Resources and Publications
Resource and Publication
Non-partisan report evaluates the candidates' positions on innovation-based policy.
As the 2012 presidential campaign moves in the final stage, ITIF is presenting general principles and...
As the 2012 presidential campaign moves in the final stage, ITIF is presenting general principles and...
As the 2012 presidential campaign moves in the final stage, ITIF is presenting general principles and...
Negotiations toward the TPP Agreement should conclude with a gold-standard trade agreement.
IT plays an important role in economic recovery.
The U.S. government should create and fund a research and development (R&D) roadmap for privacy.
Policymakers need to support research on spectrum to relieve capacity constraints.
Technical and policy recommendations to make voting more accessible for veterans who have been injured while...
Despite its efficacy, the United States continues to fall behind other nations in the generosity of its R...
Washington’s dogged faith in tax code simplicity will trump efforts to reshape the code as a driver of innovation and U.S. competitiveness.
The President’s 2012 budget proposal would make clean energy innovation a higher national priority.
The Administration’s corporate tax reform proposals would make our competitiveness worse. Instead, Washington should take a page out of the states’ economic playbooks.
Never before has a President made such a forceful statement in support of U.S. innovation policy. Yet his agenda can and should be bolder.
The Commerce Department should champion pro-innovation information policies, rather than narrowly focus on consumer privacy at the expense of other goals.
ITIF explains the benefits of Universal Service Fund and Inter-Carrier Compensation reform.
One out of four bits on the Internet is infringing content. How much bigger will piracy need to get before policymakers realize this is a problem?
Data Privacy Day provides a chance to reflect on the benefits of sharing data.
The State of the Union signals a shift in the debate on energy to a more concerted White House effort in this area.
ITIF Senior Analyst Stephen Ezell takes on Paul Krugman’s contention that only companies compete and that nations aren’t in economic competition with one another.
ITIF Senior Fellow Val Giddings will speak at the AAAS Charles Valentine Riley Memorial Lecture.
Senior Analyst Daniel Castro will speak at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's event on electronic data flow.
Senior Analyst Daniel Castro discusses strategies to build a more prosperous economy for health care data.
ITIF Senior Analyst Daniel Castro will discuss mobile applications and the state of Internet privacy.
Rob Atkinson will speak at the American Association for the Advancement of Science's Forum on Science...
ITIF Senior Fellow Richard Bennett will give a speech to the Australian Telecom User Group on the innovation...
Daniel Castro will speak at the 6th Annual ABA/FCBA Symposium on Privacy & Data Security.
Presentation at the Council of Graduate Schools Research Forum.
Daniel Castro will speak at the DMA in DC 2011 conference.
ITIF Senior Analyst Daniel Castro will be discussing online behavioral targeting and its implications for...
A strong, growing, and collaborative trade relationship between the United States and India could be in...
Ensuring the uninhibited flow of information, data, and ICT services across borders is vital both to...
ICANN should avoid choosing one business model over another by allowing both open and closed generic TLDs.
Vermont's H112 should not be enacted because it is based on a misunderstanding about biotech crops.
Pressured or mandatory technology transfer by other nations has, is, and will continue to negatively impact...
Testimony before the U.S. International Trade Commission making the case for the expansion of the ITA.
COPPA restricts the development of a robust Internet ecosystem for children and should not be strengthened.
Strong leadership in cloud computing is necessary to remain globally competitive, advance technology in the...
The FCC should not extend its authority to regulate the software installed on mobile devices.
The implications for the U.S. economy as a result of China's strategic decisions should be clear.
