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In this space, when we write about  Silicon Valley and its' relationship with the federal government, it's usually something nasty or hot-button, like net neutrality, energy, patent reform, intellectual property, or copyright. When people bring up environmental issues with the technology sector, usually it's the air pollution from all the cars, or whether or not Apple uses too much packaging, or what materials go into hardware and whether or not it should be illegal to throw away that old computer in a landfill. 

Today however, Congress (both chambers) passed the Consolidated Natural Resources Act of 2008 which, among its many, many provisions, earmarks and programs of varying validity, sanity, and importance, includes funds covering 25% of the cost to construct facilities to recycle water across the state, with two in the Bay Area to receive approximately $15 million of that federal dough. The facilities fall into two types: one that will clean up water so it can be used for irrigation of crops and watering the Redwoods, and another that doesn't clean so much but makes the water usable for industrial parks, manufacturing, etc

President Bush is expected to sign the bill, which was supported by a multitude of environmental  and government groups like the Santa Clara Valley Water District, and it's a good bill for him to sign. Water recycling, according to the Bay Area Clean Water Agencies, is a way to prevent droughts from depleting the potable water supply (aka the stuff you drink) because the water that doesn't need to be so clean because instead of quenching your thirst it's greening up your golf course.

What does this have to do with technology policy? Consider the following:


Posted to Energy | Lobbying | environment
As promised, I appeared tonight on Rod Adams' podcast, The Atomic Show. While the tone of the debate stayed sub-critical, among other things we delved into one of the darker sides of tech policymaking: who funds interest groups?

Other subjects included whether or not Nuclear technology is "new," how clean coal is like "kosher bacon," the who and how behind the anti-nuclear movement of years past, and what could have been done differently to set us on a better path than we took with our energy policy over the past 50 years. 

Mr. Adams also shared some interesting insights he gained as a veteran of our Silent Service, serving aboard several nuclear subs as an engineer.


Unlike our podcasts, Rod has some awesome theme music. 

Thanks for having me, Rod. Let's talk again soon.
Posted to Energy | Podcasts | Politics | environment
I'll be the first to admit a few things about myself:

  1. I'm bad at math.
  2. I have a sarcastic streak.
  3. As someone who has extensively studied History of Science, references to Ned Ludd, for lack of a better metaphor, make my ears steam like Yosemite Sam.

A few weeks ago, Alex and I wrote and posted an article based on my interview of Dr. Patrick Moore, the Greenpeace founder turned advocate for Nuclear energy.

On March 21, I received an email from Rod Adams, author of the Atomic Insights blog and owner of Adams Atomic Engines, Inc.

I wrote him back thanking him for the feedback and asked if I could excerpt it for a post on these pages, to which he agreed. 

In writing my response, I tried to do some background on Mr. Adams. Sadly, there was precious little out there except his own web pages, and a bio on a site that did (and still does) generate an error when I try to look at it. I title the piece "(crackpot) Reader Feedback" because I wasn't sure whether or not Mr. Adams was very well informed on the history of the anti-Nuclear movement aside from the books written on the subject, which upon a cursory search of the Library of Congress' catalogue, shows many that would enter the category of "conspiracy theory" books.

So, today I was told that Mr. Adams had reposted his letter to me in a new blog post (totally OK, since it was his letter) and was irate that I had used the word "crackpot" to reference the fact that I disagreed with his contention that the anti Nuclear power movement of the '60's and '70's was bolstered by the Fossil Fuel industry. What did happen was a convergence of fear of nuclear weapons and a series of accidents (TMI, Chernobyl, etc) that caused regulators to make it quite difficult to build a Nuclear power plant since the scales were tilted in the favor of the NIMBY (Not In My Back Yard) crowed and against common sense. 

I did some more background on this Adams fellow and found that he has quite the pedigree with it comes to this whole splitting of atoms that we're talking about. Far from a crackpot, Adams is a Naval Academy graduate and has served multiple tours aboard Nuclear powered Ballistic Missile Submarines (SSBNs). Knowing a few Academy grads myself, at least one of whom is trying to earn his Dolphins, I've got nothing but respect for those achievements, as well as Mr. Adams' service in and of itself. He's certainly no crackpot, and if I offended anyone, especially Mr. Adams, I apologize. Really. I figure that most people can handle a little "snark" now and then, but perhaps I need to reevaluate my estimates of people's tolerance for sarcasm, even during rational discourse.

On the other hand, as a student of the history of technology (sadly, I do have a degree in that) I have to disagree with much of his theory as expressed in his letter, which I will repost here and respond point by point.


[Snipped out greetings and pleasantries]

One of the ideas that I have been trying to share about the battle that all new technologies face dates back to the days of Ned Lud - the perhaps mythical character who led the fight against power driven weaving looms during the Industrial Revolution. The people he led became famous and have even entered our modern lexicon - "Luddite" is the term applied to people who stand in the way of progress. They are often seen in a rather complimentary way as fighting to preserve an idyllic way of life against technology driven change.

I've never heard it used in a complimentary way, incidentally. To address this first paragraph, economic-driven fear of new technology did not begin with Ludd, but dates back to actions by stocking-makers in the late 1600s, and led up to what most consider the start of the "Luddite" movement in 1811. Actually, Ludd 's destruction of looms in 1779 is believed to have nothing to do with the movement that bears his name.

A deeper reading of the story gives a slightly different understanding of what the word really means. The specific people who followed Lud's lead and took direct action against the people building and installing power driven looms were not disinterested bystanders who wanted to maintain a simple way of life. They were, instead, members of the guild of skilled weavers. They were elites whose skills with hand looms provided a much better living than the average person; they protected their knowledge through limited apprenticeship programs. They had a lot to lose in a world where people could purchase large quantities of inexpensive cloth made without much reliance on skilled labor.


Actually, this is a disputed point among historians of technology and economists. Often called the "Luddite Fallacy," this idea that protest against technological change was due to fear of mass unemployment and degradation of working conditions is simply untrue. At the Macro level, technological advancement which increases productivity drives down prices, increases demand for material goods and the number of workers needed to produce them. See Alex Tabarrok's excellent post on the subject.

One thing I may concede is that as global trade barriers have been relaxed, the Luddite Fallacy may be somewhat true as the cost of labor becomes comparatively expensive in countries with a high standard of living and thus unemployment does rise in industrialized nations while production of material goods is relocated to countries with lower wage and living standards. While Thomas Friedman waxes eloquent about the Flat Earth, he forgets that Henry Ford made sure he paid his workers enough that they could buy the cars they built. Sadly, even Wal Mart neglects the lessons of Mr. Ford today, and pays wages that barely let their employees shop there. Sam Walton may be revered as a genius and a paragon of morality by some while Ford is routinely vilified as an anti-semite and violent union-buster, but Ford improved the standard of living of his own workers while revolutionizing industry productivity. If I was President and had to choose an economic advisor, I'd probably gravitate towards the anti-semite and union-buster instead of the guy whose company wastes money investigating executives for having affairs with each other. (yes, I know Ford had a morals police, but in today's world I think Mr. Walton's standards are a bit anachronistic.)

If you want to nitpick about Guilds, Guild membership was a requirement to engage in most trades in pre-industrial England, earned through a process beginning with apprenticeship, and after time spent as a "journeyman" a prospective member would present the senior membership of the Guild with a "masterpiece" along with what could be called an application fee. If you were judged to be competent enough to operate your own business, you were admitted.

What the Guilds actually did was an early form of accreditation or licensing, not dissimilar from many professions today, including your own, in which you had to pass Nuke school and eventually qualify in order to earn your Dolphins and serve on those two SSBNs. Because of the process involved in joining a Guild as a "master," this maintained a standard of quality for products and services which continues today in professional associations, licensing boards and some unions, to say nothing of military organizations. 

In addition, the Guilds provided many services which Government did not, including pensions and benefits for widows and orphans of members. 

Please forgive me if I get all the details wrong, but as you entered the Silent Service after your graduation from USNA, did you not experience a similar process?. Upon completion of Nuke school (Apprenticeship) you endured a training period ending with qualification and testing, after which you earned the right to wear the Dolphin insignia, letting all that saw you in uniform (and knew what meant) know that the DNR (at the time the legendary Admiral Rickover) considered you fit to serve as an Officer aboard a Nuclear powered submarine. You did join a Guild. As a benefit, you also will receive a pension, and your family would receive similar benefits were anything to happen to your boat (doubtful considering the safety record of American subs since the sinking of the Thresher). 

Now, the advent of the Nuclear boats in the '50s and '60s didn't make obsolete the skills of those who maintained the Diesel-electric plants of the older subs, since the Diesel is still carried as a backup, and at the beginning there was certainly still a role for the huge pool of engineers out there (you certainly should know the "Diesel Boats Forever" pin). Were those guys Luddites?

(as an aside,  Weavers were certainly not "elites" in English society, as they "worked with their hands" and in no way could be considered Gentlemen. )

The original Luddites were members of a well established, prosperous enterprise that organized to take action to stop or at least slow the advance of a competitive technology. They were not selflessly seeking to protect a good way of life from destruction by new technology, they were selfishly trying to protect their own privileged position in a society. They did not care that clothing was so terribly expensive before industrial production that only the wealthy could afford more than one or two outfits. They were unmoved by the fact that poor people often shivered in inadequate garments or lived in filth because they avoided washing the few outfits that they had for fear of wearing them out.

Actually, the movement is viewed by some historians as a mass protest (some even go so far as to say paramilitary organization) that grew from the 1815 end of the Napoleonic Wars' and the economic devastation of the English economy, including mass unemployment that followed. Other uprisings at the same time that might be more appropriate to your thesis were directed against the introduction of farm equipment and decrease of agricultural workers' wages, leading to the Swing Riots of 1830. See if you can find a copy of E.P. Thompson's seminal work The Making of the English Working Class

The same story plays itself out in industry after industry. Plastics got demonized by a coalition of the steel and aluminum industries who saw their container, toy, and automotive markets getting invaded by the easier to handle, lighter weight material. Apple and Commodore - in the early days of personal computers - got portrayed as suppliers of buggy, unreliable, insecure machines that could never handle real business tasks by companies like Digital, Unisys, and IBM that made mainframes that only large companies could afford.

You're comparing apples and oranges. While plastics may have gotten a bum rap at first, much of the vitriol was directed at them by consumer groups who saw them as unsafe, especially in the automotive industries (which they were). 

The analogy to the Computer industry is simply just plain wrong. Apples and Commodores flew off the shelves despite the efforts of the DEC, etc. Remember, the Apple II and IBM PC were huge sellers because the industry underestimated the value of the software that could be ran on them, or as we say, the Killer App (see VisiCalc).  

DEC fell on their faces because they simply didn't see it coming and were too invested in the minicomputer market. IBM got on board with the original IBM PC, but made a major mistake in using commodity parts, which begat the IBM Clone industry (remember Compaq?), and stumbled a second time by passing the buck for the operating system software to a New Mexico-based outfit called Micro-Soft, run by a couple of Harvard dropouts known for implementing BASIC on pretty much any home PC you could buy. IBM failed to see the power of these Generative Systems (as Harvard's Jonathan Zittrain calls them in his new book) just as Microsoft failed to see the rise of the browser and Internet (another Generative System).

As you pointed out, MySpace, Facebook and other interactive media efforts get bombarded by mainstream media with stories about their potentially negative impact on the young. Of course those same media properties air programs that portray hundreds of murders and other violent acts every week while trying to attract the same eyeballs that are moving to more interactive, arguably more educational uses of their time in the online world. In other words, FUD happens.

I will again take issue with your portrayal of the negative media attention as purposeful FUD. I see these stories on my News Corporation O&O Fox News station (WTTG-DT) as well as Dateline, etc etc because they attract viewers, not due to any effort to discredit social media or the Internet. If it Bleeds, it Leads. 

From a human security point of view, the battle against nuclear power was probably the worst example of all. The visible Luddites in that case hid behind the mantle of selfless Environmentalism, but the real power probably came from the richest enterprise the world has ever known. Though there is a lot of money in Silicon Valley, the total revenues of all technology companies combined pale when compared to Exxon-Mobil. Last year, that single company sold more than $340 BILLION worth of product and banked more than $40 BILLION in net profit. That company, however famous, only has a 2-3% share of the oil market, which itself is only about 1/3 of the total energy market.

You're unhappy that I criticize you, but look at the context. In response to an interview with Greenpeace founder Moore, who directly links the anti Nuclear power activism to what was a groundswell of antipathy towards further testing of Nuclear weapons like those carried by the SSBNs on which you served, you point fingers at Big Oil, while hedging your bets with that weasel-word, "probably."

Take a look at the people who control energy wealth in Texas, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Dubai, Iraq, and Iran (not an exhaustive list) and compare the way that they live with the way that most energy consumers in the world live. They have tremendous motives for loosely organizing to fight against the only real source of power that can help displace our collective addiction to fossil fuel. In his talk with you, Patrick Moore mentioned the forward looking master plan of Exxon-Mobil and Shell International for new energy sources in the US, but please understand that the energy business has had long term master planning in place for many decades - there are plenty of books on the subject.

I'd be happy to read some if you'd refer me to a few authoritative ones. I still am skeptical of your idea, though. Again, I'll refer back to Iran. They want to build Nuclear power plants. Of course, they could build breeder reactors and a few bombs here and there, but cheaper electricity flowing into their power grid would free up much of their domestic fuel market (which itself is strained, as their heavily subsidized gasoline prices continue to rise) for other uses, including international sale. Russia, although rich in untapped fossil fuels, has even more to gain as an exporter of Nuclear technology. While we're busy trying to enforce sanctions and beat drums of wear, Putin and friends are selling Iran expensive reactor technology. Dubai only makes 6% of its' GDP from Oil and Gas revenue. I'll repeat my Iran theory with the Saudis, every kilowatt of energy that the Kingdom can generate internally with Nuclear power means more to export. Similarly, in America, increased Nuclear capacity would free up much of our massive petroleum imports for refining for gasoline (a different problem in itself) and other products for which oil is used (hint: watch The Graduate). 


In conclusion, I don't think you're a crackpot, but I do think your historical arguments are flawed to a degree, and that your other ideas are based on a view of the Petroleum (and to some extent coal) industries that gives them far more credit as planners of extended exploitation than simply slow-moving dinosaurs who, as IBM did, fail to see potential in new developments and possibilities for business models. You can even see it in the Music industry today. 

My talk with Dr. Moore was to find out how today's information entrepreneurs could avoid the problems that led to the Nuclear industry being regulated to death. You approached me with a whole other ball of wax, which I briefly addressed. 

I'd be happy to discuss these issues further with you. You know how to find me.
Posted to Economics | Energy | Meta | environment
Rod Adams, of the Atomic Insights Blog, wrote us a nice letter about our piece on Dr. Patrick Moore from earlier this week. On the other hand, I am not sure that despite proclaiming himself an expert on the issue, he is fully aware of the history of Nuclear Power, and perhaps he didn't even listen to the entire interview. Here is an excerpt:

(note, these are  not our words. These are those of Mr. Adams, which I repost as a courtesy for a reader who obviously took time to write in and I appreciate it. Whether or not I'm 100% in agreement? I'm not so sure. Some parts look more conspiracy theory than solid fact to me, but it's his right to say it, and I appreciate reader response at this point. If you take the time to write, Alex and I will take the time to read, and even re-post some of it. We may think some of this is...questionable, but like it or not, we'll let him have his piece. here it is.)

...As you pointed out, MySpace, Facebook and other interactive media
 efforts get bombarded by mainstream media with stories about their
 potentially negative impact on the young. Of course those same media
 properties air programs that portray hundreds of murders and other
 violent acts every week while trying to attract the same eyeballs that
 are moving to more interactive, arguably more educational uses of
 their time in the online world. In other words, FUD happens.
 
  From a human security point of view, the battle against nuclear power
 was probably the worst example of all. The visible Luddites in that
 case hid behind the mantle of selfless Environmentalism, but the real
 power probably came from the richest enterprise the world has ever
 known. Though there is a lot of money in Silicon Valley, the total
 revenues of all technology companies combined pale when compared to
 Exxon-Mobil. Last year, that single company sold more than $340
 BILLION worth of product and banked more than $40 BILLION in net
 profit. That company, however famous, only has a 2-3% share of the oil
 market, which itself is only about 1/3 of the total energy market.
 
 Take a look at the people who control energy wealth in Texas, Saudi
 Arabia, Russia, Dubai, Iraq, and Iran (not an exhaustive list) and
 compare the way that they live with the way that most energy consumers
 in the world live. They have tremendous motives for loosely organizing
 to fight against the only real source of power that can help displace
 our collective addiction to fossil fuel. In his talk with you, Patrick
 Moore mentioned the forward looking master plan of Exxon-Mobil and
 Shell International for new energy sources in the US, but please
 understand that the energy business has had long term master planning
 in place for many decades - there are plenty of books on the subject...

First off, I'm skeptical that Big Oil funded Greenpeace or the Environmental movement, nor did the Saudis or the OPEC countries. As Dr. Moore himself said, much of the criticism of Nuclear Power came from fear of Nuclear Weapons, and the response to Chernobyl and Three Mile Island accidents. Keep in mind these happened during massive expansions of nuclear testing, and there was an overall climate of fear of all things atomic. Sometimes things are simply what they seem. While I admire your enthusiasm, sometimes the simplest explanation is the most explainable and works best. Occam's Razor, anyone? 

Also, if Russia and Iran are so anti-nuclear power, why would they want it? Cheney would have us believe that Iran wants a bomb, but in reality, more Nuclear energy in Iran means less oil burned for their power grid, which means more to sell to us. Supply and Demand, my friend.

Further, the "master plan" involves Liquid Natural Gas because it's cleaner than Coal, and there is still popular resistance to Nuclear energy. Dr. Moore wants to change the debate and make people realize that Gas is still from overseas. The same with Coal. It's domestic, but dirty. Dr. Moore is correct in his observation that properly implemented, Nuclear energy can cut our dependance on foreign fuels, cut our burning of domestic coal ("clean coal" and "capture and store" are red herrings) and provide almost unlimited power at very, very cheap rates once the initial cash investment in building the plant is done. The major expense in Nuclear is building the plant, not fuel. Fuel can be recycled until it is almost useless, you drop it into a rock for 300some years, and it's nothing more than a lump. There is no conspiracy, only logic. Occam's razor. 

I am happy to print your rebuttal to the Moore piece, but keep in mind that it doesn't make you look like you have examined the entire issue. Still, I appreciate the reader feedback. 

Please write in, but I'd appreciate a bit more research and less shrill propaganda before you do. Dr. Moore and I had a civil conversation. I expect the same with each one of you. If you write to me or Alex, expect your words to be fact-checked and analyzed. We believe in things, but we don't share conspiracy theories or your zeal to blame unseen "large forces" for things that are rather simple. 

Thank you for your comments. Happy Easter, Go Badgers!
Posted to Energy | environment | feedback
Here at CV we spend most of our time looking at new technologies, the future, and how a rush to judgment or a poor public relations decision can doom a promising technology, service, or company to failure. We see how sensationalism, poor reporting and massive "click to complain" campaigns can generate outrage where there should be none, and amplify the shrill cries of a few to the point where they dominate the public discourse.

Now, instead of looking forward, we look back to the 1960's, when the relatively new technology of nuclear power brought a promise of unlimited, clean energy. Those days also were the height of the cold war, when the fear of atomic weapons clouded the nation's judgment of atomic power. This interview, and the resulting article, should serve as a cautionary tale for those who would rush to judge a new technology out of fear rather than optimism, and for those who create, who compete against each other without thinking of what he and his competitors have in common, and how they can fight to protect each other, in order to compete.

For every nuclear plant that environmentalists avoided, they ended up causing two coal plants to be built. That's the history of the last 20 years. Most new power plants in this country are coal, because the environmentalists opposed nuclear. When you ask someone like the NRDC, 'Do you prefer nuclear or coal?' They'll say 'We prefer nuclear to coal, but we don't want either.' It doesn't work that way; we need power.

--Vinod Khosla, Co-Founder, Sun Microsystems, January 2008


Vinod Khosla isn't known around Silicon Valley as a man who has bad ideas. With a net worth of around $1.5 Billion, he also knows a thing or two about a good investment.  

Dr. Patrick Moore is no slouch in getting things done either. In 1974, he founded Greenpeace, possibly the best known and most successful environmental protection group in the history of the world. 

Greenpeace, for those of you who have never heard of the Environmental movement, has been on the cutting edge of conservation for more than thirty years. It has critics who say that during those years it has either gone too far or not far enough. It has had a ship blown up by the French government. It has had one run aground on the very reef it was trying to protect. 

Ironically, what this high-tech trailblazer and environmental pioneer have in common is the embrace of something very old that is in the midst of a  renaissance: nuclear power.

Dr. Moore was on the first Greenpeace voyage in 1971 and stayed with the organization until 1986, coincidentally the same year that Khosla left Sun. Since then, he has spent his time as a consultant on environmental issues. Dr. Moore has never given up his conservationist leanings. However, whereas he first entered the public eye as an opponent of nuclear testing, nuclear weapons, and nuclear power while traveling on the Phyllis Comack to try and stop a U.S. nuclear test, today he sails a much different path. Dr. Moore wants to steer the U.S. back to being a nuclear nation in order to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. 

In fact, Dr. Moore is now at odds with the juggernaut he helped create. In 2007, Voz Hernandez of Greenpeace South Asia called claims that nuclear energy is a solution to climate change "dangerous and misleading." Hernandez went on to fan the flames, saying:

"Besides the massive financial costs involved in building a nuclear power plant, the risks of accidents like Chernobyl or the most recent one at Kashiwazaki nuclear plant in Japan following an earthquake are real..."

DSC_0138.JPG
 

I wouldn't have pictured this man as a founder of Greenpeace. Far from the "crunchy granola" stereotype of an environmental activist, or even the sharply dressed canvassers that I sometimes encounter outside the Metrorail escalator, I walked into a Dupont Circle cafe to meet a unassuming man dressed in a sharp grey suit, who could have been any lawyer working in the many law firms or agencies that line Washington's streets. Instead, he serves as the co-chair of the Clean and Safe Energy Coalition, and, in some way, is attempting to make up for the unintended consequences of the actions of his younger self.

Perhaps the greatest strength of the 61-year-old native of British Columbia is that he could blend into any crowd on Capitol Hill, only drawing the sword of his considerable credentials when needed. Whereas Greenpeace is now known for its loud, emotional, disruptive and often self-defeating "mind bombs," Moore is soft-spoken, thoughtful and precise. He rebuts emotional arguments like Hernandez's with a razor-sharp grasp of the facts surrounding the issue that have dominated over half his life. In fact, the first question he answered dealt with the success of nuclear power in Europe and rebutted the concerns over Chernobyl. 


"...the legacy of the nuclear waste remains unsolved and accidents continue to happen across the nuclear plants in operation around the world almost everyday."
 --Voz Hernandez

Dr. Moore projects an air of total confidence in his subject. I would love to see him in a head-to-head debate with Mr. Hernandez, as I listened to him describe how nuclear "waste" is actually fuel that we couldn't use because of law, not science. This isn't a new technology either, we've been able to do it since the cold war.



As the conversation turned to rolling out new technologies, I couldn't help but think of the Politics Online conference last week. Specifically, the debate over the rollout of broadband in the U.S., and who should take the lead. Dr. Moore agreed that broadband and nuclear power are remarkably similar in that they are essential to our national security, and suggests...*gasp* help from the government in setting national priorities.
 

What struck me as the most important part about Dr. Moore and his new crusade is how circumspect he is about his past and the role he played in creating the considerable uphill battle that nuclear energy now faces. 

Today's new technologies often face the same backlash, fears, sensationalism and poor public relations that nuclear power faced in the 1970's. The solution is to get out in front of problems and focus on the good. Of course, Silicon Valley is a dog-eat-dog world, and companies that compete with each other are loath to join together, even for a common goal, especially when government is concerned. Dr. Moore added that in any industry association that the members are, on on level or another, competing with one another.  Despite this competition, the members of said association are trying to compete in the same arena and need to band together over common goals and needs so that they can be allowed to compete with each other instead of excessive government legislation and public backlash.

A more "Capitol Valley" example of this would be the hoopla that surrounded MySpace as it gained popularity and was bought by News Corporation.  Although it has a lot of harmless and even useful applications (friends can use it to keep in touch and bands can preview their latest single) their founders and owners allowed, through lack of good PR and failure to pool resources with like-minded companies, the sensationalism and bad press to dominate its media attention and the public discourse. NBC spent entire episodes of "Dateline NBC" dedicating itself to showcasing the "predators" on the site. Bad press has forced News Corporation to entire separate agreements with almost every state Attorney General in the U.S. Some state legislatures have considered bills specifically to address social networking sites, which if written poorly or read incorrectly, could have chilling effects on any service which allows for user generated content. 

Of course, this is not out of malice, but from the best intentions. Old Media has done much to sully the reputation of New Media by dismissing it as a haven for predators, or a dangerous zone where bad things lurk behind a single click of a mouse. Yet, for every Megan Meier ( a 14-year-old girl who hung herself after being the victim of a MySpace hoax) there are literally millions of people and groups, from teens to adults, using MySpace, Facebook, and the entire range of social networking systems out there without a single negative consequence. Happily. Safely. Productively.

No one is trying to downplay the tragedy of what happened to Megan, but the fact is, what happened to her is not indicative of the overall MySpace experience.  The same thing happened with nuclear energy. Many are still focused on Chernobyl and Three Mile Island but ignore the fact that Sweden has eliminated fossil fuels from its generation of electricity, which is 50% nuclear energy and 50% hydroelectric.  France?  80% nuclear.  Deaths? Zero.

It doesn't seem like they're related, but Silicon Valley could learn a little from the missteps of U.S. Nuclear.  Band together and get the positive into the public eye.

Dr. Moore is both a very smart man and one who is brave enough to admit to a mistake and take the action to try and correct it.  His message to startups?  Don't wait until you have the worst public image in the world.  Band together, inform the public and improve your ability to grow and thrive.


Posted to Energy | Interviews | Politics | environment

I'm watching a live feed of the House of Representatives, where they are debating an Energy bil which would increase taxes on oil companies and subsidize clean and renewable energy.

Rep. Peter Hoekstra (R-MI) is offering a motion to recommit which would insert the "Protect America Act" (aka the Spy on America and Grant Retroactive Immunity to the Telecoms Act).

With his typical charm and wit, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charlie Rangel (D-MI) raised a point of order against Hoekstra's motion. Point of order sustained. Hoekstra appeals. The House is now voting on the motion to table the appeal of the ruling of the Chair (today it's Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-IL)).

While I don't have much time to write at the moment, I'll point out two things:

    • Big Telecom wants this immunity because they've been investing billions into systems to divert and copy fiber optic traffic for the purposes of data mining and spying at various peering points. They also stand to risk billions in judgements and legal fees (and jail time for executives?) if they're not granted immunity, because they've been complicit in a conspiracy to illegally wiretap the entire country.

 

    • While renewable energy may not be great for Detroit, the technological investment and R&D for developing truly renewable fuel and energy sources would help the economy. There would be jobs for smart people to think about these things and develop solutions, as well as jobs for the labor needed to implement stuff.

 

    • Here's a question: wouldn't Google have an interest in developing energy sources to power their massive data centers? Who do they buy their power from? More importantly, how much does fuel for their backup generators cost? Hey, Larry and Sergey! It doesn't matter if you own your own seperate backbone if there isn't any juice to run your data centers. If you want to be self-sufficient, be self-sufficient. Or, you could always invade a country.

Posted to Congress | Economy | Energy | Google | Idiots | Politics | Taxes

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