True. I once recorded a starling that was somehow able to whistle Ode to Joy, but when I uploaded the video to YouTube, it was immediately pulled down by Warner Music Group.
B..b..b...but whenever I say exactly the same thing the trolls tell me the costs are justified because someone has to reformat the first copy!
After scanning and OCR, someone has to sit and go through the book to correct any errors introduced during the OCR process. That can take up to a week. Of course, the way books are published now, that's something someone has to do anyway for the print edition. Basically, once those wages have been paid through the sale of the print edition, everything that comes in is pure profit. BTW, I'm saying this to you because you're not as annoying as a troll.
Yes, but this is just the statutes and treaties. Fat chance you are going to give your casebook away free too! Actually, we are. That will be under a CC BY, NC SA (a license that requires attribution, permits any non commercial use and tells those who modify that they must share the freedoms they were given.) It will be free to download and also available in a low cost print version — probably around $30, given its length, which would be about $130 cheaper than the other Intellectual Property casebooks.
"To the extent that Ms. Barnes is acting in her capacity as Commissioner of the ANC, then communications made or received by her would be communications of the ANC, irrespective of whether such communications were associated with her personal e-mail account."
I got in touch with AARC and pointed out to them where the AHRA says that Ford and GM's CD players are perfectly legal because their primary purpose is to play CDs, even if they can also rip them into MP3s. I'll see how it goes and update you all if possible.
As a result of the use of this photo, the suit says both the mother and daughter have “suffered anxiety, anger, hopelessness, fear and distrust of authority,” as well as “physical and emotional discomfort, injury and damage, apprehension, psychological trauma, loss of dignity, nightmares, loss of trust” and other injuries.
So shouldn't the guy's family be suing the state for releasing the image in the first place. Maybe they're suing the makers of the show because they know exactly how far they'd get if they did sue the right organisation.
Airbus filed a patent for a particularly cruel form of torture that would maximize the number of passengers that can be crammed into a plane. What if you didn't need to use your seat cushion as a flotation device?
The two links above both lead to the article about the ergonomic seats. I know because I had to view the source code of this page to get around the Barracuda block on shortened links.
The difference between our Network Optimization practices and throttling is network intelligence.
So basically, Verizon's Network Optimization practices are throttling with 'network intelligence'. (Scare quotes for the fact that mobile networks are amongst the most unintelligent network providers, and the most unintelligent here in the UK.)
The Spanish law proposal declares that editors cannot refuse the use of “non-significant fragments of their articles” by third parties. However, it creates a levy on such use to compensate editors and declares it an inalienable right (derecho irrenunciable).
Okay, then I will no longer drive traffic towards Spanish news articles by copy/pasting snippets with a link. They'll learn that those snippets are important when people don't want to read them because they haven't the slightest clue what the story's about beyond the headline.
On the post: UK Government Report Recommends Ending Online Anonymity
Hey, ConDems
On the post: City Of London Police Inserting 'This Website Has Been Reported To Police' Banner Ads On Websites With No Legal Review
Re: Re:
On the post: ISP Sues Former Customer Over Reviews Claiming His Internet Speed Was Less Than A Third Of What Was Advertised
They'll not get far in court then. Isn't the standard for defamation that the statements at issue have to be substantially untrue?
On the post: Yes, The Guys Using Legal Loopholes To Screw Over An AirBnB Host Likely Also Scammed Kickstarter Backers
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: There are real lessons in this...
No, we have to deal with you instead.
On the post: Yes, The Guys Using Legal Loopholes To Screw Over An AirBnB Host Likely Also Scammed Kickstarter Backers
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: There are real lessons in this...
It does. Would you like us to test it?
On the post: Using Spreadsheets In Bioinformatics Can Corrupt Data, Changing Gene Names Into Dates
Okay, which idiot didn't turn this 'default' feature off?
On the post: Family Sues Over Autopsy Images Appearing In Southland Opening Montage
Re: Re:
On the post: Amazon To Hachette And Authors: Here, Let Us Explain Basic Price Elasticity To You
Re:
After scanning and OCR, someone has to sit and go through the book to correct any errors introduced during the OCR process. That can take up to a week. Of course, the way books are published now, that's something someone has to do anyway for the print edition. Basically, once those wages have been paid through the sale of the print edition, everything that comes in is pure profit.
BTW, I'm saying this to you because you're not as annoying as a troll.
On the post: Only A Giant Telco Could Introduce Bandwidth Throttling And Spin It As 'Network Optimization'
Re: Computer networking
On the post: Duke Professors Looking To Make Legal Texts Affordable; Kicking Off With Intellectual Property Law
The casebook will be free too
On the post: Duke Professors Looking To Make Legal Texts Affordable; Kicking Off With Intellectual Property Law
Re: Re: The law shouldn't be locked up
Just about every professional legal textbook publisher there has ever been!
On the post: DC Circuit Court Tells District Officials They Can No Longer Hide From FOIA Requests By Using Personal Email Accounts
Booyah!
On the post: Only A Giant Telco Could Introduce Bandwidth Throttling And Spin It As 'Network Optimization'
Re: Re:
And taking away cells and base stations you still need because your consumer base hasn't shrunk. Amirite, EE?
On the post: Recording Industry Willfully Misreads The Law In Order To Sue Ford & GM For Having Built-in CD Rippers
On the post: Senate Introduces Its Version Of USA Freedom Act; Greatly Improved, But Could Still Be Better
Gee, thanks!
On the post: Family Sues Over Autopsy Images Appearing In Southland Opening Montage
So shouldn't the guy's family be suing the state for releasing the image in the first place. Maybe they're suing the makers of the show because they know exactly how far they'd get if they did sue the right organisation.
On the post: Family Sues Over Autopsy Images Appearing In Southland Opening Montage
Re: Re: Privacy isn't copyright
On the post: DailyDirt: Unicorns, Santa, Comfortable Airline Seating...
Errata
The two links above both lead to the article about the ergonomic seats. I know because I had to view the source code of this page to get around the Barracuda block on shortened links.
On the post: Only A Giant Telco Could Introduce Bandwidth Throttling And Spin It As 'Network Optimization'
So basically, Verizon's Network Optimization practices are throttling with 'network intelligence'. (Scare quotes for the fact that mobile networks are amongst the most unintelligent network providers, and the most unintelligent here in the UK.)
On the post: Spain Likely To Pass 'Google Tax'; Makes Paying For News Snippets An 'Inalienable Right' And A New Bureaucracy To Collect It
Stupid is as stupid does
Okay, then I will no longer drive traffic towards Spanish news articles by copy/pasting snippets with a link. They'll learn that those snippets are important when people don't want to read them because they haven't the slightest clue what the story's about beyond the headline.
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