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Rather than allow AT&T to buy T-Mobile USA, it's actually time to go back…

Rather than allow AT&T to buy T-Mobile USA, it's actually time to go back to 1984 and break up what has already been reconsolidated.

Reshared post from +Dan Gillmor

A letter written by AT&T (and ineffectively redacted at the FCC) shows that AT&T's rationale for buying T-Mobile is exactly we've known from the beginning. The point is to reduce competition, period. If this buyout goes through, it will be terrible for everyone but the shareholders of AT&T.

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Leaked AT&T Letter Demolishes Case For T-Mobile Merger – Lawyer Accidentally Decimates AT&T's #1 Talking Point | DSLReports.com, ISP Information

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Screw Apple! I've always like OS X and my Macbook Pro rocks and it's hard… 4

Screw Apple! I've always like OS X and my Macbook Pro rocks and it's hard to beat an ipod as a portable media player. But I've always been hohum about iOs and and with all of this patent litigation bullshit they won't be getting any more of my money any time soon.

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Apple also files complaint against Motorola Xoom design, may seek injunction | Android Central
Apple suing Motorola for the Xoom design

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There is no excuse for trying to stop photography in public places 4

If you don't want you building photographed, wall it off and don't let anyone in. If someone can stand on the sidewalk and see something, why is it wrong for them to record it?

Reshared post from +Dan Gillmor

The British War on Photography, brilliantly illustrated by activists who took pictures in public places with videographers capturing the varied — and usually false — claims of private security people about what is permitted under the law. This is happening more and more in the U.S., but the UK leads (if that's the right word) the world's democracies in this particular brand of paranoia.

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It's not often that I agree with Mark Cuban but in this case I couldn't agree… 4

It's not often that I agree with Mark Cuban but in this case I couldn't agree more. The abuse of patents by "intellectual property holding companies" needs to stop. More importantly the examiners at the US Patent and Trademark Office need to get off their asses and start actually examining these patents and using some common sense.

If patent application doesn't actually describe a very specific invention, reject it. If it's something obvious reject it. Put the burden of proof that the "claimed invention" on the applicant to demonstrate that it is novel.

Most importantly eliminate software and business method patents entirely. Patents should cover a specific implementation, not a general idea. At this point we would be better off if they put a moratorium on all new patents until the problem is sorted out.

Reshared post from +Mark Cuban

patent litigation pissing off anyone else ? I could hire a lot more people if we didnt have to spend money on the nonsense we are getting hit with. Hello Mr President, your assistance is requested…

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blog maverick
If you want to see more jobs created – change patent laws. Aug 6th 2011 8:24PM. Sometimes it's not the obvious things that create the biggest problems. In this case one of the hidden job killers i…

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It's time to take America back from big corporations and return it to the people!…

It's time to take America back from big corporations and return it to the people! An Ypsilanti/Ann Arbor chapter of Move to Amend http://movetoamend.org/ is opening up. For those unfamiliar with the recently launched group, the intent is pass a constitutional amendment that would end the ridiculous idea that corporations should be treated as persons.

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Move to Amend chapter to open in Ypsi/Arbor, challenge concept of corporate personhood
For all your Mark Maynard needs.

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Shortly after Google's top lawyer called out Microsoft and Apple for ganging…

Shortly after Google's top lawyer called out Microsoft and Apple for ganging up on his company by combining to outbid Google in the recent Nortel patent auction, Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith fired back. http://www.androidcentral.com/editorial-keep-it-courtroom-folks

Smith claims that Google was invited to join the consortium which was actually put together to allow the members to defend themselves against smaller patent trolls. Now I'm no lawyer but having watched the software patent train wreck since the mid 1990s, I've got a few ideas (which may well be completely off-base) about Google's thinking here.

From Google's perspective their real patent problem revolves around Android and efforts by Microsoft, Apple and Oracle to derail its momentum with patent claims. While small patent trolls are a real problem, they are not Google's priority right now. Google's reason for buying the Nortel patents would be as a defensive maneuver against its large rivals.

If Google had opted to join the consortium, it's a good bet that the deal would have included some provision that those patents could not be used in either an offensive or defensive way against the other members of the group. That means that they would've been no use to Google in its current legal proceedings. For Google to use these patents defensively they would probably need to have sole ownership.

That's probably why Google has turned its attention and money toward acquiring other available patents. In the long run, this may yet come back to bite Google if the consortium opts to attack based on the Nortel patents as well but this may be less of an issue since those are apparently mostly related to hardware, a segment in which Google doesn't really participate.

Reshared post from +Jerry Hildenbrand

Yes, Apple and Microsoft are still evil. Glad to see someone at Google come right out and say it.

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Google's chief legal officer calls patent war 'a hostile, organized campaign against Android' | Android Central
Google We've heard the cries. "Why isn't Google fighting back on the patent front?!?!" Trust us, there are people in suits working on this every day.

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For those of us old enough to remember, back in the 1980s, the U.S 2

NATO alliance defeated the Soviet Union led Warsaw pact without ever firing a shot on the battlefield. The stronger western economies essentially allowed the United States to finance an arms race with the Soviets that drove the eastern bloc into bankruptcy. Because the excessive spending on the military starved the populace of economic advancement, the political system in the east eventually collapsed under its own weight. Victory came at the expense of fulfilling President Dwight Eisenhower's worst nightmare upon his retirement of an overly powerful military-industrial complex.Unfortunately following an all-too brief respite in the 1990s, military spending in the United States took off again following the turn of the century to the degree that even without counting the insane cost of all the wars that we are fighting right now, the US is spending more on its military in inflation adjusted dollars than at any time since the second world war.As of 2011, the US accounts for 47% of the entire planet's military spending, meaning that we just about spend more than the rest of the world combined. We spend 8 times more than China. It is this profligate spending on expensive weapons systems we don't really need (like the F35 and new aircraft carriers) plus huge outlays to contractors that no one either side seems willing to touch, that is driving this country into insolvency. Only a group of middle eastern countries including Saudi Arabia, Israel, Iraq, UAE and others spend a larger percentage of GDP on the military. Tax cuts and slashing the social safety net will not fix what ails the United States. We need to end these wars now and slash the military.

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War Room: Will military spending bankrupt the U.S.?
Our debt problems stem from the fact that we're pouring more money into the Pentagon than we have since WWII

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The New York Times is scared to death by digital calendars

Reshared post from +Joshua Topolsky

The New York Times is scared to death by digital calendars

New York Times, I love you — but sometimes you really show your age. In today's paper in the Sunday Styles section, the NYT prints an article by Pamela Paul focused on those rare birds who still utilize a paper calendar (or Filofax) in their day-to-day lives. Now, as a man with a spouse who also uses a paper calendar, I found the premise of the article somewhat interesting. The execution, however, was rife with inaccuracies and half-truths about why someone would want — or needs — to avoid electronic calendaring systems.

The gist of the piece is that somehow paper folios are more resilient, secure, and permanent than those stored on BlackBerrys, iPhones, in Google Calendar, or on your computer. And that simply is not the case.

What's most troubling about the article are the numerous quotes from those profiled by the author which go unchecked and unchallenged. Based on some of these highly uninformed (or purposefully ignorant?), circa-1992 attitudes about computers and how they store data, an average reader might walk away from the piece thinking that not only are electronic calendars inferior to paper versions, but they will maliciously attempt to harm your data.

Let me pull some choice passages here:

Mr. George uses a datebook that fits in his back pocket. “People make comments about it,” he said. “They show me their little technology. But then they sit there tapping on their device, and by the time they’ve gone through all the log-ins and downloading, I’ve already flipped the page.”

Though it may be counterintuitive (electronic calendar keepers insist their method is more reliable than the ephemera of paper), those who use a paper calendar see it as the more durable option. Mr. George has dropped his BlackBerry in water three times — something he believes wouldn’t or couldn’t threaten his notebook.

For starters, what service or device are Nelson George's friends using which requires them to "log-in" or "download" anything to use a calendar? Nearly all modern mobile devices have a native calendar application built-in which is almost instantaneous to access. This applies to any computer sold after 1995, too. Furthermore, it's unlikely that Mr. George's data would be safer on paper than in any digital environment which requires syncing — and that goes for most BlackBerrys tied to a corporate server, all iPhones, all Android phones, and all webOS devices. The latter two sync only from and to the cloud (Apple will join them soon), which means your data is held in perpetuity across countless backup servers. Something tells me you'll have better luck restoring your calendar from the cloud than you will off of waterlogged paper covered in running ink.

You would think at this point Ms. Paul would offer a counter argument to this statement, but instead she goes on, reinforcing the sentiment with another quote:

The fear of submerging an electronic calendar has a peculiar hold on the paper-ites. “Even if I dropped my agenda in the bath, I could still fish it out,” Simon Doonan, creative ambassador at large for Barneys, said in defense of his yellow Goyard, monogrammed in orange, gold, burgundy and blue.

Outrageous! Not only have we learned that the "creative ambassador" for Barneys doesn't use or need a corporate calendar (a truth nearly impossible to accept), but that he thinks paper is more resistant to water than bits stored in multiple locations. But wait, he's not alone — Ms. Paul informs us that Elizabeth Beier, executive editor at the massive publishing house St. Martin's Press also won't use a corporate calendar or associated device. How can this be? Does she simply ignore company meetings? Does a company like St. Martin's Press still rely on paper calendars across the corporation? Does the imprint which publishes 700 titles a year have no use for electronic communication? Or, more to the point, does Beier rely on a BlackBerry we aren't told about, or an assistant who manages her calendar digitally? We'll never know, because Pamela Paul never asks.

Later in the article, Paul doesn't miss a beat as she conflates the concept of "friending" people you don't know that well on Facebook and your personal calendar data being exposed to strangers. Here she cites sociologist Christena Nippert-Eng:

The study led Ms. Nippert-Eng to examine how calendar use affects privacy. “Electronically managing everything — friends, communications, information — is a good way to break down the boundaries between the different parts of your life,” she said. “Some people are O.K. with blurred boundaries. They’ll ‘friend’ anyone. But it makes it harder to keep aspects of your life separate.”

Part of what raises the paper team’s hackles about electronic systems is that others may become privy to an afternoon’s haircut or a therapy appointment.

Never mind that there is no digital relationship to the calendar you keep in iCal, Google Calendar, RIM's servers, or Outlook to Facebook. Facts get in the way of a good story. And how good is a story when you insinuate that the use of electronic versus paper calendars can drive a wedge into a relationship? Here's the article's take on how calendars may destroy your marriage:

“That’s all my wife and I do: argue about her paper calendar and my electronic one,” David Shenk, a Brooklyn-based author, said partly in jest. Mr. Shenk is in the process of converting his wife, at least in part, to his system. “But if she doesn’t input information in the right account or the Internet is down, it may not sync,” he said. “I get mad at her for not doing it right, but of course it’s not her fault: it’s a very complicated process.”

I suppose we can all understand this. It's true that had I not attended a community college night class on entering appointments into my digital calendar, I might have had relationship trouble too.

But honestly — how can anyone repeat this luddite drivel with a straight face? It's not just that much of what is printed in this article is untrue — a lot of it comes off as downright silly, and the author doesn't seem to take a moment to ask any of these people to qualify their statements. It's like she wrote the piece to back up arguments made by those profiled. The result is a piece that seems more intent on propagating one skewed view than it does with telling a story that has legitimate meaning.

I think the article's final paragraph from Ms. Paul says it all:

As for me, it would take cold hard cash to make me cross over. Of course, I said that about the cellphone and Facebook, too. Now, how to explain all this in 140 characters or less.

Better yet, Pamela, why don't you take a stab at explaining it in the 2000 word article first?

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Calendar Wars Pit Electronics Against Paper

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