Tag Archive: obama


Finally, an inkling of reason in response to the BP oil spill disaster this summer.

The Obama administration announced today a reversal of Big Proportions to cheers of victory for the environmental world.

A month before the spill began, in a move largely viewed as a bid to appease Republicans, the Interior Department decided that its next 5-year offshore drilling plan would seek to end the longstanding drilling ban in the Atlantic Ocean and eastern Gulf of Mexico around Florida. Today, citing too much risk of another disaster, the Administration reversed that decision. This ensures there will be no drilling in these areas until at least 2017 (by then, hopefully we’ll have come to our senses, and it won’t even be a question).

View Full Article »

The Obama Administration has appealed on behalf of the former Attorney General, shielding him from suit regarding his unlawful arrests of suspected terrorists under false pretenses. ?The Supreme Court intervened on Monday, October 18, 2010, to decide on a lawsuit of Attorney ?General Ashcroft to hold him accountable for the illegal abuses of detainment and torture. ?
The Obama Administration has already refused to convict the numerous abuses of the Bush Administration regarding torture, et al. ?This is why we elected the Campaign for Change. ?This is why and how people lose faith in our government, our leaders, and our politics. ?What happened to the Campaign on Accountability? ?We need to hold these attorneys and former Justice Department officials accountable under the law!
Convict former Attorney General John Ashcroft

Sen. Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas must be feeling pretty bummed – her proposed $1.5 billion in farm “aid” may be nixed by the White House after all.

Lincoln, chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee who is gearing up for a tough re-election battle this fall, has been fighting for the funds since July when they were removed as a compromise deal from a small business stimulus bill.  The Obama administration had promised to approve the package, which was designed to provide “disaster aid” to farmers who lost crops in 2009, by Aug. 31.

August has come and gone, and there’s no sign of the package. But before we get all sad for the poor farmers down the street whose crops were ruined, let’s examine this plan. America’s biggest, least sustainable farms — many of them in Blanche’s Arkansas — would benefit most from the plan, while smaller, more damaged farms would be left high and dry. Why? The funds would not be distributed based on losses, but on how much they received or should have received under a federal subsidy program based on farm size. As the New York Times explained last week, it’s an “unjustified” windfall, as farms with as little as five percent loss would receive an additional chunk of 90 percent of the subsidy in aid. Bigger, more profitable farms — the ones least damaged by rains — are far more likely to qualify. The Wall Street Journal pointed out that the top 10 percent of wealthiest farmers would receive about two-thirds of the money, and about a quarter of the funds would (curiously) go to Arkansas farms.

View Full Article »

Returning home as a veteran can sometimes be the most challenging tour of duty a soldier must face, especially if they take that journey alone.  Air Force veteran Dwight Radcliff – who died earlier this week of a heart attack at age 55 – understood all too well the challenges of returning to civilian life and the importance of finding a strong support network.  After overcoming his own struggle with substance abuse and homelessness, Radcliff went on to help thousands of veterans find jobs, homes and counseling as president and chief executive of United States Veterans Initiative, the non-profit that helps veterans in five states and the District of Columbia.  The sudden and early loss of someone who has made a vital difference in so many lives is upsetting, but Radcliff’s commitment to helping returning vets will surely serve as an inspiration for nationwide efforts to end veteran homelessness.

Only a few weeks ago, Radcliff attended a ground-breaking ceremony for a new $34.9-million affordable housing development near Los Angeles International Airport designed for low-income veterans.    Joined by U.S. Representative Maxine Waters, Senator Barbara Boxer, and veterans from each branch of the Armed Services, Radcliff commented on the importance of the new project:

View Full Article »

In the game of politics being played around the Gulf oil spill — the cause, the response, who’s the blame, where to drill next — it’s the wildlife that stands to lose the most.

With mid-term elections closing in, politicians are out doing their hand-shaking, baby-kissing thing. They’re also collecting campaign contributions, including nearly $14 million contributed so far, just to the 2010 election cycle, by the oil and gas industry. That kind of money says Don’t forget us when you’re in office. Unfortunately, wildlife doesn’t have the luxury of buying loyalty from representatives. That’s why Defenders of Wildlife is calling on Congress to donate all oil company campaign contributions to help save wildlife in the Gulf of Mexico.

View Full Article »

Copyright Treaty Is Policy Laundering at Its Finest

The blogosphere is abuzz over an apparently leaked document showing the United States trying to push its controversial DMCA-style notice-and-takedown process on the world. But since Threat Level already lives in the land of the DMCA, or Digital Millennium Copyright Act, we’re more bothered by the fact that the U.S. proposal goes far beyond that 1998 law, and would require Congress to alter the DMCA in a manner even more hostile to consumers.

At issue is the internet section of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement being developed under a cloak of secrecy by dozens of countries. The leaked document is a three-page European Commission memo written by an unnamed EU official, which purports to summarizes a private briefing given in September by U.S. trade officials.

The language in the Sept. 30 memo shows the United States wants ISPs around the world to punish suspected, repeat downloaders with a system of “graduated response” — code for a three-strikes policy that results in the customer eventually being disconnected from the internet with the ISP alone deciding what constitutes infringement and fair use.


While the proposal specifically says that three strikes wouldn’t be mandated, it might as well be. That’s because companies that refused to implement the policy would be ejected from the immunity or “safe harbor” that otherwise protects them from copyright infringement lawsuits over the actions of their customers.

Currently, the DMCA grants safe harbor status to internet companies that promptly remove allegedly infringing content at the request of the copyright holder. Only if they fail to do so can they be held liable in court, and face up to $150,000 in damages per infringement.

Under the U.S. proposal described in the memo, removing infringing content would no longer be enough to qualify for safe harbor. Companies would have to actively work to combat the flow of unauthorized copyrighted material through their pipes, and specifically implement the “graduated response” program.

Here is the key paragraph:

“On the limitations from 3rd party liability: to benefit from safe-harbours, ISPs need to put in place policies to deter unauthorized storage and transmission of IP infringing content (ex: clauses in customers’ contracts allowing, inter alia, a graduated response). From what we understood, the US will not propose that authorities need to create such systems. Instead, they require some self-regulation by ISPs.”

Threat Level obtained the document on condition it not be posted, and we haven’t independently verified its authenticity, or that it accurately reflects the positions of the U.S. trade representatives. The document indicates the U.S. refused to turn over anything in writing itself, and briefed E.U. representatives on the plan orally in the hope of avoiding leaks.

The Obama administration has been obsessively secretive about the draft ACTA treaty — even, at one point, claiming national security could be jeopardized if the proposed treaty’s working documents were disclosed to the public. Now, it seems, we know what the administration is hiding.

Obama hasn’t asked Congress to implement a three-strike policy, which could anger consumers and watchdog groups. But if the administration gets three strikes written into ACTA, and the United States signs and ratifies the treaty, Congress would be obliged to change the DMCA to comply with it, while the administration throws its hands in the air and says, “It wasn’t our idea! It’s that damn treaty!”

That practice is common enough to have a name: policy laundering.

Language in the leaked text throws open the door to ISP filtering for unauthorized content, though there’s no way for filters to know whether the material constitutes fair use. That plan is similar to a proposal by the Motion Picture Association of America, which wants ISPs to filter for unauthorized motion pictures.

The three-strikes language would be gold to companies like MediaSentry, which browse peer-to-peer networks for infringing content, and identify a user’s IP address and ISP. MediaSentry’s work was crucial in the RIAA’s 6-year-long litigation campaign that amounted to about 30,000 copyright lawsuits against individual file sharers using Kazaa, Limewire and other services.

Until today, the most alarming thing in the proposed ACTA treaty has been the secrecy surrounding it. But now the threat level is higher. It seems the executive branch would rather negotiate with other nations, instead of its own elected officials, about the future of a free and open internet.

La blogosphère est en effervescence sur un document montrant apparemment fui les États-Unis tentent de pousser son controversé DMCA avis de style et de processus de takedown sur le monde. Mais depuis Threat Level vit déjà dans le pays de la DMCA, ou Digital Millennium Copyright Act, nous sommes plus gênés par le fait que la proposition des États-Unis va bien au-delà de cette loi de 1998, et nécessiterait le Congrès pour modifier la DMCA d'une manière même plus hostile pour les consommateurs. L'enjeu est la section Internet de l'Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement développé sous le sceau du secret par des dizaines de pays. La fuite d'un document est un de trois pages de la Commission européenne note rédigée par un fonctionnaire anonyme de l'UE, qui prétend résume un exposé privée donnée en Septembre par des responsables américains du commerce. La langue dans la note de service le 30 septembre montre que les États-Unis veulent que les FAI à travers le monde pour punir les suspects, downloaders répéter avec un système de "riposte graduée" – code pour la politique de la grève de trois qui se traduit par le client d'être finalement déconnecté d'Internet avec l'ISP seul de décider ce qui constitue une infraction et l'usage loyal. <! —
Télécommandes Universelles »http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/11/policy-laundering/ ';
/ / -> Alors que la proposition est dit expressément que trois grèves ne seraient pas prescrites, cela aurait tout aussi bien. C'est parce que les entreprises qui ont refusé d'appliquer la politique serait éjectée de l'immunité ou la "sphère de sécurité» qui protège contre les poursuites autrement les droits d'auteur d'infraction dans les actions de leurs clients. Actuellement, les subventions DMCA statut de "sphère de sécurité pour Internet d'entreprises qui éliminent rapidement incriminées des contenus à la demande du titulaire du droit d'auteur. Seulement si elles ne le font pas peuvent-ils être tenus responsables en justice, et faire face à 150.000 $ en dommages et intérêts par infraction. En vertu de la proposition américaine décrit dans le mémo, élimination de la teneur de contrefaçon ne serait plus suffisante pour bénéficier d'une "sphère de sécurité. Les entreprises auraient à travailler activement pour lutter contre le flux de matériel non autorisé sous copyright par leurs tuyaux, et en particulier mettre en œuvre la "riposte graduée" du programme. Voici le paragraphe clé: "Sur les limites du 3e responsabilité civile: pour bénéficier de« refuge », les FAI doivent mettre en place des politiques visant à dissuader le stockage et la diffusion illicites de contrefaçon de la propriété intellectuelle du contenu (ex: les clauses dans les contrats clients» permettant, entre entre autres, une réponse progressive). D'après ce que nous avons compris, les USA ne proposera que les autorités doivent créer de tels systèmes. Au lieu de cela, ils nécessitent une certaine auto-régulation par les FSI. "Threat Level obtenu le document à la condition qu'il ne pas être affiché, et nous n'avons pas vérifiées de manière indépendante l'authenticité, ou qu'il reflète fidèlement les positions des représentants commerciaux des États-Unis. Le document indique que les États-Unis ont refusé de remettre quelque chose dans l'écriture elle-même, et a informé l'UE représentants sur le plan oralement dans l'espoir d'éviter les fuites. L'administration Obama a été obsessivement secret sur le projet de traité ACTA – même, à un moment donné, en faisant valoir la sécurité nationale pourrait être compromise si des documents de travail du projet de traité ont été divulgués au public. Maintenant, il semble, nous savons ce que l'administration se cache. Obama n'a pas demandé au Congrès pour mettre en œuvre une politique à trois grève, qui pourrait la colère des consommateurs et des groupes de surveillance. Mais si l'administration reçoit trois grèves inscrit dans l'ACTA, et les États-Unis le signent et ratifient le traité, le Congrès serait obligé de changer le DMCA pour s'y conformer, tandis que l'administration lève ses mains en l'air et dit: "Il n 'était pas t notre idée! C'est ce traité damn! "Cette pratique est assez commun d'avoir un nom: le blanchiment des politiques. Langue dans le texte fuite ouvre grand la porte à l'ISP de filtrage des contenus non autorisés, mais il n'existe aucun moyen pour les filtres de savoir si le matériel qui constitue une utilisation équitable. Ce plan est similaire à une proposition de la Motion Picture Association of America, qui veut que les FAI à filtrer pour les films non autorisés. Les trois grèves de la langue serait l'or à des sociétés comme MediaSentry, qui broutent peer-to-peer pour avoir enfreint le contenu et identifier un utilisateur, l'adresse IP et ISP. MediaSentry travail a été crucial dans la 6, la RIAA ans de campagne à long contentieux qui s'élevait à environ 30.000 poursuites en justice contre les partageurs de fichiers individuels en utilisant Kazaa, Limewire et autres services. Jusqu'à aujourd'hui, la chose la plus alarmante dans le projet de traité ACTA a été le secret qui l'entoure. Mais maintenant le niveau de menace est plus élevé. Il semble que le pouvoir exécutif serait plutôt de négocier avec d'autres nations, au lieu de ses propres fonctionnaires élus, sur l'avenir d'un Internet libre et ouvert.

Powered by WordPress. Theme: Motion by 85ideas.