I say Google should forget France. Deny all of France access to Google, its services and anything Google is involved in. Watch the French go ballistic if that were to happen.
Re: Re: This is what the French fought against in WWII
Its like how during the industrial revolution in the Netherlands. Workers would throw their wooden shoes, sabots, into the gears of the textile machines. Origin of the word "Sabotage"
Any company should know the killing or alienating one's fan-base never turns out good. History has shown this. Back in 1998, Viacom went on a crusade to shut down any and all Star Trek fan sites with copyright and trademark infringement lawsuit threats. It created a huge backlash from the Star Trek community. Viacom eventually ceased their crusade and allow fair use of their IP.
I am all for creative commons. If they want it, its theirs. It took little effort to take the picture or video then post it to twitter. IMO, nothing worth demanding any compensation,
despite the fact that this is a hoax, everyone running for any public office should recall when Ronald Reagan used Bruce Springstien's "Born in the USA" without permission
As a digital forensics student, time stamps are not a way to verify integrity. They can be altered with any easily accessible, free metadata editor. The best way to confirm authenticity is to use stenography. The company I work for does remote security surveillance. When video is needed, it is extracted from the DVR or NVR. During the extraction process, a signature is embedded in the video file. If the video is presented in court and the authenticity is challenged, we provide our software and key to present the signature. If it is there, the video is authentic and genuine. If the signature does not appear, then the video file has been compromised and can be thrown out.
Cross the US border and demand asylum. Since he has not been convicted or charged with anything, this is obviously a political vendetta and not criminal. Thus the US may grant asylum based on his situation of injustice.
the unconstitutionality of this is the power shift. The Constitution gave responsibility of international trade and commerce to congress. Legally, to shift the responsibility to the President would require a constitutional amendment.
Re: Re: Realistically, how will this change anything?
Uh-huh. Tell that to people who have actually not shared anything online, but still get sued.
Then they tipped off the content owners somehow. Plus, firewalls are very useful. I have total disregard for the DMCA. Every DVD and CD I have was ripped to an audio or video file and then boxed away in the closet.
Re: Re: YOU HAVE A "RIGHT" TO PAY FOR COPIES! THAT IS IT, PIRATES!
This is why the RIAA fears the internet. Artists can interact directly with their consumers. Thus making the RIAA and the production studios obsolete. There are companies out there whose purpose is to create websites for musicians and help distribute their music for moderate fees and no percentage of revenue.
Whether illegal or not people will still make copies, convert formats for use on other devices and break DRM. The tools are out there and as long as people keep it to themselves and not share online, they is nothing to fear.
Re: Techdirt: you know about trademark, you should also no not to infringe copyright
I doubt anyone in this forum would consider two rectangles with inner captions and a figure a creative work or art. Most elementary kids could draw this and any teen or older could draw it just as easily.
This is the way it should be Company B invents: 10+10=20 Company C invents: 4*5=20 Company D invents: 40/2=20 Company E invents: 21-1=20 Company F invents: Sqrt(400)=20
Not this way Company A invents: “Method of creating output of 20”
All use different values. All use different mathematical operators. All are completely different yet produce the same output. All of which are covered by a unique patent specifying their formula to create 20. This is how it should be.
"Prohibiting temporary copies of works in electronic form (a thoroughly misguided and anti-innovation provision that has even been erased from the TPP). "
This basically means that to run any program is illegal. All programs work by loading temporary copies into memory for faster performance instead of running everything directly off the HDD. This would bring system performance to a crawl.
I don't see this any differently than the posting of instruction to make bombs, poisons, and other means of death and destruction online. One may have the know-how, but one also needs the motive and resources to make the devices.
On the post: French Regulating Body Says Google Must Honor Right To Be Forgotten Across All Of Its Domains
Forget France
On the post: Cox Sues Tempe, Arizona For Its Nefarious Plan To Bring Google Fiber To Town
legal standing
On the post: French Regulating Body Says Google Must Honor Right To Be Forgotten Across All Of Its Domains
Infinite loop
On the post: No Library For You: French Authorities Threatening To Close An App That Lets People Share Physical Books
Re: Re: This is what the French fought against in WWII
On the post: Nintendo Hates You: Massive Takedowns Of YouTube Videos Featuring Mario Bros. Fan-Created Levels
Re: Killing fan-base
On the post: Nintendo Hates You: Massive Takedowns Of YouTube Videos Featuring Mario Bros. Fan-Created Levels
Killing fan-base
On the post: The Crazy Permission-Asking Media Scrum That Descends When Photographic News Happens On Twitter
Creative Commons
On the post: Yes, I Was Deeked By Two Hoax Kim Davis Stories Today
despite being a hoax
On the post: Police Cameras Are Valuable... But Not If They Can Alter The Videos
As a digital forensics student
On the post: Authorities Can't Find Anything To Charge Alleged 'Extremist' With But Still Insist On 24-Hour Monitoring, Computer Restrictions
Re:
On the post: Fast Track Moves Forward And Now The Fight Is On TPP Directly
Re: Constitutionality
On the post: UK High Court Strips Away Short-Lived Private Copying Right, Buying Recording Industry's Demented Assertions
Re: Re: Realistically, how will this change anything?
Then they tipped off the content owners somehow. Plus, firewalls are very useful. I have total disregard for the DMCA. Every DVD and CD I have was ripped to an audio or video file and then boxed away in the closet.
On the post: UK High Court Strips Away Short-Lived Private Copying Right, Buying Recording Industry's Demented Assertions
Re: Re: YOU HAVE A "RIGHT" TO PAY FOR COPIES! THAT IS IT, PIRATES!
On the post: UK High Court Strips Away Short-Lived Private Copying Right, Buying Recording Industry's Demented Assertions
Realistically, how will this change anything?
On the post: Hey IMAX: IMAX Can't Threaten People With Trademark Infringement For Saying IMAX. IMAX. IMAX.
Re: Techdirt: you know about trademark, you should also no not to infringe copyright
On the post: Hey IMAX: IMAX Can't Threaten People With Trademark Infringement For Saying IMAX. IMAX. IMAX.
Super Bowl
On the post: Appeals Court May Have Finally Reversed An Error That Enabled Bogus Software Patent Claims
Simplest terms
Company B invents: 10+10=20
Company C invents: 4*5=20
Company D invents: 40/2=20
Company E invents: 21-1=20
Company F invents: Sqrt(400)=20
Not this way
Company A invents: “Method of creating output of 20”
All use different values. All use different mathematical operators. All are completely different yet produce the same output. All of which are covered by a unique patent specifying their formula to create 20. This is how it should be.
On the post: Meet RCEP: Yet Another Big Bad Trade Agreement No One Has Heard Of
running programs illegal
This basically means that to run any program is illegal. All programs work by loading temporary copies into memory for faster performance instead of running everything directly off the HDD. This would bring system performance to a crawl.
On the post: TISA Agreement Might Outlaw Governments From Mandating Open Source Software In Many Situations
Linux forbidden?
On the post: US Government Making Another Attempt To Regulate Code Like It Regulates International Weapons Sales
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