dltj + intellectual-property 2
SOPA and the Future of Internet Governance | David G. Post | Verdict | Legal Analysis and Commentary from Justia Verdict
february 2012 by dltj
Pull quote: "The disconnect between these two worlds—one in which physically distant actors can have a very substantial impact (good or bad) upon you or your property, and one in which it is difficult to bring law to bear upon those very actors—is at the heart of the problem that SOPA is trying to solve.
It’s a profoundly difficult problem. Some of us saw it coming, twenty years ago or so. An enormous amount of creative and innovative thinking is going to be required if we are to solve it in a sensible way.
SOPA does reflect some creative and innovative thinking; indeed, it embodies a radical new plan for the way that law enforcement will proceed on the Net. But the new plan is deeply flawed, and would set us on precisely the wrong course for dealing with this difficult challenge."
policy
intellectual-property
SOPA
legal
It’s a profoundly difficult problem. Some of us saw it coming, twenty years ago or so. An enormous amount of creative and innovative thinking is going to be required if we are to solve it in a sensible way.
SOPA does reflect some creative and innovative thinking; indeed, it embodies a radical new plan for the way that law enforcement will proceed on the Net. But the new plan is deeply flawed, and would set us on precisely the wrong course for dealing with this difficult challenge."
february 2012 by dltj
The Cooks Source Scandal: How a Magazine Profits on Theft
november 2010 by dltj
"For every reproduction that I found, I made efforts to contact the original copyright holder. And the above examples demonstrate unequivocally that nearly the entirety of Cooks Source‘s material has been taken from other sources and that, in at least four instances, Cooks Source did not obtain the necessary permission to reproduce the material. The onus is now on Cooks Source to produce the appropriate paperwork to demonstrate that it secured the release. But since Judith Griggs is uninterested in returning telephone calls, since she has demonstrated a lack of concern for copyright, and not a single writer, publisher, or organization has come forward with proof positive that Griggs has played by the rules, one can conclude from the presented evidence that Cooks Source is a magazine that profits on theft."
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internet
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publishing
copyright
intellectual-property
cooks-source
november 2010 by dltj
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