Skip Links

Network World

Scott Bradner

'Net Insider

By Scott Bradner

Bradner is Harvard University's Technology Security Officer. Reach him at sob@sobco.com.

Bradner RSS feed

Hard to get justice in MySpace case
12/03/08
The courtroom isn't where justice in the MySpace suicide case will be doled out, columnist Scott Bradner says.
Kentucky judge seizes control of the Internet
12/01/08
Kentucky judge's attempt to ban Internet gambling a bad bet, columnist writes.
For the election, the answer was the Internet. What was your question?
11/10/08
A look at how Obama's use of the Internet in his successful campaign seemed to surprise the press, and at what it will mean for the Internet going forward and for the new administration.
My 10 tech-related wishes for the Obama administration
11/05/08
10 technology-related wishes for the Obama administration, including an FCC reorganization and a DMCA revision.
Are tax-payer-funded networks a good idea?
10/27/08
Palo Alto, Calif., wants to provide its own broadband connectivity system. Can it succeed where other municipalities have failed?
White space and the FCC: a chance to do the right thing
10/22/08
One of the few unqualified success stories in recent U.S. spectrum policy has been the unlicensed spectrum used by devices ranging from car door openers to Wi-Fi. If the current schedule holds, the FCC may vote on Nov. 4 (the U.S. Election Day) to expand this spectrum considerably. Such a vote might upset traditional broadcasters but would clearly be a big win for most of the population.
How bad is U.S. broadband deployment?
10/15/08
It looks like we'll finally get useful info about where the U.S. stands on broadband Internet deployment now that Congress is forcing the FCC's hand.
Will Apple be forced to make more money?
10/07/08
Apple-AT&T iPhone agreement has gotten the court’s attention.
Is ignorance of the law a design goal?
10/01/08
Carl Malumad is pushing for more U.S. laws and standards to be Internet accessible.
This is not a Mac vs. PC column
09/23/08
Microsoft has sold a lot of copies of Vista; in May it reported it had sold 140 million. This statistic, along with the data points that 2007 was a record year for Microsoft and that 2007 Windows revenue was about $17 billion, should be seen as rather good news. Yet the press hardly ever has a good word to say about Vista and its adoption.
Fantasy numbers about fantasy football
09/16/08
Blazing headlines warning that American business will lose a billion or more dollars because of the college basketball playoffs have become a ritual of spring. Now such sports-related doom-saying is creeping into the fall. I just saw a headline that claimed fantasy football was going to cost American businesses $435 million per week during the upcoming NFL season. The basic premise that this kind of money is actually lost is more than a bit wacko, and this should be clear to just about everyone, so why do these fantasy numbers get so widely reported?
Life at 10 years AG (after Google)
09/09/08
A look back at 10 years of Google and the rise of moms surfing the Web.
Comcast: Unexplained bandwidth caps
09/02/08
Comcast is in the news again. Over the last few months it seems like a new Comcast-related story has broken every few weeks -- all of them quite bad news for the service provider. The PR people over there sure must be busy.
The last pre-Internet Olympics?
08/27/08
Expect to see a whole lot more Internet-oriented coverage of the Olympics next time around by NBC and others.
A hopefully terminal delay in enhanced advertising
08/18/08
NebuAd, an advertising service that tracks users' Web activities, is feeling the heat from Congress and others.
Transit officials don't understand publicity or security
08/11/08
Imagine you work for the transportation authority in a major U.S. city. Your organization deployed a fare collection system over the last few years that uses both prepaid mag stripe and prepaid RFID-based fare cards. Now imagine that one of your suppliers points out the agenda of a security conference where someone is going to give a talk whose description starts out with: "Want free subway rides for life?" The description goes on to say that the talk will show how to break your new fare cards. What would you do?
Unhappy the FCC supported net neutrality
08/05/08
A split FCC decided that Comcast had been a bad company when it interfered with specific customer traffic and told it to clean up its act in the future. As a proponent of network neutrality this should make me happy but it does not.
Microsoft: still a business of threats?
07/29/08
For years Microsoft has been claiming that Linux has been stealing its intellectual property rights, and there's no sign that the company will stop threatening Linux users with patent problems.
SCO Group: Its future is all used up
07/22/08
More bad news in court for The SCO Group, which is good news for the industry, writes columnist Scott Bradner.
Misdirected disappointment over fax inaction
07/15/08
Columnist clarifies target of his criticism: FCC, not FTC, needs to do more to combat unsolicited FAXs.
FTC: stealth enforcement or no enforcement?
07/10/08
For the last few months I've been dutifully telling the Federal Trade Commission when I receive an unsolicited fax, but I've decided to stop because there seems to be no reason to keep doing so. I guess the FTC’s 1,087 or so "active employees" have better things to do than deal with this type of lawbreaker. (The FTC seems to be paying about the same level of attention to enforcing the very weak CAN-SPAM law — your tax dollars not at work.)
Data centers: Green because you have to
07/08/08
Virtualization is key to controlling hardware and power costs for those looking to build environmentally friendly data centers in big cities.
All's well with U.S. broadband deployment (says FCC)
06/24/08
Earlier this month, the FCC finally got around to releasing the U.S. broadband deployment report it approved in March. This fifth in a series "examining the availability of advanced telecommunications capability to all Americans" is just as silly as its predecessors. But the report and accompanying order (and further notice for proposed rule-making) on data collection about broadband data services may mean, assuming that the data they get is reasonably analyzed, that future reports may be a bit less silly.
Broadband pricing: solutions that are orthogonal to any real problem
06/17/08
Broadband pricing proposals by AT&T, Time Warner and Comcast to deal with Internet congestion fall short.
What will rule the "new" Internet?
06/10/08
Exploring the impact Google, Facebook and Apple's iPhone will have on the Internet, along with what economic models will rule.

More

Videos

rssRss Feed