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Ask Justice Alito

Phil Wolff on January 10, 2006 09:49 AM

What issues affecting VoIP and telecom will come before the Supreme Court of the United States in the next 30 years? The Senate is interviewing Judge Samuel Alito this week before consenting to his lifelong appointment.

  1. Privacy and the rights of individuals to secure theirs
  2. Consumer control over personal information
  3. Power of executive branch (FCC) vs. regulators
  4. Rights of corporations, especially speech
  5. Taxation of internet communication
  6. Who has authority to regulate/censor internet content
  7. Application of international law and treaties to US government
  8. Employment law vs. employee rights to communicate
  9. Coyprights vs. fair use
  10. Network neutrality and common carrier status
  11. Monopoly power and antitrust regulation

If you were sitting on the panel, what questions would you ask?

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Weekend reading

Phil Wolff on December 10, 2005 10:29 AM

Is a little competition still a good thing?

Both Microsoft and Yahoo are deploying dial-out services in their Messenger clients. How do you compete when it comes to call termination? Four points:

  1. Rates (converging to flat and free)
  2. Reach (going worldwide)
  3. Quality (expectations raised by GIPS audio quality)
  4. Everything else
It's the everything else that'll matter. Bundling, niching, creative use of call metadata, convenience, caller ID pass through; they and the rest are secondary to making your softphone start up with Windows and be the conversation tool of choice.

Susan Mernit

"One of the ways Yahoo can compete with Google, IMHO, isn't to try to match then in product sets and feature to feature upgrades but to figure out what they can do differently--and do it amazingly well--and integration of tools across media and life management platforms seems like one smart way to go in this regard."

Q. Did the Microsoft-Yahoo IM interoperability agreement include voice calls?

Planck, Henshall, Shapiro, Udell, Hammersley


14 December - Quantum Physics Day. "-- the anniversary of the day in 1901 that Max Planck created the concept -- and the word -- of "quanta" and launched the revolution that has taken over the world." We've all been waiting for Heisenberg ring tones: they tell you who is calling or when, but not both.

Stuart Henshall Resurfaces (Stowe Boyd)

How Skype might help bring Network Neutrality (Mitch Shapiro via Isen. Can you blame poor Skype call quality on your ISP or other pipe-owners? If so, grounds for a consumer fight for customer choice, competition, and for no-filtering rules. David Isenberg: "We can do our part by expressing our outrage when they're outrageous. Early. And often."

Jon Udell appeals for unification of voice and data channels. (InfoWorld) Amen, Jon.

HorsePigCow restates The Madenning Octet, 8 truths driving today's changing Internet:

  1. Information wants to be free
  2. Zero distance
  3. Mass amateurisation
  4. More is much more
  5. True names
  6. Viral behaviour
  7. Everything is personal
  8. Ubiquitouos computer

This is what is going to disrupt everything you hold dear in the years to come....work with it or perish...

The Enemy (you know who you are)

  1. Copyright
  2. Borders
  3. Censorship
  4. Network blocking
  5. Identity cards and databases
  6. More network blocking
  7. Everything is trackable
  8. No privacy
(I would add that anybody unwilling to change or open up or collaborate will perish as well)

From the brilliant Ben Hammersley

Syndication, Structured blogging, and the Adaptive Blogosphere

One of the two new ideas in syndication this year: SSE, making RSS bidirectional so you can post back to an RSS publisher. The other, structured blogging, lets you add forms to blog posts and to news readers. Structured blogging is something I wrote a lot about starting three years ago on my a klog apart blog and as proposals to the first Atom specifications for Semantic Component Blogging leading to an Adaptive Blogosphere where your newsreader learns new form types from feeds, and then trains your blogging tools to support those forms, so your blogging tools become smarter over time and the blogosphere shares more structured data. See also: about my liver's weblog.

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It ain't law yet; but even Canada can be stupid about VoIP

Bill Campbell on October 11, 2005 08:08 PM

It is my country; but I am not always proud of it.

Stupid

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Ask Justice Alito

Weekend reading

It ain't law yet; but even Canada can be stupid about VoIP

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