Slashdot Mirror


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??"

21 of 178 comments (clear)

  1. If that position meant anything, maybe by daeg · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You're getting the heebie jeebies from an undersecretary? The position means very little, be glad he wasn't given a real job like a spot on the Supreme Court.

  2. Everyone except by idonthack · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Does this give anyone else the Heebie Jeebies??
    Everyone except the Senators. They're getting new cars.
    --
    Why is it that when you believe something it's an opinion, but when I believe something it's a manifesto?
    1. Re:Everyone except by fm6 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If the Bush Administration doesn't give you Heebie-Jeebies on a daily basis, you need to reduce your valium dosage.

  3. Oh no by Kijori · · Score: 5, Funny

    Now the government might start using bad data to justify ridiculous copyright laws and restriction of users' rights! But wait, surely no-one would let them get away with that?

  4. It gives me a warm fuzzy feeling by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The BSA was pretty impotent. They achieved only a tiny bit of what they could have, had they had half a clue. Personally I hope they hire more people from the BSA.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  5. I'm shocked! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I would have thought they would have went with some script kiddie or long-haired open source zealot, but instead they went with an industry man. Still scratching my head over this one.

  6. 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 techno-vampire · · Score: 3, Insightful
      This administration is all about foxes guarding the henhouse.

      It could also be argued that the administration is picking people who know something about what they're regulating and understand the issues. Mind you, I don't say you're wrong, just that there's more than one interpretation of this.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    2. 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.

    3. Re:It's consistent by Valdrax · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It could also be argued that the administration is picking people who know something about what they're regulating and understand the issues. Mind you, I don't say you're wrong, just that there's more than one interpretation of this.

      No, "foxes guarding the henhouse" usually implies people who know the situation but profit from not enforcing the rules.

      The problem with conservative government is that it's primarily run by people who wish it didn't exist in the first place. The reason why everything is so screwed up in the current administration is because it's staffed by people who have such disrespect for the institutions that they are running that they don't bother to do the job right.

      Witness FEMA. Grover Norquist of the Americans for Tax Reform once stated, "I don't want to abolish government. I simply want to reduce it to the size where I can drag it into the bathroom and drown it in the bathtub." Congratulations. Was New Orleans a good enough bathtub for the people to realize the problem with letting people with this attitude run things?

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  7. Business as Usual by Tackhead · · Score: 5, Insightful
    > Former BSA VP Confirmed as Tech Undersecretary

    Sounds like par for the course to me.

    About the same as a Doubleclick hack (Nuala O'Connor Kelly, Chief "Privacy" Officer of Doubleclick) advising HomeSec on privacy.

    Or the Gator/Claria hack (D. Reed Freeman, former Gator/Claria Chief "Privacy" Officer) sitting on HomeSec's Data "Privacy" and "Integrity" Advisory Committee.

    Maybe we should be thankful. Based on precedent, the BSA guy should be put in charge of the Copyright office, or perhaps hired by NSA to... adjust its priorities when it comes to what sort of traffic is worthy of further investigation.

    Anyone taking bets on when Jeff Bezos gets picked to head USPTO?

    1. 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?
  8. Heebie-Jeebies? Hardly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    If this administration was to make an appointment that didn't favor business interests over the needs of the populace, THEN I'd be worried. I'd be expecting a time-space continuum breach or the earth spinning off its axis or something.

  9. 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
  10. Re:What if it were all the undersecretaries? by vertinox · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You're getting the heebie jeebies from an undersecretary?

    That is fine and dandy, but one has to wonder if this goes on all the time.

    Sure one undersecretary isn't that bad, but what if all positions like this were dealt in the same way.

    Boil a frog, anyone?

    --
    "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
    -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
  11. Jeez, don't scare me like that! by Creosote · · Score: 3, Funny

    I first interpreted "BSA" in your title as Boy Scouts of America... ... and given the nature of Bush Administration appointments, it would have been about as likely.

  12. You were expecting? by mschuyler · · Score: 3, Funny

    What? You were expecting Cowboy Neal to be appointed?

    --
    How about a moderation of -1 pedantic.
  13. Re:Sheesh, what a day by digitaldc · · Score: 4, Funny

    I need half a bottle of Valium just to read /. anymore.

    Sorry, your Scientologist pharmacist won't be providing that to you any more because he has found it is against his religion. You'll just have to fly to Canada to read /.

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  14. The BSA...I remember them... by Expert+Determination · · Score: 4, Insightful
    When I tried to sell a bunch of (legal) copies of some Adobe software on Ebay the BSA told Ebay to pull my auction because I was breaking the law. I sent Ebay a pretty snotty email about how ridiculous it was that they'd listen to a third party making random accusations that were completely and utterly unfounded. Clearly they had gone scouting through Ebay looking for all sales of software by their members accusing them all of piracy. My ad had even made a special point of having photos to show the original packaging and I had spelled out the fact that I was ready to carry out a proper transfer of license through Adobe. They didn't even read that far.

    Fortunately Ebay did in fact reinstate my auctions but I was pretty unhappy about the disgusting way I had been treated. I can only hope that the shoot first, ask questions later attitude will be moderated now that this guy has a government job.

    --
    "The White House is not an intelligence-gathering agency," -- Scott McClellan, Whitehouse spokesman.
  15. 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.

  16. Re:Please explain why tax cuts help. by ScentCone · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Where does government money go that doesn't create jobs in America?

    Much of it is spent very, very inefficiently (relative to activity in the private sector). Or, much of it is "spent" as grants, social programs, and other hand-out-ish type stuff that doesn't actually require (or produce) an actual productive job in return for that money. Simple re-distribution of money from a worker to (say) a non-worker does not create a job.

    Pork-type spending (like, building pointless highways in the middle of nowhere, or sponsoring a teapot museum in the Carolinas - really!) may ultimately employ people in the literal sense, but it doesn't focus that money in areas where there's a real, 'natural' demand for the output of those workers. It's very distorting, and creates false spots in the economic landscape.

    Why do you expect investors to invest as much money in America as the American government as opposed to investing in overseas and multinational companies

    I expect investors to invest money wherever it suits them. If they're smart, they'll invest a goodly amount in domestic activity... but there's nothing wrong with investing in operations overseas, because that creates larger, newer, hungrier markets in those other places... and if you're still banking on the US as an innovative, useful place, those other countries will then have more to spend on our higher-end goods and services. Do you really think we're better off running low-end textile mills in this country? Or, are we better off leveraging developing economies that need the stimulation at that level, and focusing locally on more high-end, info/service/brain-type stuff that we do so well? It's not as simple as investing in/outside our borders, because we're completely past that as an economic model anyway. Practically everything we consume is made in China... so why not invest there and have a greater impact in how we operate parts of our companies there, and do everything we can to make Chinese citizens able to buy from us the stuff that we're still better at?

    I think the other thing that's worth mentioning is that "tax cuts" cover a lot of ground. Where it really counts is in reducing the capital gains taxes, so that people who have their cash tied up in something (a second family house, or a pile of stocks, etc) can liberate it and move the investment onto something else (which stimulates growth) without getting killed by taxes. This is much more of a middle class thing than people think it is. Just selling one stock and turning right around to buy another that looks promising... that can clobber you with taxes. No money has landed in your hands, and some other company's just raised the capital with which to expand their business (and thus hire people, etc), but all the sudden 20% or so of the money you were willing to relocate into a needy part of the economy is... gone. That completely kills the incentive to push money into the hands of growing businesses that will make the most of it.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.