Santa Clara University law professor Eric Goldman has come up with a list of the “Best and Worst Internet Laws.”
I hope I’m not giving too much away: Best list, short. Worst list, long!
(Via TechDirt.)
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In the new issue of Cato Policy Report, Cato President and CEO John A. Allison argues that the Federal Reserve is increasing the long-term risk in our financial system through both its monetary and regulatory policies. Also in this issue, James D. Gwartney looks at the incomplete “public choice revolution,” and explains how mainstream economics is leaving both current students and the general public with a misleading, false, and romantic view of government and the operation of the democratic political process.
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News reports from China and France confirm that labor compensation is constantly rising.
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The Cato Institute tops a new measure of think tank performance in the United States, according to a recent report. Cato bested all other U.S. think tanks in the main category of “Aggregate Profile per Dollar Spent.” “I’m grateful to the Center for Global Development for showing that Cato gives its sponsors something I wish government gave more of to taxpayers: bang for the buck,” said Cato CEO John Allison.
Santa Clara University law professor Eric Goldman has come up with a list of the “Best and Worst Internet Laws.”
I hope I’m not giving too much away: Best list, short. Worst list, long!
(Via TechDirt.)
Tough questions for the FBI after seizing journalists’ phone records.
Today’s White House and OMB releases don’t go to the heart of transparency
It is up to the government, its defenders, and here Professor Epstein to show that security programs are within the government’s constitutional powers.
My recent observations about the relationship of civil liberties to national security have drawn a stern response from Cato’s own Jim Harper.

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