E. Zachary Knight (profile), 18 Mar 2013 @ 10:15am
Re: Re: @"Ninja" - "how the fuck this is fair"?
It explicitly does NOT provide that those who don't pay for the works can still enjoy them for free.
That is dodging the actual question. We were asking how denying paying customers the content they paid for fair and just. Do you have an answer to that?
those who produce are to get the rewards, while those who merely use the products must TRADE something of value for goods or works.
So paying money, which most economists agree is something of value, does not guarantee access to a good or work?
Is Techdirt going full on constitutionalist, if not what does this have to do with tech or copyright, patents or tech innovation?
Money in politics is a common theme on Techdirt, especially when it comes to new laws such as CISPA, SOPA, PIPA, etc being proposed. The Question often comes down to "Who is buying this law?"
So with this little bit of information, we can learn how much it costs to "buy" a Congressman or Senator.
Should be fairly simple to intercept whatever the game sends to the server, parse it and write it to a flat file locally. Then do the reverse when the game loads a save file.
"The Senators and Representatives shall receive a Compensation for their Services, to be ascertained by Law, and paid out of the Treasury of the United States. They shall in all Cases, except Treason, Felony and Breach of the Peace, be privileged from Arrest during their Attendance at the Session of their respective Houses, and in going to and returning from the same; and for any Speech or Debate in either House, they shall not be questioned in any other Place."
The problem is not that 2 people in 7billion would come up with the same solution to the same problem. The problem is that 2 people in the same narrow expertise would come up with the same solution to the same problem. The fewer the number of people in a field and the more specialized the field, the more likely it is that individuals would independently come up with the same solution to the same problem.
There is no other way to consider it. That is the purpose of the obviousness requirement. It is not to measure whether a moron in a hurry would come up with the same idea, it is to measure if a software engineer would be able to write the same "software" a patent would cover or any other field of expertise..
I don't particularly like the insinuation that Mormons in particular support this kind of legislation. This kind of legislation has an emotional appeal to a vast array of emotional and shortsighted people of all faiths and lack thereof.
E. Zachary Knight (profile), 17 Jan 2013 @ 11:58am
Re: The Next Step
"I tell you, a clever person would form a political party."
People have been forming new parties for years now with little luck. The major problem with that idea is that the two major parties have so entrenched themselves in government and media that it is nearly impossible to gain national party status consistently between the 50 states. If you do manage to gain status in all 50 states, the problem then becomes a matter of exposure. With most media outlets being run by entrenched players in the current two parties, getting serious air time on their networks is near impossible.
Do we need new parties? Yes. Yes we do. However, short of a revolution, it will be near impossible for such an effort to take hold in the minds of the people.
Re: don't tell those guys freed after 20 years by DNA evidence
What the court is saying is that if convicted, the time he has spent imprisoned without bail will apply to the final sentence. Sounds pretty fair to me, all things considered.
Re: Re: Many anti-Manning people will argue that it is not his position to decide what is and what is not properly classified, and that's true.
If the corrupted have the power to suppress the evidence of their corruption through the classification process, exactly how are you proposing we go about exposing said secret corruption?
E. Zachary Knight (profile), 12 Dec 2012 @ 10:13am
Re: Re: Re: Change to "Nintendo's is one of the most" SUCCESSFUL!
The DRM itself is not the reason for Steam's success. It is all the features that come with agreeing to use DRM. The Achievements, the play on any device with the same account. The cloud saving and storage., The massive friends lists. The gifting features. The sales. Many many more positive features. With all that, the DRM seems pretty much unnecessary.
If all else fails, Yahoo could send them 2.7 billion Pesos claiming they thought that was what they were asking for. While $208 million is still no laughing matter, it is a far less bitter pill to swallow.
On the post: DRM Strikes Again: Digital Comics Distributor JManga Closing Down... And Deleting Everyone's Purchases
Re: Re: @"Ninja" - "how the fuck this is fair"?
That is dodging the actual question. We were asking how denying paying customers the content they paid for fair and just. Do you have an answer to that?
those who produce are to get the rewards, while those who merely use the products must TRADE something of value for goods or works.
So paying money, which most economists agree is something of value, does not guarantee access to a good or work?
On the post: How Much Does It Cost To Win Election To Congress?
Re:
Money in politics is a common theme on Techdirt, especially when it comes to new laws such as CISPA, SOPA, PIPA, etc being proposed. The Question often comes down to "Who is buying this law?"
So with this little bit of information, we can learn how much it costs to "buy" a Congressman or Senator.
On the post: How Much Does It Cost To Win Election To Congress?
Re:
On the post: Modder Makes SimCity Capable Of Offline Play Which Works Flawlessly
Re: Arrrrgh, Matey.
On the post: Healthcare Isn't A Free Market, It's A Giant Economic Scam
There are doctors fighting back.
http://reason.com/reasontv/2012/11/15/the-obamacare-revolt-oklahoma-doctors-fi
On the post: Obama Administration, Once Again, Says $222,000 For Sharing 24 Songs Is Perfectly Reasonable
Re: Uh, that's why it's called punishment
The "punishment" for sharing 24 songs online: $220,000 fine.
Do you not see a disconnect here?
On the post: Do You Live In The Constitution-Free Zone Of The US?
Re: Re:
"The Senators and Representatives shall receive a Compensation for their Services, to be ascertained by Law, and paid out of the Treasury of the United States. They shall in all Cases, except Treason, Felony and Breach of the Peace, be privileged from Arrest during their Attendance at the Session of their respective Houses, and in going to and returning from the same; and for any Speech or Debate in either House, they shall not be questioned in any other Place."
On the post: Mark Cuban Agrees: Independent Invention Is A Sign Of Obviousness; And Should Kill Patents
Re:
There is no other way to consider it. That is the purpose of the obviousness requirement. It is not to measure whether a moron in a hurry would come up with the same idea, it is to measure if a software engineer would be able to write the same "software" a patent would cover or any other field of expertise..
On the post: Iceland's MPAA Pirates Software; Tries To Defend Itself On Facebook; Runs Away
That's not piracy...
On the post: Another Legislator Hops On Board The 'Violent Video Game' Bandwagon; Introduces Redundant Labeling Bill
Re:
On the post: White House, Tiring of Death Stars And Deportation Requests, Ups 'We The People' Signature Threshold From 25,000 To 100,000
Re: The Next Step
People have been forming new parties for years now with little luck. The major problem with that idea is that the two major parties have so entrenched themselves in government and media that it is nearly impossible to gain national party status consistently between the 50 states. If you do manage to gain status in all 50 states, the problem then becomes a matter of exposure. With most media outlets being run by entrenched players in the current two parties, getting serious air time on their networks is near impossible.
Do we need new parties? Yes. Yes we do. However, short of a revolution, it will be near impossible for such an effort to take hold in the minds of the people.
On the post: The Rise Of E-Singles In Literature
Re: Re:
On the post: The Rise Of E-Singles In Literature
Re:
While 100% of the revenue would be the most ideal scenario for any creator, 70% of the sticker price is still leaps and bounds better than the
On the post: Bradley Manning's Defense: Releasing Over-Classified Information To The Public Would Be Good For The US, Not Bad
Re: don't tell those guys freed after 20 years by DNA evidence
On the post: Bradley Manning's Defense: Releasing Over-Classified Information To The Public Would Be Good For The US, Not Bad
Re: Re: Many anti-Manning people will argue that it is not his position to decide what is and what is not properly classified, and that's true.
On the post: To Avoid Controversy, 'Realtime' Microblogging In China Now Delayed By 7 Days
Re: Protest
On the post: Infographic: People Will Pay To Support Creators, Even When Free Is An Option
Re: Re: Re: How much total was received?
On the post: Nintendo Still Loves DRM; The Internet Not So Much
Re: Re: Re: Change to "Nintendo's is one of the most" SUCCESSFUL!
On the post: Court Orders Yahoo To Pay Mexican Yellow Pages Companies $2.7 Billion In Mystery Case
Dollars to Pesos
On the post: Copyright Troll Case Tossed For 'Fraud On The Court' After Abbott & Costello-Worthy Hearing
Obviously...
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