Public safety agencies want D Block for themselves, FCC still seeking auction

The 700MHz ‘D Block‘ has been the subject of much debate over the past few years, primarily because the FCC’s master plan to auction it off — yet require the winner to open up the waves for public safety use on command — didn’t exactly pan out. Post-failure, the agency made clear its plans to host up another auction or two in order to accomplish the same goal via slightly different means, but now public safety entities are coming forward with a healthy amount of opposition. Rob Davis, head of the San Jose Police Department, puts it bluntly: “If they auction this spectrum, we’ve lost it forever.” These public safety officials also have allies in Congress, with many worried that auctioning off the spectrum may lead to an inability to accurately wield bandwidth in a hurry if needed during a national emergency. The FCC plan also alleviates the cost issue, but public advocates have a solution there as well — they say that if given the ‘D Block’ outright, they could “lease excess airwaves to commercial carriers since they would not always need all of it.” Of course, that’s a pretty big assumption about the willingness of carriers to lease space, and we suspect a lot more back-and-forth will go on here in the coming months. Oh, the drama.

Public safety agencies want D Block for themselves, FCC still seeking auction originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Jul 2010 08:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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China happy with Google’s latest tweaks, saga appears at an end

The China versus Google spat seems to be drawing to a conciliatory end today, as a senior state official has announced China is “satisfied” with Google’s latest round of changes. This was somewhat predictable given that the country just recently renewed El Goog’s license to host sites within its borders, but it’s always reassuring to get confirmation from an official source. The American search giant had tried to strike a precarious balance, by having its local .cn domain adhere to Chinese laws and dictum while also providing a link out to its uncensored Hong Kong hub, and that seems to have done the trick. Ultimately, even the .hk search results will be subject to China’s firewall — which will render the most sensitive info inaccessible — but at least Google can walk away from this dispute claiming that it’s providing uncensored search in some form, even if its output can’t always be put to good use.

China happy with Google’s latest tweaks, saga appears at an end originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Jul 2010 03:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Senator Chuck Schumer writes open letter to Steve Jobs, world is officially doomed

Look, we get it. There’s a problem with the iPhone’s antenna. But was the open letter to Jobs calling for a “clearly written explanation of the cause of the reception problem” and a “public commitment to remedy it free-of-charge” really necessary? What, you don’t have better things to do? The full press release (and the Senator’s letter) is after the break.

Continue reading Senator Chuck Schumer writes open letter to Steve Jobs, world is officially doomed

Senator Chuck Schumer writes open letter to Steve Jobs, world is officially doomed originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Jul 2010 15:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Chile becomes first country to guarantee net neutrality, we start thinking about moving

Chile becomes first country to guarantee net neutrality, we start thinking about moving

Net neutrality: you want it, we want it, ISPs pretty much hate it. Chilean politicians? Those guys love the stuff! The Board of the Chamber of Deputies voted almost unanimously to pass Bulletin 4915 which, among other things, forces an ISP to:

…ensure access to all types of content, services or applications available on the network and offer a service that does not distinguish content, applications or services, based on the source of it or their property.

There are other provisions as well forcing ISPs to protect user’s privacy and the integrity of their systems, but it’s the network neutrality bit we’re really digging here. However, the cynics among us are wondering how long until ISPs start claiming that bandwidth-hogging sites pose a risk to user’s systems. We’re sure they just don’t want your tubes to get backed up.

Chile becomes first country to guarantee net neutrality, we start thinking about moving originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Jul 2010 13:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Slashdot  |  sourceCamara de Diputados de Chile  | Email this | Comments

Perfect Citizen: secret NSA surveillance program revealed by WSJ

Do you trust your government? Do you just support it like an obedient Britney Spears, steadfast to your faith that it will do the right thing? Your answer to those questions will almost certainly predict your response to a Wall Street Journal exposé of a classified US government program provocatively dubbed, “Perfect Citizen.” Why not just call it “Big Brother,” for crissake! Oh wait, according to an internal Raytheon email seen by the WSJ, “Perfect Citizen is Big Brother,” adding, “The overall purpose of the [program] is our Government…feel[s] that they need to insure the Public Sector is doing all they can to secure Infrastructure critical to our National Security.”

Histrionics aside, according to the WSJ, the “expansive” program is meant to detect assaults on private companies and government agencies deemed critical to the national infrastructure. In other words, utilities like the electricity grid, air-traffic control networks, subway systems, nuclear power plants, and presumably MTV. A set of sensors deployed in computer networks will alert the NSA of a possible cyber attack, with Raytheon winning a classified, $100 million early stage contract for the surveillance effort. Now, before you start getting overly political, keep in mind that the program is being expanded under Obama with funding from the Bush-era Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative. The WSJ also notes that companies won’t be forced to install the sensors. Instead, companies might choose to opt-in because they find the additional monitoring helpful in the event of cyber attack — think of Google’s recent run-in with Chinese hackers as a potent example.

Like most citizens, we have mixed emotions about this. On one hand, we cherish our civil liberties and prefer to keep the government out of our personal affairs. On the other, we can barely function when Twitter goes down, let alone the national power grid.

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Perfect Citizen: secret NSA surveillance program revealed by WSJ originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 08 Jul 2010 04:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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White House pledges another $800 million for broadband stimulus

Usually, when we see “stimulus” and “broadband” in the same sentence it’s because someone turned off our Google SafeSearch filter, but today we have one such item that is totally safe for work. According to Information Week, the $7.2 billion in broadband grants and loans that we’ve already seen will be buttressed by an additional $800 million. A total of sixty-six new infrastructure projects (with up to 5,000 new jobs created in the process) are planned to launch in every state of the union (and Washington DC to boot). That is, of course, if the congressional appropriations committee doesn’t siphon off $602 million of it to offset the cost of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. “Once we emerge from the immediate crisis, the long-term economic gains to communities that have been left behind in the digital age will be immeasurable,” President Obama said in the announcement.

White House pledges another $800 million for broadband stimulus originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Jul 2010 16:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HotSeat Chassis Brings the Pilot Pro Simulator to Capitol Hill

HotSeat Chassis - Flight SimIf you’re in the Washington, DC area on Wednesday, June 30th, HotSeat Chassis will be at the U.S. Capitol demoing the Pilot Pro Flight Simulator for members of Congress and the general public during the 5th Annual Capitol Hill Modeling and Simulation Expo. The event is designed to help members of federal and regional governments see new technologies that can help train police, fire, medical, and other first responders in how to manage an emergency situation.

HotSeat Chassis manufactures training simulators that governments and businesses can use without having to buy massive simulator rooms that can be programmed for flight simulation, police and law-enforcement training, defensive driving exercises, and even training doctors with surgery simulations. The Pilot Pro simulator will be on display tomorrow in the Rayburn House Office Building at 12:30 EST, with demonstrations to follow. 

Senators ask FCC to prioritize action on broadband white space, FCC promises nothing

Senators John Kerry (D – MA) and Olympia Snowe (R – Maine) have written a letter to FCC chairman Julius Genachowski asking them to prioritize actions on broadband white space while adhering to the scheduled Broadband Action Agenda, finishing it up by the third quarter of 2010. The national broadband plan includes 360 recommendations, with the white space action being just one of them. The letter reminded the commission that it’s been about two years since it first authorized the use of white space, which would allow the use of unused television channels for wireless broadband.

Senators ask FCC to prioritize action on broadband white space, FCC promises nothing originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Jun 2010 11:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DoJ’s inquiry at Apple purportedly expanding beyond iTunes practices

Take this for whatever it’s worth (which isn’t a whole heck of a lot without any official confirmation from any of the parties involved), but the New York Post has it that the Justice Department’s inquiry into Apple‘s iTunes practices may in fact be growing. ‘Course, it’s not exactly surprising to hear that authorities are now investigating every nook and cranny of Apple’s tactics thanks to Steve Jobs’ public thrashing of Flash and his sly insistence that the world shun Adobe while hugging HTML5, but we’ve still yet to hear from the DoJ and Apple about what exactly is going on within Cupertino. At any rate, the Post notes that a number of “sources” have confirmed that the inquiry is growing, most notably to include “how the iPhone and iPad maker does business with media outfits in areas beyond music.” We’d heard whispers that things may be getting just a bit too dictator-ish in the developers Ts and Cs, and now it seems that the DoJ is “asking questions about the terms that Apple lays out for computer programmers who want to develop apps for the iPad.” It’ll be interesting to see how all of this plays out, but we can bet devs (and end-users, frankly) are hoping and praying for less restrictions in the future.

DoJ’s inquiry at Apple purportedly expanding beyond iTunes practices originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 31 May 2010 07:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DoJ making preliminary inquiries into Apple’s music endeavors while iTunes dominance continues

It’s all just noise right now, but the United States Justice Department is purportedly having a “very preliminary conversation” with Apple regarding the company’s music business, wondering in particular if anything it’s doing (or has done) would violate antitrust legislation. According to unnamed sources familiar with the situation, DoJ staff seem most interested in whether or not Apple’s dominance in the market enabled it to unfairly prevent Amazon’s music service from exclusively debuting new songs. Beyond that, details of the investigation are few and far between, but it’s coincidentally coming down on Cupertino when its iTunes numbers are on the up and up. The latest NPD research figures show that over a quarter of the music purchased within the US is now procured through iTunes — 28 percent, if you’re looking for specifics, which is up 4 percentage points from Q1 2009. Meanwhile, Amazon has pulled into a tie with Walmart for second place, which may or may not coerce Wally World to ditch its morals and finally start stocking that uncensored version of My World 2.0.

DoJ making preliminary inquiries into Apple’s music endeavors while iTunes dominance continues originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 May 2010 10:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceNPD, Reuters  | Email this | Comments