April 2013

Tax Internet Sales, Stimulate Growth

[Commentary] At the state level, there are reforms that can alleviate the problems associated with declining sales-tax bases and, at the same time, allow the states to move closer to a pro-growth tax system. One such reform would be to have Internet sellers collect the sales taxes that are owed by in-state consumers when they purchase goods over the Web.

So-called e-fairness legislation addresses the inequitable treatment of retailers based on whether they are located in-state (either a traditional brick-and-mortar store or an Internet retailer with a physical presence in the state) or out of state (again as a brick-and-mortar establishment or on the Internet). Addressing e-fairness from a pro-growth perspective creates several benefits for the economy. A gross inequity is addressed—all retailers would be treated equally under state law. It also provides states with the opportunity to make their tax systems more efficient and better aligned toward economic growth, as well as improve the productivity of local retailers. The principle of levying the lowest possible tax rate on the broadest possible tax base is the way to improve the incentives to work, save and produce—which are necessary to reinvigorate the American economy and cope with the nation's fiscal problems. Properly addressing the problem of e-fairness on the state level is a small, but important, step toward achieving this goal.

[Laffer is the chairman of Laffer Associates and regarded by some to be “The Father of Supply-Side Economics.”]

Pay-TV operators start streaming live TV outside home

In an affirmation that the TV-to-go trend is irrevocable, pay-TV providers are dipping their toes into a new experiment that allows subscribers to stream real-time programming — as it is aired — on tablets and smartphones outside the home. The shift to offer live TV streaming outside the home is partly a competitive response. Several start-ups, including Aereo, want to bypass the traditional, complex TV industry relationships and deliver live over-the-air broadcasts to mobile devices.

Sen. Rockefeller to push for Do Not Track at hearing

Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) will hold a hearing April 24 to push for a feature that would allow users to opt out of online tracking.

“I strongly believe that consumers should be able to manage whether online companies collect their personal information,” he said. "Industry made a public commitment to honor Do-Not-Track requests from consumers but has not yet followed through," Chairman Rockefeller said. "I plan to use this hearing to find out what is holding up the development of voluntary Do-Not-Track standards that should have been adopted at the end of last year.” Chairman Rockefeller has introduced legislation that would mandate a Do Not Track option.

Poll: Targeted Advertising is Not The Bogeyman

Consumers may be worried about Internet privacy, but targeted advertising is the least of them. In fact, only 4 percent were concerned about behavioral targeting, according to a Zogby Analytics poll commissioned by the Digital Advertising Alliance. Among 1,000 adults polled over two days in early April, the biggest privacy concern was identity theft (39 percent), viruses and malware (33 percent), government surveillance (12 percent), and cyber bullying (4 percent). The DAA conducted the study as part of its charter to preserve interest-based advertising and provide a counter-point to other polls that found consumers mistrust how companies use their data.

Marco Rubio Forced To Clarify That He Is Not Giving Away Free Cellphones

Lots going on up at Capitol Hill which is kind of not the ideal environment for a bunch of right-wing blogs to start dredging up nonsense over a sinister plan to give away free cellphones, mirroring the ancient election year grievance over "Obamaphones," but that's what's happened. And now, the office of Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) has had to take the time to clarify that this is not happening. Rubio's office has now had to put out a clarification responding directly to these stories, in which they make it clear that the point of the legislative language is to address infrastructural weaknesses that undermine border security efforts

Internet copyright rulings quashed

British citizens can browse the internet without fear of litigation, after the Supreme Court quashed a previous ruling that had exposed millions of people to claims of copyright infringement. The UK’s highest court ruled that when a person viewed a web page on their computer, the temporary copies made on screen and in the internet cache were exempt from copyright infringement.

The ruling, which lawyers expect to be applied across the EU, is part of a long-running dispute between the Newspaper Licensing Agency, which represents newspaper publishers, and a news aggregation service called Meltwater. The case is the latest example of how courts around the world are being asked to make big decisions about the future of copyright law during a period of substantial technological evolution. To the surprise of many, the High Court and the Court of Appeals previously ruled that the temporary copies made through the process of displaying a web page on a computer is a violation of UK copyright law if made without the explicit consent of the copyright owner. But in its latest judgment, the Supreme Court said the previous rulings were “unacceptable” and would have made “infringers of many millions of ordinary users of the internet across the EU who use browsers and search engines for private as well as commercial purposes.”

EU steps up single telecoms market plan

European regulators are planning to aggressively accelerate plans to create a single regional telecoms market to help push through the far-reaching reforms before the end of European Parliament.

A blueprint for the hard-hit European telecoms industry will now be published in June, months ahead of an original deadline in the autumn, with hopes that regulations can be implemented before the end of the year. Setting up a single European telecoms market has become the top priority for Neelie Kroes, Europe’s digital commissioner, and Brussels is keen to accelerate the process to get the plan approved before the European Parliament elections in 2014. The move could wrong-foot some in the industry who had been preparing their proposals, and in some cases opposition, for the original deadline in October.

Apple Ordered to Remove Obscene Content From China Store

Apple, which apologized this month in China after being criticized by state-run media for poor customer service, was ordered by the government to remove obscene content accessed through its online applications store.

The National Office Against Pornographic and Illegal Publications named Apple among 198 websites ordered to remove content, the official Xinhua News Agency reported, without providing details of the material. The order to delete content in Apple’s China online store that offers applications for use on the iPhone and iPad follows more than a dozen stories in the state-run People’s Daily in the past month accusing Apple of arrogance and poor customer service. Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook apologized on April 2 for warranty and repair policies and promised to improve training and support in its biggest market after the US.

THIS HEARING HAS BEEN POSTPONED

State of Wireless Communications

Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet
Senate Commerce Committee
April 25, 2013
10:30 am

THIS HEARING HAS BEEN POSTPONED



Senate Commerce Committee
April 24, 2013
2:30 pm

This hearing will examine what steps, if any, industry stakeholders have taken to fulfill their public commitment to honor Do-Not-Track requests from consumers.