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Tech-Conscious Congressmen?

Political Geek asks: "Many times we have seen clueless U.S. Senators and Congressmen supporting technology related bills that hurt consumers and developers when they are passed (for example, the 1998 DMCA, and Senator Hollings SSSCA/CBDTPA) However, there may be some hope for a few of our elected leaders. I have been asked by a staff member of a US Congressman to submit a list of issues that are the most important to individuals active in the tech sector. Therefore, instead of screwing-up this opportunity by replying to this request on my own, I am passing this request on to the Slashdot community: What issues/problems are most important to you and what is necessary to resolve them?" I'm going to keep posting questions like this in the hopes that, when a reader can bend the ear of their representative, that these issues can be heard.

8 of 53 comments (clear)

  1. Important Issues in a down tech job market by COredneck · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The important issues right now in a very weak job market are:

    Too many H1B Visas. They need to be reduced or eliminated. The Asian Indiana workers are willing to work for half of what US citizens are making, therefore, drive down wages. They also fill spots that can be filled by unemployed American workers instead.

    Politicians clamoring to regulate high tech and ruin it like other businesses got ruined. An example is the auto industry.

    Solutions and ideas:

    Keep high tech unregulated which encourages it to flourish. That means saying no to Senator Fritz "Disney" Hollings and the MPAA/RIAA. Also saying no to Jack "Fist Pounding" Valenti.

    Tax incentives to companies that offer for flex time and telecommuting to their workers. Those are being taken away in the current tight job market.

    Tax incentives to companies that buy high tech equipment and software such as more generous depreciation schedules. This would encourage them to stay updated.

    Eliminate H1B Visas.

    Repeal the DMCA especially the onerous provisions that stifle research.

    Tax incentives to telecomm companies that put out high speed connections such as DSL to areas that don't have high internet speed service such as rural areas.

  2. Three issues are: by wtom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1. The "Trusted Computing" initiative. That has immense power to be abused, and will be largely in the hands of companies and organizations who are more interested in power and profits rather than privacy and security.

    2. The Homeland Security Act (or whatever the official name is). This has gone past security into just plain scary. A national database of every monetary transaction that takes place in the US? Absolute freedom for wiretapping (of all flavors)? Our rights are swirling down the drain, and in this case, technology is making it a bit easier to do it. Let's see some legislation protecting the American citizen for a change.

    3. Sort of related to 1. Media and software companies should NOT have the right to do ANYTHING to a person's computer, regardless of what EULAs you agree to. Legislation needs to be put into place regulating the access that any company has to an individual's computer. We have to stop allowing the entertainment industry to dictate legislation here.

    4. Campaign finance reform - related to 1 and 3. We all know politicians are slithy toves who are as fickle as the wind. It is their nature. We need campaign finance reform to STOP large companies of all types being able to make large donations (cough cough Microsoft cough cough RIAA). I personally think political donations should ONLY be able to be made by individuals, and should be capped at a level that most people could afford.

    --

    Styrofoam IS biodegradable, you're just impatient!
  3. Ethical Laundry List by Kiaser+Zohsay · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The DOJ had an airtight case against Microsoft, and then they basically dropped it. Why? Well a change in the Oval Office certainly had something to do with it, but I firmly believe that there are ethical questions here that the American people deserve to have answered.

    The DMCA was passed in the House of Representatives by a "voice vote", where no record of individual votes is available. The lack of accountability created by this practice is reason enough to discontinue it. If I get screwed, I at least want to know by whom.

    Consumer Broadband and Digital Television don't need Protection. Furthermore, the two are completely unreleated and have no reason to be mentioned together in the same bill. The entertainment industry wants to kill the Internet as we know and replace it with a glorified cable TV system. The Internet is not cable TV. I for one prefer it to stay that way.

    --
    I am not your blowing wind, I am the lightning.
  4. Gee by Iamthefallen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How important is it to actually do something?
    Apparently not very, right now at 09:35 this article has 15 comments, the mouse-human hybrid story has 150.
    When an article pops up in a month or two saying that Washington has pushed through some new zany legislation, remember you had a chance to contribute here.

    --
    Wax-Museum Fire Results In Hundreds Of New Danny DeVito Statues
  5. Start by removing the DMCA by haplo21112 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We need to end the DMCA as the number one priority...

    After that we need laws that make it illegal for companies to restrict our rights to use content.
    Fair use needs to be officially put on the books, not just be out there as a concept.

    Unrestricted CD's made the smae way they always have been...

    DVD's that can be played on any operating system.

    Tivo's that we are allowed to copy the content off of and do what we want with it. (and don't force us to watch commercials)

    Computers that don't restrict our rights to do what we want with them.

    Ok thats what I can come up with off the top of my head.

    --
    Power Corrupts,Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely, leaving one person(group)in charge is absolutely corrupt.
  6. Just one law we need ... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "All portions of the Bill of Rights shall be held to apply without reservation to the use of electronic devices."

    Really. That's it. That would solve 99% of the problems Slashdotters (including myself) bitch about.

    --
    The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
  7. Issues by bwt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Patent Craziness
    Patents should protect "inventions", which have to be truly novel and non-obvious. The PTO has repeatedly been granting patents to things which do not deserve patent protection. An undeserved patent stifles innovation and creativity. Business process patents, software patents, and patents for computerizing otherwise ordinary activities are all stifling innovation.

    Copyright
    Congress is fundamentally off track. I can only echo Justice O'Connor from the Eldred oral argument: "If the overall purpose of the Copyright Clause is to encourage creative work, ... one wonders what was in the minds of the Congress".
    - Copyright is way too long. The Constitution authorizes Congress to protect "authors", not their children and grandchildren. Repeal the Sonny Bono Copyright Extension.
    - DMCA. It puts a locked safe around fair use, destroys first sale (which is NOT just the right to resell, but the beginning of full property rights for the purchaser), and creates a very nasty chilling affect for white-hat security research. When applied to software it violates the first amendment. Section 1201 is not a valid exercise of any enumerated Congressional power. Repeal the anti-circumvention provisions now.
    - Digital Restrictions Management (DRM) This does not need legislative assistence. NO!
    - Clickwrap/Shrinkwrap EULAs: these are not valid contracts, and any attempts to make them so using state law should be preempted by the Federal Copyright Act if the terms seek to unilaterily deny consumers the benefits of the Copyright Act, such as fair use, first sale rights, etc. In particular, reverse engineering clauses should NEVER be enforcable.

    Privacy
    - Pass comprehensive spam legislation immediately
    - Stop companies from sharing data about me unless I explicitly "opt-in". This is especially important with phone records and financial records. This is a commerce power question, not a free speech question. Consumers have a right not to speak. The government can speak for it's citizens to say that they do not want to "opt in" by default. If they can "opt in" manually, there is no free speech issue. Outlaw pricing differently based on the choice.

  8. OK, here's mine. by Ashurbanipal · · Score: 3, Insightful

    1) Intellectual property law. Copyright has been ridiculously extended and should be "reset" back to the original limitation. Patents on methods and algorithms should not be permitted. The right of individuals to duplicate their own property should not be infringed by RIAA incompetence and avarice.

    2) Software liability issues. Programmers who release software sources with few or no restrictions (public domain or BSD license) should not be in the same legal position as those who create more restricted software (such as GPL) or vendors of proprietary software. Vendors of closed-source, copyrighted software should be held legally responsible for egregious flaws in their products, like any other manufacturer is.

    3) Spam. Spammers should be internationally traced and prosecuted. If we can kidnap and try the leader of a sovereign nation (remember Noriega?) we can certainly crack down on spammers.

    Visa issues don't matter to me. I am willing to compete for employment in a global market based on my knowledge and abilities.