Tag Archive for POTUS

UNIVAC and the 1952 Presidential Election

UNIVAC and the 1952 Presidential ElectionRobert Colburn, the research coordinator at the IEEE History Center, recalled the first time a computer, UNIVAC was used to predict a United States Presidential election in 1952. The IEEE historian says the story has been told and retold for decades.

UNIVAC computerCBS Television News used a UNIVAC computer to predict the 1952 U.S. Presidential election returns and — when the computer accurately predicted the Eisenhower landslide at around 8:30 in the election night broadcast — however, they doubted the prediction, and only hours later did CBS reveal that the prediction had been correct. It has become a classic cautionary tale of the dangers of allowing human preconception to interfere with logic and the evaluation of facts.

There is more to the story according to Mr. Colburn. The exact timeline of when UNIVAC’s made its initial prediction is not certain, but that UNIVAC’s correct prediction of a landslide victory was ostensibly ignored until later in the broadcast because of journalistic prudence and lack of confidence in the accuracy of the results.

Walter ChronkiteThe article cites Dr. Ira Chinoy, whose doctoral thesis examines the use of computers in broadcast journalism, estimates that the celebrated initial prediction of the Eisenhower landslide was made closer to 9:15. At 8:30, only slightly more than one million votes had been tallied; it took until at least 9:15 pm for three million votes to be transmitted from CBS to the Remington Rand factory in Philadelphia. CBS was receiving vote tallies from the wire services and teletyping them to Remington Rand’s factory in Philadelphia. Additional time to input the data and run the programs was required.

The 8:30 CBS segment merely gave the television audience a visual tour and introduction to UNIVAC; the second UNIVAC segment of the evening at 9:30 asked for a prediction, but the machine was not yet ready. By that point in the television coverage, the human commentators were already commenting on the surprising Eisenhower strength in the early returns. On the basis of pre-election polls, the race between Eisenhower and Stevenson had seemed to be close (Eisenhower held a slight edge), so the use of a state-of-the-art computer to predict what was expected to be a very close election had generated a lot of popular interest the blog speculates.

Dwight EisenhowerAt some point relatively early in the evening, UNIVAC predicted an Eisenhower landslide victory. However, the UNIVAC programmers decided that the prediction was too risky to release because it contradicted what the pollsters had been saying about the election about a tight race.

At 10:30, which was the third on-air UNIVAC segment, the computer predicted twenty-eight states for Eisenhower and twenty for Stevenson recalls the historian. This was a softer prediction and was in line with what the CBS commentators had already been telling their television audience. It was the first correct prediction of an overwhelming Eisenhower win that the UNIVAC programmers decided not to release because it contradicted the poll numbers.

UNIVAC logoThe 11:30 UNIVAC on-air prediction caused more drama. It reversed its earlier prediction, calling 24 states each for Eisenhower and Stevenson, and a slim 270 to 261 Electoral College vote margin for Eisenhower. But by 11:45, the prediction was corrected and UNIVAC predicted 100 to 1 odds of an Eisenhower victory.

UNIVAC made its predictions based on the difference between vote tallies and the expected vote in cities and counties, based on a statistical model extrapolated from past elections. By applying this deviation in places that had already voted to those which had not yet voted, an estimate of the present election could be obtained based on past tallies in those places. One of the ironies of the election of 1952 was that the returns from Massachusetts, one of the crucial early reporting states, were incorrectly reported to UNIVAC. That UNIVAC was nonetheless able to make accurate predictions.

a dummy control console was set up in the CBS studio in Grand Central Terminal, New York City for visual effect, its lights blinking evocativelyThe UNIVAC used by CBS was the fifth UNIVAC machine made. In the autumn of 1952, UNIVAC-5 was still in the Philadelphia factory of Remington Rand waiting for its future installation at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratories. Ironically, the author reports that because UNIVAC itself was too large to be moved conveniently, a dummy control console was set up in the CBS studio in Grand Central Terminal, New York City for visual effect, its lights blinking evocatively thanks to delay switches ordinarily used for making Christmas tree lights flash on and off.

There was some irony that a machine that debuted in the public spotlight of national TV would go on to do classified weapons work. UNIVAC contained mercury delay lines, which allowed it to store 1,000 words (45 bits each) as electric pulses in tubes of mercury. Up to one million characters could be stored and accessed on magnetic tape. It was these tapes, replacing punched cards, which made the UNIVAC revolutionary, and which gave it a tremendous speed advantage because it could access its own data instead of needing to wait for cards to be loaded. It could perform four hundred and sixty-five multiplications per second and had a clock speed of 2.25MHz.

A brief Youtube video of the CBS prediction can be seen here.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Tech Regulatory Capture

Tech Regulatory CaptureRegulatory capture occurs when governmental bodies created to act in the public interest instead advances the commercial or special interests that dominate the industry or sector it is charged with regulating. Regulatory capture is a form of government failure, as it can encourage large firms to exploit the public.

Former Sen. Chris Dodd Named MPAA Chief

Former Sen. Chris Dodd Named MPAA ChiefChristopher Dodd, the former five-term Democratic senator from Connecticut is the head of the Motion Picture Association of America. He sat on the Foreign Relations Committee, headed the Banking Committee, and co-authored the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. Among other things, he attempted to filibuster the legislation that immunized telecom companies from lawsuits over the Bush administration’s warrantless wiretapping program.

As head of the MPAA, he’s likely to be a little less friendly to the average netizen. The MPAA has lobbied hard for the controversial Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement.

It has pushed for the government to shutter websites suspected of hosting infringing material and is responsible for using the American legal system to sue U.S.-based torrent search engines out of existence. A case against Canadian-based Isohunt is pending.

Facebook Adds Friends in Washington

Facebook Prepares to Add Friends in WashingtonDemocrat Sheryl Sandberg, the former Clinton administration official is a chief operating officer for Facebook. Ms. Sandberg, is the company’s No. 2 official behind co-founder and chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg.

Republican Ted Ullyot, a former clerk for Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia is the social networker’s general counsel. Mr. Ullyot, was a White House lawyer and chief of staff for Alberto Gonzales when he was attorney general in the George W. Bush administration. Facebook  told the Los Angeles Times that Mr. Ullyot “has extremely strong connections with the Republican Party, and we think that’s a good thing.”

Facebook Adds to Its Public Policy Staff

Facebook Adds to Its Public Policy StaffFacebook increased its Republican credentials by adding Catherine Martin, who is the site’s first director of public policy. Previously, Ms. Martin worked for President George W. Bush, serving as deputy assistant to the president and deputy communications director for policy and planning.

Facebook May Hire Former Obama Aide

Facebook May Hire Robert Gibbs, Former Obama AideFacebook is in talks to hire Robert Gibbs, President Obama’s former White House press secretary, for a senior role in helping to manage the company’s communications, people briefed on the negotiations told the New York Times.

Mr. Gibbs, who left the White House in February after two years on the job, had planned to help set up President Obama’s re-election campaign before taking a private-sector job, these people said. A job for Mr. Gibbs at Facebook could be worth millions of dollars. While details of his potential compensation package have yet to be discussed, people briefed on the talks said that he would receive a cash salary as well as shares ahead of the initial offering. Some investors have valued Facebook at more than $60 billion and could be the largest offering in history. Mr. Gibbs and a spokesman for Facebook declined to comment.

Facebook Woos Washington

Facebook Woos WashingtonThe Daily Beast points out that Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg’s company has 600 million members, making it about twice as big as the United States. The Daily Beast says that Facebook needs to get as cozy as it can with the U.S. Government and Barack Obama. This company is gathering more personal information about more people than any other company ever, even more than Google. Suddenly it is dawning on everyone, including members of Congress, just how much power Facebook is amassing.

Co to counter the trend Facebook has hired two more former government officials.

  • Elliot Schrage worked at the Council on Foreign Relations and Google before joining Facebook. Mr. Schrage, a lawyer by training, serves as Facebook’s head of global communications and public affairs.
  • Chris Hughes, a Facebook co-founder, ran Obama’s 2008 social networking operation via a website called My.BarackObama.com.

$35,000 For a Dinner With Obama

Yelp Just Paid $35,000 For A Steak Dinner With ObamaAfter President Obama’s love-in speech video on Facebook, another group of tech luminaries got a meeting with POTUS. The steak dinner at the home of Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff cost $35,000-a-plate. According to Business Insider other Silicon Valley big-shots in attendance included:

Related articles
  • Facebook Prepares to Add Friends in Washington (nytimes.com)
  • Chris Dodd shows how Washington works (salon.com)

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Tech Titans Talk Tax Cuts with POTUS

Tech Titans Talk Tax Cuts with POTUSFortune is reporting that a group of tech, pharmaceutical, and energy giants are lobbying for a tax cut that would allow them to bring home the estimated $1 trillion they’ve got parked overseas at a steeply discounted rate. Fortune’s sources say that Apple (AAPL), Cisco (CSCO), and Oracle (ORCL)  are among the major players looking to win a one-year tax amnesty on their foreign earnings, allowing them to repatriate that money at a tax rate of about 5%, instead of the 35% they face now.

Multinationals prevailed on Congress to approve a one-year tax holiday once before, as part of a jobs package in 2004. Back then, the companies argued the relief would help them boost economic growth because they’d plow their repatriated money into research, investment, and hiring. And while plenty of outfits benefited from the break – 843 corporations made use of the holiday, bringing back a total of $362 billion, according to the IRS — the broader economic benefits were dubious.

The Treasury Department wrote rules trying to make sure that the recovered cash was in fact invested back into the companies. But money is fungible. Although the rules expressly prohibited using the funds for dividend payments or stock buybacks, later analysis has shown participants sent most of it to shareholders anyway. One study cited by Fortune from the National Bureau of Economic Research found that for every dollar of repatriated cash, companies bumped up shareholder payouts between 60 and 92 cents.

A tax holiday would bring a substantial amount of cashback to the United States and paying that out to shareholders is good for the economy,” said study co-author Kristin Forbes, an economics professor at MIT’s Sloan School of Management and a member of then-President George W. Bush‘s council of economic advisers told Fortune. “But if you’re a politician claiming this will create a lot of jobs or new investment, it isn’t supported by the data.”

In order to sell the deal, Cisco CEO John Chambers and Oracle president Safra Catz argued in an October editorial in the Wall Street Journal that a second holiday would help put Americans back to work. But they don’t promise that companies would drive all of their repatriated money directly into job-creating investments. They acknowledge that companies might pass the money along to shareholders again. But Mr. Chambers and Ms. Catz argue on top of direct investments, the tax cut holiday would spur a new stimulus by boosting markets, thereby increasing consumer confidence. And they say the tax revenue itself could fund $50 billion worth of credits to encourage new hiring — a sum only possible in the unlikely event companies decide to bring home the entirety of their overseas reserves.

President Obama’s recent dinner with Silicon Valley’s tech titans was a star-studded event according to TechCrunch.

Obama tech- dinner toast

Invitee included Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Apple CEO Steve Jobs, Yahoo (YHOO) CEO Carol Bartz, Cisco’s CEO John Chambers, Twitter CEO Dick Costolo, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison, Netflix (NFLX) CEO Reed Hastings, Genentech Chairman Art Levinson; Google (GOOG) CEO Eric Schmidt; former state controller and venture capitalist Steve Westly Doerr, and Stanford University President John Hennessy. The event was held at Kleiner Perkins partner John Doerr’s home.

After the dinner, White House press secretary Jay Carney said the group talked about ways to invest in innovation and how to increase jobs in the private sector. He said Mr. Obama also discussed proposals to invest in research and development and his goal of doubling exports in five years.

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I don’t think it’s unreasonable to assume that what POTUS calls, “increase jobs in the private sector” would mean a “tax cut holiday” for the tech titans.

It should be no surprise that the Tech Titans who supped with POTUS were big political contributors and supporters of the tax cut holiday. What happened to “Yes We Can”?

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Internet Kill Switch in Place

Internet Kill Switch in PlaceThere is a great hub-bub in the blog-o-sphere about the new “Internet Kill Switch.” If one reads the Protecting Cyberspace as a National Asset Act of 2010, (S. 3480) which the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee unanimously approved which in part says:

If the President determines there is a credible threat to exploit cyber vulnerabilities of the covered critical infrastructure, the President may declare a national cyber emergency, with notification to Congress and owners and operators of affected covered critical infrastructure. The notification must include the nature of the threat, the reason existing security measures are deficient, and the proposed emergency measures needed to address the threat. If the President exercises this authority, the Director of the NCCC will issue emergency measures necessary to preserve the reliable operation of covered critical infrastructure. Any emergency measures issued under this section will expire after 30 days unless the Director of the NCCC or the President affirms in writing that the threat still exists or the measures are still needed.

Sponsor of the proposed Act Senator Joe Lieberman (I- CT) recently told CNN‘s Candy Crowley about whether the proposed Act was an “Internet Kill Switch”,

” … total misinformation.,,, We need the capacity for the president to say, Internet service provider, we’ve got to disconnect the American Internet from all traffic coming in from another foreign country …  This is a matter of national security. A cyber attack on America can do as much or more damage today by incapacitating our banks, our communications, our finance, our transportation, as a conventional war attack.  So I say to my friends on the Internet, relax… take a look at the bill. And this is something that we need to protect our country.”

Lieberman goes on to say that the U.S should do this because China does, “Right now, China, the government, can disconnect parts of its Internet in a case of war. We need to have that here, too.

If one takes a closer look at the existing laws, the President already has a kill switch. Section 706 of The Communications Act of 1934 (last amended in 1996) says in part,

Upon proclamation by the President that there exists a state or threat of war involving the United States, the President, if he deems it necessary in the interest of the national security …   may designate, (1) suspend or amend the rules and regulations applicable to any or all facilities or stations for wire communication within the jurisdiction of the United States as prescribed by the Commission, (2) cause the closing of any facility or station for wire communication and the removal therefrom of its apparatus and equipment, or (3) authorize the use or control of any such facility or station and its apparatus and equipment by any department of the Government under such regulations as he may prescribe, upon just compensation to the owners. (emphasis added)

Big tech firms support the proposed “Internet Kill Switch.”  McAfee’s vice president for government relations called the  Lieberman Bill a “very important piece of legislation.” Big tech firms get several benefits for their support of the bill which has language that will give them immunity from civil lawsuits and also reimburse them for any costs incurred if the Internet is shut down for a time. The legislation provides tech firms with new protections for their poor business practices. If a software company’s programming error costs customers billions, or a broadband provider intentionally cuts off its customers in response to a federal command, neither would be liable according to the bill.

Declan McCullagh at CNET writes that if there’s an “incident related to a cyber vulnerability” after the President has declared an emergency and the affected company has followed federal standards, plaintiffs’ lawyers cannot collect damages for economic harm. And if the harm is caused by an emergency order from the Feds, not only does the possibility of damages virtually disappear but the U.S. will even bail out the firms.

Rep. Jane Harman, (Dem – CA) has introduced a House version of the bill, H.R. 5548,, but it has not yet passed the committee.

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There does not seem to be any language in the Lieberman bill to retract the Kill Switch in the Telecom Act, so Lieberman is right that his bill does bot include a “kill switch” because it has been in place for over 75 years. This is just another example of Washington’s double-talk.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Insurers Astroturf Facebook

Insurers Astroturf FacebookThe Business Insider reports that health insurance industry trade groups opposed to President Obama’s health care reform bill are paying Facebook users. The trade group is Facebook users virtual currency to send letters to Congress protesting the bill. When Facebook users play a social game, like “FarmVille” or “Mafia Wars,” the gamers get virtual currency in three ways:

  1. Winning it playing the games
  2. Paying for it with real money
  3. By accepting offers from third parties who agree to give the gamer virtual currency so long as that gamer agrees to try a product or service. This is done through an “offers” provider — a middleman that brings the companies, Facebook, and the Facebook game maker’s users together.

Blue Cross Blue Shield opposition to healthcare reform

It’s this third method that an anti-reform group called “Get Health Reform Right” which is funded and directed by mega-insurer Blue Cross Blue Shield according to SourceWatch is using to pay gamers virtual currency for their opposition to health-care reform. This practice of paying people to act like political supporters is called “astroturfing,” because of the fake grass-roots campaigning. The Insurance Companies’ Political Action Committee astroturfing is targeting women in their 30s and 40s and teenagers of both sexes who tend to be Facebook gamers according to Business Insider.

Instead of asking the gamers to try a product, “Get Health Reform Right” requires gamers to take a survey, which, upon completion, automatically sends the following email to their Congressional Representative, including:

“I am concerned a new government plan could cause me to lose the employer coverage I have today. More government bureaucracy will only create more problems, not solve the ones we have.”

Under the “Who We Are” tab on GetHealthReformRight.org (appears down on 12-10-09) the following organizations are listed:

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This practice is not illegal. Most EULA’s are so broad, ambiguous, and slanted toward the vendor that most anything is possible. The ethics of this practice are pretty shady in my opinion. Based on the list of companies that back GetHealthReformRight.org. I find it extremely hard to believe that these insurance companies have nothing but their own best interests in mind.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.