Google, Verizon Near Net Neutrality Plan, Source Says

Any deal that is reached could form the basis for federal legislation and would likely shape efforts by the Federal Communications Commission to broker an agreement on the contentious issue, which has pitted the nation’s big phone and cable companies against many big Internet companies.

The FCC has been holding talks with a handful of large phone, cable and Internet companies – including Verizon and Google – to try to reach some sort of industrywide compromise on net neutrality that all sides can accept. FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski is seeking to adopt rules that would require phone and cable companies to give equal treatment to all broadband traffic traveling over their networks.

Public interest groups and a number of big Internet companies, including Google and online calling service Skype, say such rules are needed to prevent broadband providers from becoming online gatekeepers. They are particularly concerned that the phone and cable companies could start charging extra for priority access, or could slow or even block Internet phone calls, online video and other Web services that compete with their core businesses.

But the phone and cable companies argue that after investing billions in their networks, they need to be able earn a return on their massive investments by offering premium services. They also insist that they need flexibility to manage network traffic so that high-bandwidth applications don’t eat up too much capacity and slow down their systems for everyone else.

While there is consensus that broadband providers should not be allowed to block or degrade Internet traffic, the FCC talks have yet to produce an agreement. Two big sticking points center on whether broadband providers should be allowed to offer premium services and whether net neutrality rules should apply to wireless networks, which tend to have more bandwidth constraints than landline systems.

In a statement Wednesday, Verizon said it has been in talks with Google for nearly 10 months to try to strike some sort of compromise on net neutrality. It added that it remains committed to the discussions taking place at the FCC and is “optimistic this process will reach a consensus that can maintain an open Internet and the investment and innovation required to sustain it.”

Google had no comment.

Google and Verizon are already business partners since Google’s Android operating system powers Verizon Wireless’s Droid smartphone. The Droid is the biggest competitor to Apple Inc.’s iPhone, which is available only through AT&T Wireless in the U.S.

An FCC statement said only that “the broad stakeholder discussions continue to actively include Google and Verizon.”

AT&T Inc., which is also taking part in the FCC talks, said it is “not a party to the purported agreement between Google and Verizon” and remains “committed to trying to reach a consensus on this issue through the FCC process.”

Several public interest groups, meanwhile, voiced concerns that a deal between Verizon and Google would allow broadband providers to offer premium services and would not apply to wireless networks. Josh Silver, founder and president of the group Free Press, warned that an agreement would amount to “a bold grab for market power by two monopolistic players” and would “effectively create two Internets where application and content innovators have to ask Verizon and Google for permission to reach mobile Internet customers.”

“The point of a network neutrality rule is to prevent big companies from dividing the Internet between them,” said Gigi Sohn, president and co-founder of the group Public Knowledge. “We do not need rules to protect Google and Verizon, but we need a rule to protect the customers of Google and Verizon and the competitors of Google and Verizon.”

The talks at the FCC are also focused on establishing the agency’s authority to regulate broadband. The agency has been scrambling to develop a new regulatory framework since a federal appeals court in April cast doubt on its jurisdiction over broadband – including its ability to mandate net neutrality – under existing rules.

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Sharron Angle Senate Campaign: How To Lose An 11-Point Lead In 7 Weeks

Following Tea Party-backed candidate Sharron Angle’s come-from-nowhere win in Nevada’s Republican primary, the conservative hopeful has found herself trekking along a rocky road in her quest to unseat Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

The Christian Science Monitor reports on the state of the race as it stood just seven weeks ago:

Nevadans were down on their senior senator, according to the polls. The “tea party” movement was zeroing in on him as representative of all that’s wrong with big-government politics back in Washington. And it looked like any of his likely GOP opponents could beat the four-term incumbent in November.

Shortly after Nevada Republicans chose former state assemblywoman Sharron Angle to run against Reid, the beleaguered Democrat was trailing his opponent by 11 percentage points in a Rasmussen Reports poll of likely Nevada voters.

But the latest numbers to come out on the contentious Senate match-up paint a dramatically different picture.

A survey from Rasmussen released this week shows Reid maintaining a 2-point lead over Angle. A recent Mason-Dixon poll revealed the ranking Democrat to be ahead of the GOP hopeful by an even wider 7-point margin.

Angle herself has acknowledged that since the primary, her campaign hasn’t exactly been smooth sailing.

“We’re going to have to roller coaster for a while,” the Senate hopeful reportedly told her staff as the general election match-up got underway. “You saw it during the primary. We were up, we were down. But we always knew that it would all come together at the right time. And it did. And that’s what we’re looking forward to. . . . Don’t lose your nerve in the beginning here, because we’ve got a pretty long road.”

National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman Sen. John Cornyn predicted it would “take a few weeks” to work out the kinks in Angle’s political operation after she secured the GOP nomination. But when asked to reevaluate the conservative candidate’s campaign over a month later, the Texas Senator said, “We continue to work with them, but it’s a work in progress.”

So, how did Angle manage to lose an 11-point lead in just seven weeks?

Below, a slideshow highlighting some of the controversies and gaffes that may shed light on the factors behind the downward spiral of the conservative contender’s campaign:

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U.S.-China talks to soothe but not solve troubles (Reuters)

An employee counts yuan banknotes at a bank in Changzhi, Shanxi province, May 20, 2010. REUTERS/StringerReuters – High-level talks between China and the United States next week will not bring big breakthroughs, but may help prevent destabilizing breakdowns as the two powers grapple with North Korea and other contentious global troubles.


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Pirates are the video game industry’s "largest customers"

It’s vastly becoming a recurrence within the video game industry; the contentious blame against pirates for “major” losses in profit.



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Senate’s Summer Recess In Peril: Capitol Hill Gridlock May Require Curtailing August Break

Every August Senators take a break from their legislative duties for a month-long summer recess. But Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) said Thursday the length of this year’s recess may be cut short.

Durbin echoed a cautionary message from Senate Majority Leader Reid that Senate gridlock may end up forcing lawmakers to work into their annual August vacation on the Wall Street reform bill.

“The fact we are in the second week of this bill, three amendments into it, is an indication of problems to come, including jeopardizing the August recess,” Durbin said, according to the Hill. “Sen. Reid announced that this week at the caucus [meeting].”

Meanwhile, Republican Senators continue to use secret holds to suspend confirmation hearings of Obama nominees, leaving 96 candidates still stuck in limbo.

And as lawmakers slog through everything already on the docket, President Obama called Wednesday for the Senate to take steps to deal with the contentious issue of immigration reform.

But senators may not have to sacrifice the entire August recess — a crucial period for incumbents up for re-election this year (including Reid).

“I said ‘one week’ in August,” Sen. Reid clarified Tuesday when asked how long Senators might be expected to remain in Washington.

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Constitutional Reforms Committee Key Meeting Today

ISLAMABAD: The constitutional reforms committee will resume its sitting today (Wednesday) with its chairman Senator Raza Rabbani in chair.

The committee to deliberate on the contentious issues pending with the committee before finalising a proposed constitutional reforms package as Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) will submit new proposals with regard to the new name of NWFP and constitution of judicial commission for appointment of judges.

A decision to end deadlock between PML-N and ANP over the new name of NWFP and to iron out differences over judicial commission is expected in the meeting, sources said.

According to sources, in case PML-N and ANP fail to reach any decision over the new name of NWFP than the committee will be entitled to propose the new name of the province.

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NFC award meeting today

LAHORE: The 7th National Finance Commission (NFC) Award meeting will continue on the third day under the chairmanship of Federal Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin here on Friday, it is hoped the award would be announced today.

A two-day meeting of the 7th NFC Award concluded late Thursday night without finalising horizontal distribution of resources. According to sources privy to developments, representatives of all the four federating units failed to reach an agreement over the contentious issue of horizontal sharing during the two-day meeting in Lahore.

Another informal session could be convened on Friday morning as the Thursday talks failed to yield a positive outcome. The sources said the federal government agreed to shed its share under the vertical formula to 56-57.5 per cent from previous share of about 46pc. The provinces want to increase the vertical share to 60 per cent. Nevertheless, major increase in the share of provinces has made the four chief ministers heave a sigh of relief.

According to sources, only Balochistan will get greater share of resources from the federal divisible pool, compared with the last NFC Award, and remaining provinces will have to bear losses in revenue percentage wise.

Sources claimed that overall share of Balochistan under horizontal sharing will go up to 9.2 per cent from present paltry 7.1 per cent. Share of Punjab will be curtailed to 51.9 per cent from present 53 per cent. Sindh will have to get 23.8 per cent resources against previous over 24 per cent share, while NWFP will be given 14.24 per cent share against previous allocation of 14.89 per cent.

Apart from provincial representatives, all four chief ministers also participated in negotiations Thursday evening.
NFC award meeting today

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NFC Meeting Underway in Quetta

QUETTA: A meeting of National Finance Commission (NFC) underway here with Minister of Finance Shaukat Tarin in chair.NFC Meeting Underway in Quetta

The two-day meeting attended by three provincial finance minister and Chief Minister of Syed Qaim Ali Shah, to discuss the Gas Development Surcharge, sales tax on services and the contentious issues between federation and the provinces and within provinces.


NFC Meeting Underway in Quetta was first posted on October 12, 2009 at 3:39 pm.
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NFC Meeting Underway in Quetta

QUETTA: A meeting of National Finance Commission (NFC) underway here with Minister of Finance Shaukat Tarin in chair.NFC Meeting Underway in Quetta

The two-day meeting attended by three provincial finance minister and Chief Minister of Syed Qaim Ali Shah, to discuss the Gas Development Surcharge, sales tax on services and the contentious issues between federation and the provinces and within provinces.


NFC Meeting Underway in Quetta was first posted on October 12, 2009 at 3:39 pm.
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NFC Meeting Underway in Quetta

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