must be gored when the load offered to a
network segment exceeds its capacity. Hence, the petition for declaratory ruling must be
rejected.
[…]
So this is the choice that Comcast has on its network of today: should it allow a handful of
BitTorrent users to degrade the performance of VoIP and web users to the point of distraction, or
should it limit the bandwidth that BitTorrent users can consume? This is not a hard choice to
make, and the only interesting implications it has concern methods employed and obligations for
disclosure owing to the customer.
[…]
If ISPs have the freedom to experiment with different methods and business models, and
consumers have reasonably broad choices, the market will sort this matter out. Hence the policy
priority should be the promotion of market-based competition between Fiber, DOCSIS, DSL, and
wireless.
[…]
It’s worthwhile to point out that Internet2 schools practice traffic shaping and policing on their
campus networks, for the same reasons that public carriers such as Comcast do: it’s not
economically feasible to build networks around the excessive bandwidth appetites of a few users.
[…]
There are alternative methods and policies that may be employed by ISPs to address problems of network congestion and overload; the market should decide among these, not the government.

Continue reading →

The Association of Corporate Travel Executives recognizes the problems that the Department of Homeland Security will cause if it follows through on the threat to make air travel inconvenient for people from states that refuse the REAL ID Act’s national ID mandate. That’s why ACTE has released a statement asking for change to the REAL ID law.

An ACTE release published on etravelblackboard.com says:

“The traveling public needs more time to consider how these new regulations will affect them, and to be made aware of alternative efforts that may serve the same security objectives with less stress,” said Gurley. “Divisive activity by pressuring states into accepting a mandate at the risk of inconveniencing travelers is not conducive to the best policy-making.”

Gurley is referring to the Identification Security Enhancement Act S.717, described as a “compelling alternative to Real ID,” and is cosponsored by four senators from both parties. A companion bill, H.R. 1117, introduced by Tom Allen (D-ME) has been cosponsored by 32 representatives. It has been stated that these bills would produce a more secure identification program, faster than the implementation date (2017) given by DHS.

As I wrote in the American Spectator a week ago:

With enough states saying “Hell No” to the REAL ID mandate, the feds will back down from their threat to make air travel inconvenient. The airline industry will be up on Capitol Hill faster than you can say “You are now free to move about the country.” Congress will back the DHS off.

I was close. It turns out to be an air travelers group making the first to move to end DHS’s brinksmanship.

FISA Flip-Flop

by on February 13, 2008 · 2 comments

Over at Slate, I call Republicans to task for flip-flopping on the rule of law:

Republicans scored a victory yesterday—with the help of many Democrats and independent Joe Lieberman—with the Senate’s spy bill. The legislation would give retroactive immunity to telecom companies who have shared customer data with the government in violation of the law, and it would expand the government’s ability to spy on Americans’ international phone calls without court oversight. Conservatives were ecstatic. “Immunity is very, very important, obviously, to get the full capability and cooperation we need,” Republican Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson, R-Texas, said yesterday. And yet this enthusiasm for telecom immunity is a betrayal of a principle Republicans love to invoke in other contexts. “America is based on the rule of law, and that law must be enforced,” Sen. Hutchison thundered during last year’s immigration debate. The conservative arguments against forgiving illegal immigrants apply with equal force to the telecom industry, even if no one made them yesterday.

The Senate legislation must now be reconciled with the House version, which does not include retroactive immunity. Given that the Democrats control both houses of Congress, you’d expect they’d come up with something closer to the House version, but I’m not going to hold my breath.