February 2010

Disney, Vue Agree on Terms to Show 'Alice' in UK Cinemas

Walt Disney won agreement from Vue Entertainment to screen Tim Burton's latest film, "Alice in Wonderland," in U.K. and Irish theatres, averting a threatened boycott. The London-based cinema owner will show the film from March 5 at 69 theaters, ending weeks of speculation Vue would boycott the film like some other cinema owners in the U.K. and Holland, after the world's biggest media company proposed speeding up the movie's DVD release. Odeon Cinemas and a number of theatres in the Netherlands decided not to show the film after Disney narrowed the window between the film's premier and DVD release. Cinema owners said the shorter period leaves them with less income after spending huge sums of money on digital projectors.

Sec Clinton faces growing pressure to fight Internet censors in Iran and China

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is coming under growing pressure to award grants to promote Internet freedom in Iran.

A coalition of pro-democracy groups wrote to Clinton on Monday asking that grants be awarded based on merit and not political biases. They want the grants to go to groups working inside and outside nations such as Iran and China that tightly control information on the Internet. In a release, they said awarding the grants in a transparent manner based on merit would show that a speech by Clinton last month on Internet freedom was not just political rhetoric, but a serious call for action. The letter from the groups follows another letter signed by five senators pressing the State Department to issue funds quickly. A key issue for the senators is that grants should be awarded to groups working outside the borders of authoritarian regimes such as Iran.

The State Department's request for proposals stipulates that those asking for grants show an "in-country" demonstration. This "ignores the fact that some of the most successful censorship circumvention tools are operated remotely," the senators said in a letter sent to Clinton in January.

The Digital Dictatorship

[Commentary] It would be unreasonable for the American government to simply abandon all efforts to use the Internet for promoting democracy abroad.

A good starting point is to stop thwarting America's own technology companies, which currently need a host of waivers from the U.S. Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) to export Internet services to authoritarian countries (often the target of government sanctions). The reason Microsoft's Messenger is unavailable in Iran is not because the Iranian government hates it, but because Microsoft would need to fight an uphill battle in Washington to bypass the numerous restrictions imposed by OFAC to make that happen, and the poor commercial appeal of places like Iran, North Korea or Cuba makes such fights very costly. Similarly, a host of American hacktivists who wanted to assist the Green Movement with anti-censorship and anti-surveillance technology have also found themselves paralyzed by these sanctions. This is certainly not a good way to promote "Internet freedom." Resolving such arcane policy disputes is likely to advance American interests abroad more effectively than the flashy and media-friendly undertakings -- like the U.S. State Department's leaked request to Twitter executives to halt the site's maintenance during the June protests in Iran -- of which American diplomats have grown so increasingly fond. The growing coziness between them and the top executives of America's leading technology companies, epitomized by state dinners and joint trips to countries like Russia and Iraq, is also a cause for concern. It is certainly a good thing that Obama's youthful bureaucrats have bonded with the brightest creative minds of Silicon Valley. However, the kind of message that it sends to the rest of the world -- i.e. that Google, Facebook and Twitter are now just extensions of the U.S. State Department -- may simply endanger the lives of those who use such services in authoritarian countries. It's hardly surprising that the Iranian government has begun to view all Twitter users with the utmost suspicion; everyone is now guilty by default.

But there is a broader lesson for the Obama administration here: Diplomacy is, perhaps, one element of the U.S. government that should not be subject to the demands of "open government"; whenever it works, it is usually because it is done behind closed doors. But this may be increasingly hard to achieve in the age of Twittering bureaucrats.

UK School sets up free Wi-Fi broadband for pupils

Around 1,000 children in the Manchester area are to get free wireless broadband access in their homes as part of school community broadband project. Communications specialist Pennine Telecom said on Monday that it has finished the first phase of the effort by Broad Oak Sports College, a state secondary school in Bury. The aim is to ensure low-income families do not miss out on e-learning and social networking by providing them with free Internet access.

Taiwan's Next Step of E-Government Plan

Executive Yuan in Taiwan has laid out the e-government plan for next five years as the second step. Research, Development and Evaluation Commission of Executive Yuan has successfully developed e-government Internet infrastructure and applied services and applications in the last ten years. For the next step, e-government will design a more user-friendly platform for small business and private sectors to register and subscribe information they need. The government will automatically send out information. Public does not have to link back to government websites. (Translated)

Taiwan NCC plans digital TV set top box subsidy

Taiwan's National Communications Commission (NCC), in line with its policy to stop analog terrestrial TV broadcasts in 2012, is drawing up a plan to subsidize the purchase of digital set-top boxes (STBs), according to market sources. The NCC has come out with two proposals: one calls for giving every household a free STB at a total budget of NT$10.5 billion (US$328 million) while another suggests only making low-income households eligible at a total budget of NT$250 million, the sources noted.

Cellcom told to stop blocking VoIP in Israel

Israel's Ministry of Communications (MoC) has ordered mobile network operator Cellcom to halt blocking Internet applications including VoIP, Globes Online reports. As per its license, Cellcom must allow Internet access for all online services, and the MoC claimed that, having checked the cellco's contracts with customers that require infrastructure services and Internet access, as of January 2010 the operator's subscribers were prevented from using a number of applications, including Internet telephony.

National Telecommunications and Information Administration
Department of Commerce
March 4, 2010
9:00 a.m. to 2:00

The Committee is expected to hear presentations on spectrum related issues from representatives of the Federal Communications Commission and from NTIA staff. The Committee will discuss draft reports from its subcommittees.

There also will be an opportunity for public comment at the meeting.



House Commerce Committee
Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade, and Consumer Protection
Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
10am

The hearing will examine privacy and other issues related to the commercial collection, use, and sharing of location-based information.

INVITED WITNESSES:

• Lorrie Cranor, Associate Professor, Computer Science and Engineering and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon University
• Mike Altschul, Senior Vice President and General Counsel, CTIA - The Wireless Association
• John B. Morris, Jr., General Counsel, Center for Democracy and Technology
• Anne Collier, Co-Director, ConnectSafely.org
• Jerry King, Chief Operating Officer, uLocate Communications, Inc.
• Tony Bernard, Vice President and General Manager, Useful Networks



Are Foreign Libel Lawsuits Chilling Americans' First Amendment Rights?

Senate Judiciary Committee
February 23, 2010
10am

Witnesses

Kurt A. Wimmer
Partner
Covington & Burling LLP
Washington, DC

Bruce D. Brown
Partner
Baker Hostetler, LLP
Washington, DC