Archive for August, 2017

First Amendment in Peril? – City Journal

In the marketplace, traditionally understood, when a company produces a poor product or mistreats its customers, it faces market disciplinenew ones come in and steal market share. Thats the theory, at least.

Too bad its not true right now, at least not on the Internet.

Google and Apple, with a combined 98 percent market share in mobile-phone operating systems, have banned Gab, an upstart Twitter competitor with a free-speech policy quaintly modeled on the First Amendment itself, from their app stores. Google cited hate speech as its reason for exclusion; Gab doesnt censor. What few people yet understand is that Google and Apple have used their duopoly status to revoke the First Amendment on mobile phones. Because the Internet is now majority mobile, and a growing majority of all web traffic comes from mobile devices, the First Amendment is now effectively dead in the mobile sphere unless policymakers act to rein in the tech giants who serve as corporate gatekeepers to digital speech.

Twitter ran into controversy last year when it was accused of censoring conservative voices. Gab founders Andrew Torba, an alumnus of Silicon Valleys prestigious Y Combinator accelerator, and Ekrem Bykkaya saw a market opportunity for a competitor focused on free speechnot just for conservatives but for dissidents globally. Last August, they launched Gab, a Twitter-like app where, according to company spokesman Utsav Sanduja, Whatever is permissible under the First Amendment is what Gab allows onto its site.

Gab grew slowly but has now reached over 200,000 usersa substantial number, though tiny compared with Twitter. It generated modest revenue through a freemium model, wherein users could pay to upgrade to a Pro level. Gab pulled off a coup by raising $1 million through crowd-funded investment. The company says that it is planning an Initial Coin Offering with its own digital currency based on the Ethereum standard. In short, Gab is a real company, with legitimate founders, a business strategy, revenue, more than 200,000 users, and seven-figure funding.

Apple and Google dont agree. Gab built an app for Apples iOS operating system, but Apple wouldnt approve it. This means that iPhone and iPad users cant use the Gab app because users cant install applications on those devices unless Apple approves them. Gabs Android app was available through Googles app store until yesterday, when Google banned it, citing violations of its hate-speech policy. In order to be on the Play Store, social networking apps need to demonstrate a sufficient level of moderation, including for content that encourages violence and advocates hate against groups of people, a Google statement read. This is a long-standing rule and clearly stated in our developer policies. While Android users can install unapproved apps, its a cumbersome process, and being kicked out of the app store reduces the apps reach.

No doubt, a number of far-right groups have found a home on Gab. I tried Gab myself when it first came out, finding it functionally an interesting mix of Twitter and Reddit, but with too many far-right users for my taste. So I dropped it. Gab also courted trouble with provocative moves like publicly announcing a job offer for James Damore after Google fired him and taunting Silicon Valley after its crowd-funding success. It also uses a green frog as its logo. Gab claims that this is not the controversial Pepe the Frog, identified with the alt-Right, but rather inspired by the plague of frogs from Exodus. Even if this is true, the logo choice seems like a deliberate provocation.

But its difficult to credit Gab as a white-supremacist site when its cofounder is a Turkish Kurd and Muslim. Bykkaya, who says Ive never supported Trump for a minute in my entire life, is concerned about speech repression in his part of the worldfor good reason, as Turkey is infamous for its violations of free speech and for locking up journalists. Gab spokesman Sanduja is a South Asian Hindu from Canada.

Gab points out that other major social-media platforms have hosted ISIS activity, and child-porn rings, facilitated drug dealing, and carried live streams of murder, torture, and other crimes. Yet all are still allowed by Google. Google itself actually hired Chris moot Poole, founder of the notorious website 4chan, known not just for offensive speech but also for the distribution of hard-core pornography. Police have made multiple child pornography arrests associated with 4chan. There remain multiple 4chan apps in Googles app store.

At a minimum, Apple and Googles decisions about offensive app behavior are arbitrary. This is a problem the market cant easily solvebecause there is effectively no market. Both the Apple and Google app stores are private markets owned by those companies, which act as their effective governments. You cannot easily start a new mobile business without their permission. If your app follows the First Amendment, theres a good chance that youll be rejected. Regardless of how one views Gab or any other application or group, two Silicon Valley companies should not be the governors of the mobile Internetwhich, in due course, may be indistinguishable from the Internet itself.

The mobile-Internet business is built on spectrum licenses granted by the federal government. Given the monopoly power that Apple and Google possess in the mobile sphere as corporate gatekeepers, First Amendment freedoms face serious challenges in the current environment. Perhaps it is time that spectrum licenses to mobile-phone companies be conditioned on their recipients providing freedoms for customers to use the apps of their choice.

Aaron M. Renn is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute and a contributing editor ofCity Journal.

Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

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First Amendment in Peril? - City Journal

Hillary Clinton needs to move on – Toronto Sun


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Hillary Clinton needs to move on - Toronto Sun

Editorial: Transgender service members should remain in military – GazetteNET

Transgender people deserve to stay in the military, and we hope that a federal lawsuit filed last week affords them that protection in the face of President Donald Trumps intention to boot them out.

The suit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia by the GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders and the National Center for Lesbian Rights on behalf of five active service members identified as Jane Does. It alleges equal protection and due process rights violations under the Constitutions Fifth Amendment.

Its necessary because there are thousands of transgender service members who notified their command of the fact that they are transgender when the military announced in June of 2016 that they could openly serve, says Jennifer Levi, the plaintiffs lead attorney and co-director of the Center for Transgender and Sexuality Studies at Western New England University in Springfield.

These plaintiffs have been in the military from between three years and 20 years. They have bravely and courageously served our country and dont deserve the slap in the face that Donald Trump is giving them.

In three tweets on July 26, Trump announced, After consultation with my Generals and military experts, please be advised that the United States Government will not accept or allow Transgender individuals to serve in any capacity in the U.S. Military. Our military must be focused on decisive and overwhelming victory and cannot be burdened with the tremendous medical costs and disruption that transgender in the military would entail. Thank you.

Military officials were surprised by Trumps intention to reverse the policy enacted by the Obama administration last year when it ended the ban on transgender troops. Under that policy, those already serving could come out, and openly transgender people could join the military next year.

Many transgender people have hormone therapy or surgery as they transition to the gender with which they identify. However, studies dispute Trumps contention that those serving in the military would incur tremendous medical costs.

A RAND Corp. study commissioned by the Department of Defense last year concluded that the additional cost of gender transition-related health care treatment was relatively low between $2.4 million and $8.4 million a year. Thats far less than the aapproximately $6 billion spent annually on medical expenses for active-duty personnel, according to the report.

The Palm Center, an independent research institute in San Francisco, released a study this month concluding that if 12,800 transgender service members were kicked out of the military, it would cost $960 million to train their replacements.

Estimates vary about the number of transgender people currently serving. Using the RAND studys lowestestimate of 1,320 transgender troops, the cost of replacing them would be $99 million.

Trumps argument that transgender people disrupt the military has been used in the past to argue unsuccessfully against allowing blacks to serve, women in combat and openly gay troops. Experts point out there is no evidence to support Trumps contention that transgender people disrupt military readiness, since they have been allowed to serve openly for the past year without incident.

Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, a former Navy pilot and prisoner of war who now chairs the Senate Armed Services Committee, says any American who meets current medical and readiness standards should be allowed to continue serving. There is no reason to force service members who are able to fight, train and deploy to leave the military, regardless of their gender identity.

The Pentagon is still waiting for a formal directive from the president before it takes any action to change the policy on transgender troops.

Nevertheless, says Levi, the lawsuit is necessary because Trumps tweets already have resulted in immediate, concrete injury to Plaintiffs by unsettling and destabilizing plaintiffs reasonable expectation of continued service.

Its important for the country as a whole because what the president is seeking to do weakens the military. This is a time when everyone who is capable of serving and wants to serve needs to be able to do so.

There are plenty of military issues that need the presidents attention, most notably de-escalating tensions with North Korea. Getting rid of transgender people who are proudly serving their country is not among them.Beyond that, it insults a group of Americans who have pledged themselves to serve this nation, and who deserve respect in return.

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Editorial: Transgender service members should remain in military - GazetteNET

SCORE LA is in the business of helping start new businesses – Los Angeles Times

Starting a new business requires fortitude, funding and sometimes a little luck. It may also need some sage advice from someone who has worked in the business world for decades and is primed to help guide entrepreneurs on their new ventures.

SCORE L.A. offers mentoring services for those starting a new business, buying an existing business or purchasing a franchise. The organizations Los Angeles County headquarters is in Glendale, and it hosted a workshop on how to start a business this past Saturday in its local offices.

Led by Dick Mader, who founded wholesale publication distributor Mader News Inc. in Glendale, the workshop covered a variety of topics ranging from business plans to financing and hiring employees.

Mader said he started selling newspapers on a street corner. Coming from a 10-member family, each child had to find their own way financially sometimes.

Always thinking about future success, Mader said he saved his money to buy something that would move him forward a bike, so he could get a newspaper route and make more money.

I could increase my earnings by investing in a bicycle. I always spent less than I earned, and I suggest that you do the same thing, Mader said.

When starting a new business, there are many keys to success, including setting realistic goals and figuring out how to do something that will be better than the competition.

However, one of the most important challenges can be timing. Sometimes, a product or service will fail today, but it might be hugely popular down the road.

Besides bad timing, a business can fail if the owner doesnt adapt to change.

Businesses fail because they dont change, because they dont listen to their customers, Mader said. They dont watch whats going on in the market. They fail because they dont make changes internally to respond to what going on outside.

He cited his own adaptability when the mainstream newspaper industry started to slow down with the advent of the Internet and other news sources.

So, his company moved into distributing foreign publications, particularly fashion magazines that sell for $30 to $40 a copy.

Were actually selling fewer copies today, but at higher prices, Mader said.

When starting a new business, finding funding can be difficult. It often includes using the new owners savings, equity in their property or borrowing from family and friends, Mader said.

Banks and venture capitalists are not likely to invest in a new business, he added.

While its tempting to hire friends when first starting out, Mader said thats not always a good idea. It can end a friendship if the work arrangement doesnt work out.

Mader suggested business owners figure out what the job entails first, then hire someone who has the skills to do it.

He also said that a good business plan can be a road map to keep the new business owner on track. It outlines what the owner intends to do and how they plan to do it, but, perhaps most importantly, how much money the business expects to make.

If the financial goals arent met, changes or sound advice may be needed.

Anne Pittman attended the workshop because shes looking to start a company called Cupcake Panache, which will sell items that can up the game when cooking cupcakes.

For example, fancier cupcake liners may jazz up a batch of cupcakes.

Im going to have things that they cant find at their local grocery store or craft store, Pittman said.

SCORE L.A. offers many workshops on a variety of topics including buying into a franchise as well as social media and Internet marketing basics.

For more information, visit scorela.org.

mark.kellam@latimes.com

Twitter: @lamarkkellam

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SCORE LA is in the business of helping start new businesses - Los Angeles Times

Small-business resources – Chron.com

Monday

Learn About Federal Contracting: Webinar hosted by the SBA. 10-11 a.m. Registration: http://www.sba.gov/tx/houston.

Tuesday

Small-business Insurance, Legal Entitites and Fair Labor Standards Act: Hosted by SCORE. 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., United Way Community Resource Center, 50 Waugh. Information: http://www.scorehouston.org.

Increase Your Close Ratio to Shorten Your Sales Cycle: 9 a.m.-noon, UH Bauer College SBDC, 2302 Fannin, Suite 200. Cost: $39. Information: http://www.sbdc.uh.edu.

Data Protection for Your Business: 9 a.m.-4 p.m., UH Bauer College SBDC, 2302 Fannin, Suite 200. Cost: $19. Information: http://www.sbdc.uh.edu.

Small Business Meetup: Hosted by the SBA. 4:30 p.m., Cafe Express, 5311 FM 1960. Registration: http://www.sba.gov/tx/houston.

Wednesday

Making Business Plans Easy: Hosted by SCORE. 9 a.m.-noon, Palm Center, 5330 Griggs. Information: http://www.scorehouston.org.

Breakfast with Beth - Internet Marketing Q&A: 7-9:30 a.m., UH Bauer College SBDC, 2302 Fannin, Suite 200. Cost: $10. Information: http://www.sbdc.uh.edu.

Starting Your Business: Conducted in Spanish. 9 a.m.-noon, UH Bauer College SBDC, 2302 Fannin, Suite 200. Cost: Free. Information: http://www.sbdc.uh.edu.

Tools for Starting or Growing a Business - Franchising for Veterans: Webinar hosted by the SBA. 9:30-10:30 a.m. Registration: http://www.sba.gov/tx/houston. x: Webinar hosted by the SBA. 9:30-10:30 a.m. Registration: http://www.sba.gov/tx/houston.

Enhancing Your Federal Procurement Marketing: Webinar hosted by the SBA. 10-11 a.m. Registration: http://www.sba.gov/tx/houston.

Thursday

Grow Your Business Online: 10 a.m.-1 p.m., UH Bauer College SBDC, 2302 Fannin, Suite 200. Cost: $39. Information: http://www.sbdc.uh.edu.

Employment 101 - The Art of Negotations: 4-6 p.m., Houston/Galveston Women's Business Center, 9800 Northwest Freeway, No. 120. Cost: Free. Registration: http://www.facebook.com/HoustonGalvestonWBC.

Friday

Funding Sources: Hosted by SCORE. 1-3 p.m., Northwest Branch Library, 11355 Regency Green Drive. Information: http://www.scorehouston.org.

Making Sense of the Numbers: 9 a.m.-noon, UH Bauer College SBDC, 2302 Fannin, Suite 200. Cost: $25. Information: http://www.sbdc.uh.edu.

QuickBooks Online: 9 a.m.-1 p.m., UH Bauer College SBDC, 2302 Fannin, Suite 200. Cost: $79. Information: http://www.sbdc.uh.edu.

Saturday

Income Tax Myths and Facts: Hosted by SCORE. 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m., Houston Community College-Alief/Hayes Campus, 2811 Hayes Road. Information: http://www.scorehouston.org.

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Small-business resources - Chron.com