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Verizon Getting Government Help? Scam

by Jason Wilk on January 30, 2009

  • A new provision might give Verizon $1.6 billion in credits in the next two years to bring fast Internet connections to rural and low-income areas*. The House bill that passed Wednesday will provide $6 billion in grants to broadband projects. The latest Senate bill increases those grants to $9 billion says The WSJ.
  • Here is the breakdown of tax cuts: Companies would get a 20% tax credit on investments made on broadband speeds of at least 5 megabits per second for unserved areas and a 10% cut for investment in low-income and rural areas.
  • Providing unserved, rural, low-income areas with speeds of at least 100 megabits per second gets a 20 percent credit. Currently Verizon FiOS is one of the only ISP’s with speeds at or above 100 megabits per second, and here is why they will cash in.  It’s all in the small print. The bill says “A qualified subscriber, with respect to next generation broadband services, means any nonresidential subscriber maintaining a permanent place of business in a rural, undeserved, or unserved area, or any residential subscriber.
  • ”or any residential subscriber”–means that Verizon will get a tax cut for continuing to build out their FiOS network, which they are already currently doing. AT&T and the smaller phone companies don’t have technology that meets the 100 meg-bit-per-second threshold and Comcast is just beginning to roll out their new technology to meet the qualifications. According to analysts, Verizon is planning to spend $4 billion a year to continue building out FiOS, meaning they would get an annual tex credit of $800 million. The tax credits are in place to encourage the company to accelerate its plans and run FiOS past more homes over the next two years. How much did Verizon have to pay senator Rockefeller of West Virginia to include those last 4 words in the bill?
  • What’s not included in the bill is that along with the tax credits to build the infrastructure, is an incentive to create more jobs with the additions or cut prices. Verizon, who cut 2700 jobs the day after Thanksgiving, and has cut 15,000 jobs since 2003 is receiving nothing but free money for this initiative. What’s worse is that the Senate proposal also would not require any recipients of the credits to abide by network neutrality. Verzion is already getting grants to help build out the 700 mhz wireless spectrum they won the auction for last year, and on top of that they had another record year, beating analysts projections by a landmark in the down economy. Remove the last 4 words from the bill, require them to create more jobs and lower prices, and then you have got yourself a potentially legitimate infrastructure grant. Other than that, this is ridiculous.

What Do You Think? Fill In The Blank In The Comments Section:

I Think This Deal Is (A) __________

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Google Takes The LIFE Photo Archive To The Mainsteam

by Jason Wilk on December 13, 2008

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  • Last monthly Google quietly announced a partnership with LIFE Magazine to bring their entire archive of offline photos to the web. Today they bring it to the masses by advertising it on the Google Images homepage. This is one of Google’s most prominent achievements as they continue to try and organize the offline web online. This last week Google announced that you will now be able to search magazine online, another big step for the grand mission that is Google Book Search.
  • The collection of newly-digitized images includes photos and etchings produced and owned by LIFE dating all the way back to the 1750s. A majority of the images have never been published and most the ones that did have only been seen by few collectors and historians. In the process, Google searched (by hand) the dusty archives which contained negatives, slides, glass plates, etchings, and prints that needed to be converted. As of last month during the testing period, they had about 20 percent of the collection online or around 2 million photos. Now, they are nearing completion of the 10 million total photos.

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http://www.crunchbase.com/assets/images/resized/0001/9775/19775v1-max-150x150.png

  • Technorati founder Dave Sifry has launched his new Travel Guide startup, OffBeat Guides.
  • He came up with the idea while visiting Dalian, China, one of my favorite places in the world. He was looking for a guidebook and was surprised to find limited info about Dalian, and an influx on major attractions like The Great Wall and Terracotta Warriors. He wanted to change this.
  • Concept: Once  you to enter your name, travel plans, and where you are staying on OffBeatGuides.com, the system crawls various sites such as weather, professional travel sites, notes and articles by professional travel writers, etc. and displays essential guide book info about the area you are headed.
  • The info is displayed in a Wikipedia style format and let’s you choose what kind of information you would like to include in your persona travel book (eat, sleep, attractions, dangers, etc.). If you know about the area already, then you can hide the history section, or if you already know what to see, you can hide the attractions section.
  • Once you’ve built your book, you can download it as a PDF for $9.95 or purchase it in physical form for $24.95, which also includes the PDF. You can always refer back to it online need be.
  • I don’t exactly know how Dave thinks he can compete in this arena. As an experienced world traveller, I can tell you that Lonely Planet, Rough Guides and more dominate the travel book industry. If I wanted to purchase one of those, I could do so online, buy it on Amazon used, or just pick one up when I go to my destination. Any non-westernized country will also have knock-off editions of all these travel guides that are around $5 once I get there. In addition, there are so many user generated travel resources out there, that I can print out myself if I wanted and make it into a nice little book. Wiki Travel guides, Bootnall Travel Network, Travel Blogs, Lonely Planet’s UG section, TripAdvisor, and so many more can give me this info for free. Come on, $24.95 for a printed version or $9.95 for a PDF? Sounds like you should have talked to a few more travellers before launching this thing.  I just don’t see the appeal here. Nice functionality and design, but I give it a 2 on execution. Sorry.

TC

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  • Starting in November, printer friendly pages will be available on Myspace thanks to handsome sponsorship fund from HP.
  • With the crummy Myspace navigation out of the way users will now be able to better see on the printed page, all the crap that’s cluttering their profiles.

TC

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  • ICents is a payment solution used to access premium content on the web.
  • iCents faces the major problem of convincing content providers to adopt their system. An unlikely event.
  • Most interesting feature is the microsubscription model whereby a $5 payment, for example, would grant the user access to all of the sites premium content for a specified number of time.

Can iCents net enough smaller content publishers to attract the big dogs (Youtube, Hulu, Flickr, etc.)?

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