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Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Hahaha NOPE

Even the easiest looking Pinterest crafts turn out to be impossible for regular people.

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Peer pressure

The age of monopolistic control over internet traffic is here. “We’re really, really fucking this up”, says Nilay Patel of the new age of pay-to-play internet, ushered in first by the Verizon v. FCC court decision last month, and more recently the Netflix-Comcast peering deal.

In this new deal, Netflix will pay Comcast to deliver its content directly to Comcast customers, rather than going through a traditional middleman like Cogent Communications (which is having its own battle over Netflix traffic with Verizon). In the short term, this is good news for Comcast subscribers, who are guaranteed faster video streaming service — Netflix reports that the speed of its service to Comcast customers had slowed by 25% over the last few months. Over the longer term, though, “the more fundamental issue is that the [internet service providers] have sole dominion over the one link in this chain — the last mile — that can’t be replicated and can’t be circumvented”, says Cardiff Garcia.

Timothy Lee does a good job of explaining how the internet has worked up until now: companies like Netflix pay a middleman to upload their content. You pay a different internet service provider (Comcast, Verizon, TWC) to connect to the internet and download all that content at home or work. All of the many providers share content with one another equally and for free — that’s called “peering”. But, Lee says, Netflix is cutting out the middleman and is now paying for a direct peering agreement with Comcast.

Patel calls the CEOs of Comcast, AT&T, and Verizon “robber barons for a new age of infrastructure monopoly”. Tim Wu, analyzing both the Netflix deal and Comcast’s acquisition of Time Warner Cable, says “the bigger [Comcast] gets, the more credible its threats become, and the more money it drains from everyone”. Guan Yang compares the deal to your apartment building charging Netflix to bring its red DVD envelopes through the door, even though you pay for a mailbox and Netflix pays for shipping. In that case, he says, “you don’t really have a choice of an alternative mailbox/lobby provider if you think their terms are unfair”.

The deal doesn’t directly infringe on the principle of net neutrality; Stacey Higginbothom explains why the FCC left peering out of net neutrality. Lee, however, says that the deal fundamentally changes the problem:

The conventional network neutrality debate implicitly assumes that residential ISPs receive Internet traffic from one big pipe ... But in a world where Netflix and Yahoo connect directly to residential ISPs, every Internet company will have its own separate pipe. And policing whether different pipes are equally good is a much harder problem than requiring that all of the traffic in a single pipe be treated the same.

-- Shane Ferro

On to today’s links:

Data Points
The average American family's "color wheel" of spending - Derek Thompson

Listicles
5 reasons why right now is a great time to shrink the US Army - Zack Beauchamp

Amazing
Ghostbusters is a "Reaganite carnival of ideological triumph" - Matt Phillips

Wow
A brutal and truly damning piece on Bill Gross's management of PIMCO - Gregory Zuckerman and Kirsten Grind
This article could be "be a fatal blow to the career of the greatest bond investor of all time" - Felix

Distinctions
Public policy should focus on raising standards of living, not mobility - James Surowiecki

Please Update Your Records
German austerity is a myth - Paul Krugman

Politicking
Walmart's shadow campaign to support raising the minimum wage - Dave Weigel

Oxpeckers
DealBook goes to great lengths to reveal who's behind a mildly funny fake Twitter account - Andrew Ross Sorkin
Everyone's a once-in-a-generation talent, you know - Erik Wemple
Why it's so hard to get graphs in newspapers - Paul Krugman

Robots
"This stool is made of three pieces and no humans have to get involved in assembly" - Gigaom

Takedowns
"Our name-brand financial writers are too big to practice journalism" - Alex Pareene

JPMorgan
After announcing 13,000 jobs cuts last year, JP Morgan will cut another 5,000 in 2014 - David Henry and Peter Rudegeair

Bankers
RBS gives back to the community by having its bankers unload forklifts two days a year - Max Colchester

Great Headlines
Post-Structuralist Mayor Disregards Your Epistemological Conjectures - Alex Balk

Hilarious Jargon
"100% autonomous penetration" - Tesla

Tax Arcana
The real secret elevators are at Credit Suisse. And they're used for tax evasion - FT

Study Says
Riding the train makes people more inclusive - Boston Globe

Your Daily Outrage
Temps can work at the same company for 11 years - ProPublica

Follow Counterparties on Twitter. And, of course, there are many more links at Counterparties. 

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Who Can Save Hollywood?

Movies and TV shows are choosing to film in Atlanta over Hollywood. What can Hollywood do about it?

the California exodus

Who Can Save Hollywood?

California has fought to stop runaway film and television production for more than four years now with a tax incentive program, but some say it’s not enough. The uphill battle to save California’s $17 billion-a-year industry.

— by Hunter Schwarz

Elsewhere in Entertainment

Someone flipped off Justin Timberlake at one of his shows. He handled it perfectly.

Alexander Skarsgård and Amanda Seyfried. Christian Bale and Drew Barrymore. And 22 other couples you never knew existed.

You should be following January Jones on Instagram. Her photos are pretty fantastic.

Haim covered Beyoncé’s "XO." This is excellent news for all of us.

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Business Today: Bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox goes dark in blow to virtual currency

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02/25/2014
Reuters Election 2012 Daily round-up of the day's top news from the campaign trail, the White House and all the politics in between
Bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox goes dark in blow to virtual currency
TOKYO/ST LOUIS (Reuters) - Mt. Gox, once the world's biggest bitcoin exchange, abruptly stopped trading on Tuesday and its chief executive said the business was at "a turning point" but gave no details.
U.S. home price rise momentum weakens, consumer confidence falls
(Reuters) - U.S. home price gains slowed in December, according to a closely watched housing survey on Tuesday that underscored a loss of momentum in the housing recovery, while consumer confidence drifted lower this month.
Wall Street dips; confidence data offsets retailers' gains
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks edged lower on Tuesday, easing back from record territory a day earlier as weaker-than-expected consumer confidence data offset gains in Home Depot and other retailers' shares.
JPMorgan says reducing 2014 profit target, jobs
(Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co , the largest U.S. bank, said on Tuesday that it is reducing both its target for profitability and its headcount in 2014.
House oversight panel seeks documents on Target breach
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A House of Representatives committee with broad investigative jurisdiction has turned up the heat on Target Corp, demanding that the No. 3 U.S. retailer turn over internal documents and messages describing how and when it learned of a recent massive consumer data breach.
Apple issues fix for glaring security flaw on Mac computers
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Apple Inc has issued fixes for a security flaw in its Macintosh computers that allows hackers to intercept data such as email, patching a major and embarrassing glitch that came to light several days ago.
VW Tennessee workers challenging UAW objection to plant vote
(Reuters) - Five Volkswagen workers are trying to challenge an objection filed by the United Auto Workers with the federal government following the UAW's defeat in a unionization vote at the Chattanooga, Tennessee, VW plant, an anti-union group said Tuesday.
GM more than doubles North American ignition-switch recall
DETROIT (Reuters) - General Motors Co on Tuesday more than doubled a recall, mostly in North America, to correct a condition that may allow the engine and other components including airbags to be unintentionally turned off.
Gaming magnate Adelson bets on himself to win Japan's casino race
TOKYO/MACAU (Reuters) - Billionaire Sheldon Adelson is willing to bet $10 billion that his Las Vegas Sands will become the leader in casino gambling in Japan, an offer he says his competitors can't match. What remains to be seen is whether one of the world's last great untapped gaming markets is willing to bet on him.
Repsol board approves $5 billion Argentine settlement
MADRID (Reuters) - Spanish oil major Repsol said its board of directors had approved a definitive $5 billion settlement from Argentina over assets seized in 2012, drawing a line under a two-year battle for compensation.
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Economic News
U.S. home price rise momentum weakens, consumer confidence falls
U.S. home prices rises to slow to single digits this year: Reuters poll
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