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01.23.2008
The iPhone and Consumers--Lessons from Europe

One of the curiousities of intellectual battles is the ability of the intelligentsia of one school to retrench and come back, using the vocabulary popularized by another set entirely to argue the opposite point. (A curiousity because one would hope that the relatively clever would steer clear of rhetorical devices in favor of clarity and making real progress towards understanding).

Free-marketers in the nineteenth century, then known as "liberals," became popular with the working classes and the poor because of their support for the abolition of the Corn Laws and other benefits of free trade; economic interventionists tried to capitalize on this popularity by calling themselves "liberals," and today the original reference of the term is obscured, particularly in the United States.

Another more complicated example: The success of free marketers in demonstrating that competition and choice serves consumers; offering empirical support for the fundamental point that contracts are a basic building block of a prosperous economic order. Today advocates of regulation build on this legacy by borrowing the language of consumer choice to attack the ordinary contract.

The Wall Street Journal Europe explores a variation on this argument concerning the iPhone. Kyle Wingfield notes, "Yes, consumers benefit from economic efficiencies. But it cannot be said that economic efficiencies are gained simply by creating circumstances that are attractive to consumers." And goes on to make some interesting observations about the leftist allegiance to labor, rather in tension with their stance on consumers.

Continue reading The iPhone and Consumers--Lessons from Europe . . .

posted by Solveig Singleton @ 10:46 AM | Prices, Terms, and Licensing , Spectrum & Wireless

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06. 6.2007
The Electromagnetic Spectrum

Thus.

posted by Solveig Singleton @ 9:42 AM | Spectrum & Wireless

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05.14.2007
Compulsory License for Broadcast to be Reexamined

The Copyright Office is studying the compulsory licensing system for the cable and satellite television. The results of the examination are due June 30th, 2008. The compulsory licenses are regulated by Section 111 of the Copyright act (permits cable to retransmit broadcast programming to subscribers), Section 119 and 122 (allows satellite carriers to retransmit iers of distant television signals and let satellite carriers to retransmit distant and local television signals, respectively).

Continue reading Compulsory License for Broadcast to be Reexamined . . .

posted by Solveig Singleton @ 8:42 AM | Media: Video, Music... , Prices, Terms, and Licensing , Spectrum & Wireless

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10.25.2005
NAS on the Innovation Economy

The National Academy of Sciences has released Rising Above the Gathering Storm: Employing America for a Brighter Future, a report recommending measures to maintain U.S. leadership in science and technology.

A quick overview of the report reveals a market-friendly bent--with discussion of tort reform, a mention of broadband deregulation and spectrum policy, the need for flexible capital markets, and a review of Ireland's economic reformation. But then there is also considerable emphasis on government-funded research.

The report's four highlighted choices for changes to the patent system follow the earlier NAS report, as one might expect:

1) Better funding for the patent office.
2) Adopting first-to-file.
3) Shielding research uses of patented inventions from liability.
4) Changing laws that act as barriers to innovation in specific industries such as pharmaceuticals.

Continue reading NAS on the Innovation Economy . . .

posted by Solveig Singleton @ 10:00 AM | Big Tent , General , International , Patents , Spectrum & Wireless

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03.15.2005
Camera Phones

Infectious Greed jeers at Kodak's comments that camera phones have deficiencies as "akin to a buggy whip maker saying cars are crap." IG commenter David Bennet waxes even more sarcastic:

Considering the technology for using phone cameras to do things like read bar codes then use blue tooth or some other protocal to communicate with a local computer is already being done in high tech nations (eg. Japan and especially Korea) that people do things like send pictures of things that they are thinking of buying to their spouse, that one can sketch something out and send it in a phone conversation, that a field worker can send a photo of a job to a supervisor or expert...

I mean why would a a billion + people want the capacity to generate want the capacity to generate picture with their primary comunication device?

posted by James DeLong @ 2:52 PM | Spectrum & Wireless

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03.14.2005
More on Cell Phones

C|Net says that 180 million Americans now have cell phones. with an average monthly bill of $50.64, of which about $8.61 goes to governments. In 2004, the system added 21.7 million new subscribers.

However, in contrast to the earlier post about the rising number of multi-purpose gizmos, a speaker at the New Orleans wireless said the path to nerd nirvana is not smooth. With respect to camera phones:

Notoriously short camera phone battery life; photo quality, especially in daylight; and the complexity of printing pictures are causing major headaches for the 180 million camera phone owners worldwide, according to [Kodak CEO Dan] Carp.

"These are all warning signs," he said. "If we're not careful, imaging could fade to niche application in phones. Some think it's happening already."

posted by James DeLong @ 2:59 PM | Spectrum & Wireless

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02.28.2005
Spectrum Wars

The National Journal has made web-accessible Drew Clark's article "Spectrum Wars."

posted by James DeLong @ 8:37 AM | Spectrum & Wireless

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