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Rethinking Valentine v. Chrestensen

Valentine v. Chrestensen was a landmark 1942 Supreme Court ruling declaring that the Constitution does not protect commercial speech. This precedent has allowed Congress…

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TSA Liberalizes a Little

The TSA is finally allowing laptop designers to make cases that can pass through TSA security with the laptop inside. With an older…

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Billion Dollar Lead Paint Judgment Reversed

The Rhode Island Supreme Court overturned a trial court ruling against paint companies sued by Rhode Island’s attorney general in a huge lead-paint lawsuit.  The companies had been found…

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Doodle Your Password?

CNET reports that you may soon be able to draw a doodle to gain access to ATMs, computers, or websites. The two computer scientists…

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RIAA Attacks Safe Harbor

Ars reports that the RIAA is lobbying the government to sneak rules mandating web filtering into the secret Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA). The proposed…

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The Bell Tolls for Local Franchising

Broadband Reports has news: The FCC made changes to cable franchise rules last year which prevent “local franchising authorities from unreasonably refusing to award…

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AIDS Subsidies Used to Subvert Anti-AIDS Message

Taxpayer-funded AIDS subsidies are being used to subvert successful anti-AIDS programs in African countries like Uganda that succeed by instilling a politically-incorrect truth: fidelity saves lives.  That’s what Sam…

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Bill Gates Leaves Microsoft

Today, Bill Gates left Microsoft. As Cord Blomquist pointed out, Bill Gates has created more value for the world in his time at…

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Gaming for Health?

Ars reports that the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is giving out grants as part of its new Games for Health program. Performing modern electronic…

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Lots More Domain Names

The San Jose Mercury News reports that ICANN, the internet’s main governing body, relaxed its rules to allow hundreds or thousands more domain extensions…

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Roadtrips with Wireless

Chrysler annouced that it will begin offering an optional wireless internet service in its vehicles for about $500, plus $29 a month. The network…

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Statistical Insignificance?

I seem to remember from statistics class that anything less than 95 percent probability is junk science. This is an editorial from the most recent…

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Bond Ratings Scam: Feds Protect Failure

The Wall Street Journal explains how federal and state regulations block competition with the rating agencies that fueled the mortgage crisis by giving ridiculously rosey ratings…

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Charter Gives In, Kills NebuAd

Major ISP Charter Communications is indefinitely suspending its use of NebuAd, a tool that would use customers’ browsing habits to send them better-targeted…

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US Bandwidth Scare

A DC law firm just published a report claiming that the US is falling behind other countries in broadband deployment. The report, like…

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Time to Kill the USF

Ars reports on a Congressional hearing called to address the failings of the Universal Service Fund, which is supposed to provide telephone access to…

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Please, Let Me Beg

Ars reports that the FCC has today banned Verizon’s practice of trying to woo back customers who are in the process of switching their…

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Has the WTO Gone Bananas?

Who knew bananas could be controversial? The U.S. and the EU are locked in a heated dispute over banana tariffs. Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras,…

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Sexual Harassment and Hypocrisy

Alex Harris notes that hypocrisy can affect obscenity prosecutions, at the expense of free expression.  He quotes a lawyer who observes that  “Time and time again you’ll have…

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FCC Looks at Product Placements

Responding to calls from special interest groups, the FCC will begin an investigation of product placements in TV shows, the Wall Street Journal…

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George Carlin Passes Away

CEI has just put out a media release mourning the death of the great comedian George Carlin. As Cord Blomquist’s statement says: Like Bruce…

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Printers Get Take-Down Notices

The MPAA has sent two network printers take-down notices for supposedly sharing copyrighted movie files. This came about because “researchers at the University of Washington…

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Big Tax Increase Looms

A big tax increase is likely during the next administration, with self-employed people in many areas facing marginal tax rates of “60% or higher”…

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More Coerced Censorship

We reported earlier on the New York Attorney General’s successful attempt to coerce ISPs into censoring their content. Later that day,…

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Bizarro USDA Bans Testing for Mad Cow

“He’s reliable. He’s considerate. He’s like your exact opposite.” “So he’s Bizarro Jerry.” “Bizarro Jerry?” “Yeah, like Bizarro Superman, Superman’s exact…

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Faster Broadband for Cheap

Verizon announced a new, zippy broadband plan for all markets through its FiOS fiber optic service. Customers will be able to download at 50mbps…

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YouTube Screens Indie Films

YouTube has just launched a new area, called the Screening Room, for independent shorts. According to Ars, the Screening Room “will feature…

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New property rights defense

What to do when busybody neighbors try to tell you what you can and cannot do on your own property — and seek local government’s…

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More Wrangling Over White Spaces

Today, Ars takes a look at the recent political battle over “white spaces” – those gaps in the electromagnetic spectrum between television channels. Drew…

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Sweden Kills Democracy

Ars reports that Sweden just passed a bill that will allow “Sweden’s National Defense Radio Establishment to monitor citizens’ phone calls, text messages, e-mails,…

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Obama Now a NAFTA Supporter

Now that the primaries are over, Sen. Barack Obama has come out in favor of NAFTA.  He told Fortune in an interview that “Sometimes…

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Mobile WiMax Launched in Amsterdam

An upstart WiMax company, Worldmax, is threatening to displace established telelcom companies by building Europe’s first mobile WiMax network. With impressive speeds and incredible…

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TSA and Technology

Crave is reporting that Delta and Continental are testing programs that allow passengers to check in using their mobile web devices, then display those…

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A New Regulatory Order?

Harvard economist Larry Summers has some ideas for a new regulatory order in the Financial Times. In typical Summers fashion, his…