IAMA

Sites like Reddit may be mostly nonsense, but every once and a while you get a gem like this, that shows just how damned fascinating and broadly connective the Internet can be.

FCC

From the FCC…

Further, we recognize that there have been meaningful recent moves toward openness, including the introduction of open operating systems like Android. In addition, we anticipate soon seeing the effects on the market of the openness conditions we imposed on mobile providers that operate on upper 700 MHz C-Block spectrum, which includes Verizon Wireless, one of the largest mobile wireless carriers in the U.S.

In light of these considerations, we conclude it is appropriate to take measured steps at this time to protect the openness of the Internet when accessed through mobile broadband.

Wow. Because what OS you’re running makes a difference as to wether your connection is tiered. This makes no sense what so ever.

9/11 & Congress

Jon Stewart gets pissed.

Luck of the Irish

Planet Money digs in a bit more to the Irish bailout, the so-called European Financial Stability Facilityand it isn’t pretty.

European countries aren’t actually putting their own money into that trillion-dollar bailout fund. Instead, the fund will borrow from investors around the world — the same investors who are growing wary of lending to a bunch of countries in Europe.

What’s more, the fund will be guaranteed by the countries that use the euro. So the more the fund is used, the more countries that are already struggling — countries like Spain and Italy — will be on the hook for potential losses.

This is like looking down the barrel of a howitzer. If someone else in the euro zone finds themselves short, which it seems like they will in the form of one of the PIGS (Portugal, Italy, Greece or Spain), and needs to draw on this fund (that has no money in it), it starts to look like a credit default swap. It breaks down like this –  if Spain, for example, gets into even more trouble and needs bailing out from the fund that they are  supposedly a certifior and contributor to, the fund could loose its AAA rating. From there’s, there’s nothing left to bail these guys out – they’re left a borrowing at market rates of about 7% (good for a credit card, bad when you owe a cool billion or five).  Then we start talking about countries defaulting – at which point nobody really knows what would happen, but it might make 2008 look like a good year in comparison.