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Comment What ban? (Score 1) 1049

What ban is he wanting to reverse? I see that there's a minimum efficiency standard in the US:

In December 2007, many of these state efforts became moot when the federal government enacted the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, which requires all general-purpose light bulbs that produce 310–2600 lumens of light[8] be 30% more energy efficient (similar to current halogen lamps) than current incandescent bulbs by 2012 to 2014. The efficiency standards will start with 100-watt bulbs in January 2012 and end with 40-watt bulbs in January 2014.

Light bulbs outside of this range are exempt from the restrictions (historically, less than 40 Watts or more than 150 Watts). Also exempt are several classes of specialty lights, including appliance lamps, rough service bulbs, 3-way, colored lamps, and plant lights.

By 2020, a second tier of restrictions would become effective, which requires all general-purpose bulbs to produce at least 45 lumens per watt (similar to current CFLs). Exemptions from the Act include reflector flood, 3-way, candelabra, colored, and other specialty bulbs. (emphasis mine)

Hmmm, it looks like this is another (successful) troll by a Congressional Republican.

Comment Re:Huh! (Score 1) 459

If the NHTSA didn't exist Toyota would have had to spend money to fix the problem instead of paying ex-regulators to quash multiple investigations.

That's a nice false dichotomy you've set up. There is no proof, zero, that without the NHTSA Toyota would have spent any money on a fix. It's just as likely the executives would have spent it on their bonuses (or replacing worn out office chairs or investing in newer tech or hookers and blow, etc.).

The Courts

Submission + - Watchdog to Represent eBay Seller in Autodesk Suit (aecnews.com)

New10k writes: "Following up on a recent Slashdot entry, nonprofit consumer advocacy group Public Citizen has agreed to provide an attorney to eBay seller Timothy S. Vernor, who is suing Autodesk in federal court. This is not the first time Public Citizen has represented an eBay seller. The advocacy group has identified elements of the Vernor case as one of its key litigation priorities for 2007. The article includes an interview with Vernor's new lawyer, Greg Beck, who was a software engineer for Microsoft before going to law school."
Censorship

Submission + - Yahoo Censors Hosted Websites

FilthyPr0nBaron writes: In an email sent out today, Yahoo quietly notified customers of its Yahoo! Small Business web hosting service that its Terms of Service have been changed to include the "prohibition of adult content". The new ToS can be found here. Just a heads up to anyone who's using Yahoo for hosting and finds their site offline in the coming weeks.
NASA

Submission + - NASA announces "bizarre star" (nasa.gov)

Andrew Stellman writes: "NASA astronomers held a press conference announcing that a new ultraviolet mosaic from NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer shows a speeding star named Mira that's leaving an enormous trail of "seeds" for new solar systems. Mira is traveling faster than a speeding bullet, and has a tail that's 13 light-years long and over 30,000 years old. The website has images and a replay of the teleconference."

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