Year: 2008

Supreme Court Reaffirms Patent Exhaustion

The case is LG Electronics vs Quanta, where LG licensed the technology to Intel, who made the chips used, but wanted to charge buyers of the chips an additional royalty.

Basically, patent exhaustion says that if someone licenses a patent from you, and they sell stuff made with that patent to someone else, the recipient can use that stuff without any more restrictions. It’s a 100 year old precident, but the patent court decided to ignore it.

You can find a very good primer on why this happened here.

The district court ruled for Quanta, but the patent court ruled for LG on appeal, and the Supreme Court completely reversed the patent court, which is becoming a regular thing.

The special patent court is out of control and needs to be abolished.

Do Not Send Money to These Bush Blue Dogs

One of the things Tim Mahoney and Allen Boyd, both of Florida, won’t do is endorse Barack Obama for president.

These are both folks who have received lots of support from the Democratic grass roots, Mahoney is in Mark “Just as soon as I get to the end of the page” Foley’s old seat following the sex scandal, and when the time comes for them to do little things, like endorse the Democrat, or in Mahoney’s case, criticize John McCain for opposing Mahoney’s own insurance relief bill, they just don’t have the guts.

Screw them.

Lobbyists Complaining About Obama Donation Ban

Good. It means that he’s done something right.

So are some Congressman, or at least that’s what the lobbyists say in the article.

Seriously though, is there any reason for Steny Hoyer to have, “received a higher percentage of his campaign contributions from PACs this cycle than has any other member of Congress?” He’s in a completely safe district. He could win if he spent 50 bucks on his hole campaign.

Two snaps up from me.

Gates Bitch Slaps Fighter Mafia

Since 1984, the Air force chiefs have staff have all been former fighter pilots. Before that, they were all bomber pilots.

With the appointment of General Norton Schwartz, who flew C-130s and AC-130s, it’s clear that Robert Gates is slapping down the so called “fighter mafia” hard.

What’s more, Vice Chief is now General William Fraser III, a former bomber pilot, which is another slap at the fighter jock leadership culture.

Maybe now, we can start seeing the Air Force do something useful at the upper leadership.

Bush Fired Rove In Church

Boy, the Avignon president is a really classy guy:

If you’re going to fire someone, you want to make sure you do it in a place where the now-unemployed can’t make a scene.

You know…a place like, say, a church.

That, according to a new book – “Machiavelli’s Shadow” – by former Time magazine reporter Paul Alexander, is where President George W. Bush informed trusted advisor Karl Rove in 2007 that his services would no longer be needed at the White House.

“On a Sunday in midsummer, George W. Bush accompanied Karl Rove to the Episcopalian Church Rove sometimes attended,” writes Alexander. “They made their way to the front of the congregation. Then, during their time in the church, Bush gave Rove some stunning news. ‘Karl,’ Bush said, ‘there’s too much heat on you. It’s time for you to go.’”

It appears that Rove is a screamer, and Bush was afraid that he would be shouted at.

But according to the Republican party, Bush is really brave for sending soldiers to die in Iraq.

Pathetic.

Boy…Firing a man in church because you were afraid he would be angry with you? Bush is one classy dude.

Economics Update

China, in response to inflationary pressures, and the fact that a number of their banks are insolvent by western standards, just hiked their reserve requirements, meaning that they have to keep more in reserve, and lend less out of their deposits, which, not surprisingly has tanked Asian markets.

Given that the US trade deficit widened under the pressure of rising oil prices, there may be another purpose: to slow things down before US demand drops off a cliff, particularly when Ben Bernanke is signaling rate hike strongly.

In any case, oil fell a bit, but gasoline is still hitting new records, which implies that a lot of money is still going to petro-economies.

It looks like the British Bankers Association may be taking steps to fix the problems with LIBOR reporting, where this critical rate looks increasingly to have been gamed by member banks, by tightening scrutiny on the transactions, though they are still whining about how it will hurt, “What we do here in the U.K. must match others … maintaining competitiveness is essential to the U.K. industry.”

If you crank out phony numbers, it will hurt your bank more than any other thing that you can do.

Meanwhile, back in the good old USA, Q1 delinquencies rose 62% over a year ago.

Zimbabwe: Mbeki “Loses” Letters from, Tsvangirai, Courts Rule Against ZANU-PF

A letter has reached the South African newspapers from Morgan Tsvangirai pleading with Thabo Mbeki to do something, and his office claims to have “never received the letter”.

Simply disgraceful.

The courts in Zimbabwe actually seem to be doing their jobs though, ordering the release of a jailed opposition MP, and reversing the police ban on rallies, though this may not help much with ZANU-PF thugs using violence to disrupt the rallies.

It’s no wonder that Human Rights Watch is calling for intervention.

30 Years for Driving While Black

William Thornton IV, a black man, skidded through a stop sign on a rainy night, and struck an SUV, killing its two occupants. He remained at the scene, and there were no drugs or alcohol in him. He had no criminal record.

Despite this, Judge Ric Howard sentenced him to 30 years in jail, after he followed his public defender’s advice, and pled guilty and threw himself on the mercy of the court.

Thankfully, a high powered law firm noticed, but had he been white, would he have served any time at all.

Congress Attempting to Regulate Satellite Launches Without US Content

The House 2009 Defense Authorization Bill has a section that allows for punitive actions to be taken against “a foreign-owned company that is engaged with the People’s Republic of China in the development, manufacture or launch of certain satellites” (Paid Subscription Required).

This is about Thales Alenia Space, which has communications satellites that use no US content, and they are cleaning up by using the dirt cheap Chinese Long March boosters to launch satellites that have no ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations) components.

It appears that something got Duncan Hunter’s (R-CA) nose out of joint about this, but given the restrictions on what are commercial technology present in the ITAR regulations, it was inevitable that this would happen.

I wonder if the WTO will end up getting involved in this.

The Real Misery Index

The inestimable Barry Ritholtz notes that the Hedonically-Adjusted, Well-Spun, Nominal Misery Index, the sum of unemployment and inflation, is really 6 pounds of fertilizer in a 5 pound bag, and that if we used the same standards, because both numbers have been massaged into irrelevancy, and that if you used the metrics in place in 1980 or so, we would be at about the same number:

That’s right, we would be looking at 12% inflation and 9% unemployment under some measures.

SEC Looks to Ban Ratings Agencies from Consulting on How to Get Good Ratings

It boggles my mind that this is allowed:

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission may recommend this week that Moody’s Investors Service, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings be prohibited from advising investment banks on how to earn top rankings for asset- backed securities, according to people familiar with the matter.

This just buggers the mind. These companies were advising investment banks on how to game themselves.

This is not the only change proposed, the SEC is going more generally for transparency in rating:

SEC staff may also propose at a June 11 meeting in Washington that the companies disclose all the data that goes into a rating so competitors can grade bonds even if they weren’t compensated by the underwriter, said the people, who declined to be identified because the rules aren’t final. Moody’s, S&P and Fitch help design securities backed by a stream of payments, making it impossible for them to be impartial raters, a May 2007 academic study by Joseph Mason and Joshua Rosner concluded.

This is Alan “Bubbles” Greenspan’s Randroid utopia of an unregulated market, inside players conspiring to defraud the average investor.

Why Guest Worker Programs are a Bad Thing, Episode 7734

This time, it’s welders and pipe fitters from South Asia, who were misled, and had to pay outrageous fees, to get H2B visas to work in the US:

The Indian workers say they were deceived by Signal International and labor recruiters when they paid as much as $20,000 for visas they believed would allow them to work and live permanently with their families in the United States. In fact, the H-2B visas are for short-term contracts.

They are now on a hunger strike.

I would note that this problem is not a bug in guest worker programs. It’s a feature.

The goal of guest worker programs is to create an underclass of cheap and easily exploited labor.

Just in Case You Were Wondering

yes, Virginia, the drug companies do have a policy of secret payoffs to researchers.

A world-renowned Harvard child psychiatrist whose work has helped fuel an explosion in the use of powerful antipsychotic medicines in children earned at least $1.6 million in consulting fees from drug makers from 2000 to 2007 but for years did not report much of this income to university officials, according to information given Congressional investigators.

At some point, we need to start throwing both the people who took, and the people who made, the payments in jail.