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Former BSA VP Confirmed as Tech Undersecretary

RedOregon writes "The Senate has confirmed Robert Cresanti as the Commerce Department's new undersecretary for technology. Who's that, you ask? He was the former vice president of public policy at the Business Software Alliance. Does this give anyone else the Heebie Jeebies??"

5 of 178 comments (clear)

  1. It's consistent by ktappe · · Score: 5, Informative
    This administration is all about foxes guarding the henhouse. Considering that ex-oil executives are energy czars and ex-forestry industry personnel are in charge of monitoring the environment, this latest move really shouldn't come as a surprise.

    -Kurt

    --
    "We can categorically state we have not released man-eating badgers into the area." - UK military spokesman, July 2007
    1. Re:It's consistent by DSP_Geek · · Score: 3, Informative

      After Rumsfeld fucking up Iraq, Chertoff screwing up FEMA, the entire Administration blowing up the budget, FCC administrators selling us down the river to Jeezemoids and junk faxers, and various PR mouthpieces stifling scientists, picking someone who knows the matter at hand would be a freaking first for this bunch.

  2. Copyright Lobbyists now part of the US Govt? by digitaldc · · Score: 5, Informative

    From a ZDNet Aug.1, 2005 Declan McCullagh article titled , Copyright lobbyists strike again
    The Central American nations participating in CAFTA must also:
    - Permit software patents
    - Extend copyright protection to "70 years after the author's death"
    - Ban the "manufacture" or "export" of any hardware or software that could decode encrypted satellite TV signals
    - Offer "online public access to a reliable and accurate" WhoIs database of domain name registration details

    It's true that these may be ideas beloved by the Bush administration and business lobbyists, but they have far more to do with special-interest lobbying than traditional notions of free trade.

    In reality, they're simply the latest in a string of victories that copyright lobbyists have managed to accumulate in the last decade--under both Democratic and Republican presidents--through adept work at influencing the arcane process of treaty drafting.

    Negotiating below the radar "We push for that in trade agreements and treaties and bilateral" agreements, Robert Cresanti, vice president for public policy at the Business Software Alliance, told me last week. Members of his group include Adobe Systems, Cisco Systems, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Intel and Microsoft.

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  3. Re:Business as Usual by Puhase · · Score: 3, Informative

    Had to look twice at that second reference. Gator!? The guys who practically invented mainstream data-mining? I've seen some of the inside of Homeland Security and I was depressed at its prospects. But between this and the fact that they regularly hire sexual predators to defend us,

    http://www.tpmmuckraker.com/archives/000294.php

    this is getting to ALMOST be so scary its funny.

    --
    I am and always will be a stereotype, because who in their right mind prefers mono?
  4. Duties of the Office and Suing Public Schools. by twitter · · Score: 3, Informative
    From TFA:

    The National Institute of Standards and Technology, the National Technical Information Service and the Office of Technology Policy all fall under the oversight of the Technology Administration

    So there's one big no vote on making any free file formats or programs standard issue for government offices. That's a big deal.

    People from the BSA have no place in government service in any case. The BSA is an organization that sued public schools systems for copying a text editor. People who do things like that should be shunned.

    Ugh, he even looks like a bit character from the Sopranos.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.