Ahh, thanks for ruining my hypothetical with your fancy lawyer "facts".
Could the counterfeiters use it as leverage towards maybe a merchandising deal? If I understand you correctly, they still could counter-sue and COULD win, though it would be tough. There would be legal costs involved for Rovio, at least.
Do the counterfeiters have any control over their own innovations that have build on Angry Birds? Clearly they're doing stuff that Rovio hasn't thought of, or Rovio wouldn't be looking to them for inspiration.
Could a counterfeiter then sue Rovio for copying the copies? Obviously the counterfeiters would have to admit to the original copying, but it might make for a really interesting legal ruling.
Ebert is considered an expert on movies - by many probably THE expert. if one is considering a purchase of the movie, and THE expert has said, "here's a better version that is also free", I don't think most people are going to buy/rent the original as well as the "perfect" version.
Although, I can't imagine that many of the people who follow Ebert on Twitter haven't seen the original already. The actual harm may end up being minimal, but I think your argument on why that would be the case is wrong.
Two of my friends got a full 24 pack of Miller Lite into FedEx Field pre-9/11. That's, what, $250 if you actually pay for it inside? The revenue of the food and drink vendors inside the stadium is much, much more important than preventing terrorism.
Re: I've always thought there needed to be Better Negotiating on the contract
Don't sell yourself short - for that deal, 10% is about what the PUBLISHER should keep, not you. You can do what you describe now, so long as you can market the book/s yourself.
You've got it wrong - the State Department is just protecting national interests. If we have to deal with crappy Microsoft products, the world has to deal with them, too. Imagine if the Bosnian government switched to Linux? Think how much money they'd save! Think how many extra processor cycles they'd be able to leverage without anti-virus software running all the time! We'd never be able to compete!
If he knew what he was doing in security and privacy, he'd know how to protect his personal data without destroying the hard drive. If "destroy the hard drive" is an answer to "how do I protect personal data?" at Deloitte, sign me up for a high-paying consulting job. I can destroy hard drives ALL DAY LONG.
Still, a very bad precedent to set - hopefully the court comes to its senses.
I don't find this argument as compelling as others - the data could always be stored offline (not that the law requires this, but still). I think it's dangerous to start piling on more and more arguments after someone like Rep Lofgren has already presented real problems stemming from the law.
Every argument that can be dismissed as "well, we can do X to fix that" weakens the overall objection to the law.
It should be noted that the NLRB only handles cases where there is a union - employers can still fire non-union employees for just about anything they want, including things said on Facebook. I think the laws on that sort of thing vary by state, but I also think most states set a pretty low bar.
This is a really positive thing for the rest of the country that thinks more open sharing of knowledge/content is generally a good thing. Nearly everyone gives more leeway when it's done in the name of education, and hopefully soon we can point to FWK and their success as a concrete argument in favor of scaling back copyright laws.
Can an email provider get around this by doing something to your content every 179 days to keep the clock resetting? Moving it to another server, maybe?
I think WalMart has a very strict "You don't make judgment calls, you follow the rules" policy. They probably feel they have to in order to maintain order in such a large organization.
I worked at a Ritz Camera in college (before everyone went digital). Our biggest local competitor was the WalMart photo lab, and we often got customers coming in with pictures that WalMart refused to print. WalMart had a strict no-nudity policy, which extended all the way to infants waist-up in the bath. While I can't imagine a reasonable person in our society finding that obscene or inappropriate, it violated policy, so they wouldn't print it.
I don't mean to support or condemn WalMart here - I'm not really sure what side I come down on - but I think that, based on corporate policy that the fired employees certainly should have known, this was the correct call by WalMart.
At my house, I can get Comcast cable or Verizon DSL. None of the others on the chart are an option. And I live in Washington DC, hardly an underserved backwater.
I like to see this data come out, but I think it's pretty unlikely that it leads to anything but a couple of blog posts.
On the post: Lindsay Lohan's Lawyer's Loopy Legal Argument Laced With Lifted Language?
Re:
On the post: Angry Birds CEO At Peace With Chinese Counterfeit Merchandise
Re: Re: Interesting IP question
Could the counterfeiters use it as leverage towards maybe a merchandising deal? If I understand you correctly, they still could counter-sue and COULD win, though it would be tough. There would be legal costs involved for Rovio, at least.
On the post: Angry Birds CEO At Peace With Chinese Counterfeit Merchandise
Interesting IP question
Could a counterfeiter then sue Rovio for copying the copies? Obviously the counterfeiters would have to admit to the original copying, but it might make for a really interesting legal ruling.
On the post: Roger Ebert Points People To The 'Ebert-Edit' Of Psycho On The Pirate Bay
I think you're wrong on harm
Although, I can't imagine that many of the people who follow Ebert on Twitter haven't seen the original already. The actual harm may end up being minimal, but I think your argument on why that would be the case is wrong.
On the post: NFL Ramps Up Security Theatre
Re: Re: Re: Re:
On the post: NFL Ramps Up Security Theatre
Re: Re:
On the post: Author Dumps Publisher At Book Launch Party
Re: I've always thought there needed to be Better Negotiating on the contract
On the post: Since When Did US Diplomats Become Microsoft Sales Staff?
Protecting US interests
On the post: Is Destroying A Hard Drive On A Work Issued Computer The Equivalent Of Hacking Or Fraud?
Not very good at his job
Still, a very bad precedent to set - hopefully the court comes to its senses.
On the post: How Data Retention Makes Us Less Secure
Not so compelling
Every argument that can be dismissed as "well, we can do X to fix that" weakens the overall objection to the law.
On the post: Labor Board Continues To Warn Companies Not To Fire People Based On Tweets
Note: This only applies to unionized labor
On the post: Flat World Knowledge Continues To Innovate: Make Your Own Textbook Platform
For the greater good
On the post: Feds: 4th Amendment Shouldn't Apply To Online Emails Because... That Would Make Us Have To Work Harder
Loopholes?
On the post: Rethinking Music Selling Incentives: Can A Pyramid Scheme Help Save Music Sales?
Re: Even if the distributed files aren't DRM-encumbered...
On the post: Rethinking Music Selling Incentives: Can A Pyramid Scheme Help Save Music Sales?
Re: stolen ideas
On the post: Judge Dumps Yet Another Mass Infringement Suit In Response To Single, Pro Se Motion To Quash
Confusion
On the post: Walmart Employees Fired For Disarming Gun-Toting Robber
Re: Policy
I worked at a Ritz Camera in college (before everyone went digital). Our biggest local competitor was the WalMart photo lab, and we often got customers coming in with pictures that WalMart refused to print. WalMart had a strict no-nudity policy, which extended all the way to infants waist-up in the bath. While I can't imagine a reasonable person in our society finding that obscene or inappropriate, it violated policy, so they wouldn't print it.
I don't mean to support or condemn WalMart here - I'm not really sure what side I come down on - but I think that, based on corporate policy that the fired employees certainly should have known, this was the correct call by WalMart.
On the post: Firm Involved In Planning Attack On Journalist Glenn Greenwald To Hurt Wikileaks Apologizes; Cuts Ties With HBGary Federal
That's not an apology
If you don't admit wrongdoing, you haven't apologized. Good for them for cutting ties with the other firm, but that doesn't count as an apology.
On the post: Netflix Shows Which ISPs Actually Perform Well... And Which Don't
Who cares? There's no competition
I like to see this data come out, but I think it's pretty unlikely that it leads to anything but a couple of blog posts.
On the post: Still Trying To Track Down Who Controls Patent Used Against Reddit, Digg, Fark, Slashdot & TechCrunch
Is that you, Hobbes?
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