Tuesday, April 13, 2010

the big story (late edition)

US Government Finally Admits Most Piracy Estimates are Bogus



Copyright infringement is not nearly the economic boogeyman we've been led to believe

We've all seen the studies trumpeting massive losses to the US economy from piracy. One famous figure, used literally for decades by rights holders and the government, said that 750,000 jobs and up to $250 billion a year could be lost in the US economy thanks to IP infringement. A couple years ago, we thoroughly debunked that figure. For years, Business Software Alliance reports on software piracy assumed that each illicit copy was a lost sale. And the MPAA's own commissioned study on movie piracy turned out to overstate collegiate downloading by a factor of three.

Can we trust any of these claims about piracy?

The US doesn't think so. In a new report out yesterday, the government's own internal watchdog took a close look at "efforts to quantify the economic effects of counterfeit and pirated goods." After examining all the data and consulting with numerous experts inside and outside of government, the Government Accountability Office concluded (PDF) that it is "difficult, if not impossible, to quantify the economy-wide impacts."

More specific studies that focus only on single industries don't fare much better because "the illicit nature of counterfeiting and piracy makes estimating the economic impact of IP infringements extremely difficult." And when it comes time to choose a substitution rate (how much of the infringing activity should be counted as a lost sale), we're left only with "assumptions... which can have enormous impacts on the resulting estimates."

The GAO then went on to slam three particular reports often linked to the government. They're all commonly cited, they're all bogus, and at least one is still being used officially.

Read more...

earlier:
Obama's Healthcare Reform Won't Stop Premium Increases


The new law doesn't prevent rate hikes such as Anthem Blue Cross' double-digit increase last year. "It is a very big loophole"

Public outrage over double-digit rate hikes for health insurance may have helped push President Obama's healthcare overhaul across the finish line, but the new law does not give regulators the power to block similar increases in the future.

And now, with some major companies already moving to boost premiums and others poised to follow suit, millions of Americans may feel an unexpected jolt in the pocketbook.

Although Democrats promised greater consumer protection, the overhaul does not give the federal government broad regulatory power to prevent increases.

Many state governments -- which traditionally had responsibility for regulating insurance companies -- also do not have such authority. And several that do are now being sued by insurance companies.

Read more...

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)

Five Million Should Flee Tehran Over Earthquake Fears: Ahmadinejad



At least five million Tehran residents should flee Iran's capital because it sits on several fault lines and is threatened by earthquakes, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Sunday


"We cannot order people to evacuate the city... but provisions have to be made. At least five million should leave Tehran so it is less crowded and more manageable in case of an incident," Mehr news agency quoted him as saying.

Mr Ahmadinejad said the government could offer "land, loans at four per cent interest and substantial subsidies" in the provinces to encourage Tehran residents to leave the sprawling capital.

Tehran province has nearly 14 million inhabitants, eight million of whom live in the city, which straddles several fault lines. Experts have warned that a strong quake in Tehran could kill hundreds of thousands of people.

Mr Ahmadinejad said that 67 per cent of Iran's 74-million-strong population lives in urban areas.

Read more...

*Another Obama bow, this time to China head

*Consumer Reports says Lexus GX 460 is too unsafe to buy

*Video catches Maryland police beating unarmed student, unprovoked

*Cops drop ‘corrupting youth’ charge against war protester’s mom

*Vatican scoffs at idea of arresting pope in Britain

*Kyrgyzstan interim leader says US base will stay

earlier:
Hedge fund managers invest on Hill



Hedge fund manager John Paulson held a $1,000-a-head fundraiser for the Senate Banking Committee chairman last year. Many hedge funds enjoyed an enormously profitable year in 2009, in part because of good bets that federal dollars would be used to rescue “too-big-to-fail” financial institutions

John Paulson, one of the world’s richest hedge fund managers, has not been shy about spreading his wealth to Senate campaign coffers — or to the chairman of the committee that could directly affect his bottom line.

Paulson held a ritzy $1,000-per-head fundraiser for Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd last year — and then maxed out his donation with $4,800 more for the Connecticut Democrat’s now-aborted reelection run.

Paulson is hardly alone.

According to a review of Federal Election Commission records, the nation’s 10 richest hedge fund managers have dumped nearly $1 million into campaign accounts over the past several years — with much of it going to senators who’ve given them a friendly reception on Capitol Hill.

And despite all the tough talk about a crackdown on Wall Street, consumer advocates and critics from other financial sectors say hedge funds would get off pretty easily under the regulatory reform bill Dodd’s committee approved last month

Read more...

*13 Reasons You Should Sell Your House Now Before It's Too Late

*Pakistan Air Strike Kills 71 Civilians

*USA: A Banana Republic with No Bananas


*Medvedev: Israeli strike on Iran could spark global catastrophe

*Vice President Biden Lends His Prestige To Robert Rubin's Relaunch

*The Number Of Small Businesses Freaking Out Over The Economy Is "Surging"

*Tax Day Prompts Rethinking on Climate Policy

*Wrong video of health protest spurs N-word feud

*Glenn Greenwald on Why Elena Kagan Would Shift the Supreme Court to the Right

the Girls of CoOlDiGgY tm

(coming soon)

the fairer sex

Crazy Brunette News SPECIAL EDITION
Man Nearly Killed by His Lover's 40 LL Breast

girl blurbs

...now with more mercury

*She's actually pretty cool, not that we know personally: Ashley Dupre in Playboy

*Billy Joel's clone, er, daughter Alexa Ray Joel's ad is just like mom's

*Jessica Simpson turtling

*She should apologize to James Frey: Oprah faked rough childhood

*Dixie's missing the best Chick

*TMZ: The Woman Who Settled With Jesse James

*Britney's Unretouched Photos From Candie's Ads



the random

Two days in a row of Emmanuelle Chriqui. We are so sorry

CoOlDiGgY tech & media

ProPublica Becomes First Online Pulitzer Winner



ProPublica, in an historic first for online journalism, won a coveted Pulitzer Prize on Monday for investigative reporting about controversial deaths at a New Orleans medical center following Hurricane Katrina.

Read more...

*Twitter unveils plan to make money from advertising

*CNet Co-Founder Tops California’s List of Tax Infamy

*White House Science ‘Czar’ Tells Students: U.S. Can’t Expect to Be Number One in Science and Technology Forever

*Are regulators dropping the ball on biocrops?


*Kevin Eubanks retires as Jay Leno's sideman: Who should take over the gig?

*CNN: We're In 'Category Of One,' Only Non-Partisan News Network

*VIDEO: Android can guess bra size?

sports & health

Sponsorship-strapped JRM replaces Bires with McMurray



MOORESVILLE, N.C. (AP)—Kelly Bires was released Tuesday by sponsorship-strapped JR Motorsports, which is finding it difficult to develop young drivers without corporate backing.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. created the team as an avenue to develop drivers in NASCAR’s second-tier Nationwide Series level. But he and his family are running much of this season out of pocket because sponsorship has been difficult to land.

Bires drove JRM’s flagship No. 88, which is only partially funded this year. Danica Patrick drives the No. 5 on a part-time basis with sponsorship from GoDaddy.com, but JRM is trying to run that car the entire season.

“We are extremely appreciative of Kelly Bires and wish him the best,” said Kelley Earnhardt, co-owner of JRM and Earnhardt’s sister.

“Internally, it was evident the chemistry that is imperative for us to succeed in this highly competitive industry was simply not there. That is the fault of no one person. We owe it to our fans and sponsors to make necessary adjustments in an effort to put our best product on the track, and we’ll continue evaluating our progress until we are confident that our full potential is being reached.”

Bires did not run the season-opening event at Daytona because a sponsor commitment required Earnhardt to drive that race. He did pilot the No. 88 in the previous five events, finishing a season-best seventh at California in his only top 10 this year.

Read more...

*NCAA makes recruiting rules changes

*Source: NCAA's probe eyes Rodriguez

the frivolous

The True Cost of Milkshakes



Rapper Nas Ordered to Pay Ex-Wife Kelis Big Bucks

Nas went to court Monday over his divorce with Kelis -- and walked out a little lighter in the wallet.

According to documents filed in L.A. County Superior Court, Nas had to immediately fork over $47,249.42 in back child support and $40,454 in back spousal support.

The judge also ordered Nas to pay $10,000/month in spousal support until he pays off the $299,015.50 he owes Kelis.

Nas also has to pay 90% of Kelis' legal fees in the amount of $155,787.28.

Lastly, Nas has to pay $48,549.83 to cover Kelis' accounting
expenses.

The lesson, as always -- when Laura Wasser reps your ex, settle as quickly as possible. Nas just learned that the hard way.

Read more...

*Steven Seagal sued for sexual assault

Followers