Court: To rule on the Government’s motion, we must consider several factors, including whether the Government has shown that it is likely to succeed on the merits of its appeal, the degree of hardship caused by a stay or its denial, and the public interest in granting or denying a stay.
Trumplation: You gotta figure in a whole lot of things, if they're gonna win, big things, like hard stuff caused and the other guy.
C: We assess those factors in light of the limited evidence put forward by both parties at this very preliminary stage and are mindful that our analysis of the hardships and public interest in this case involves particularly sensitive and weighty concerns on both sides.
T: It's too soon to tell, but we're taking lots, a whole lot of stuff into account.
C: Nevertheless, we hold that the Government has not shown a likelihood of success on the merits of its appeal, nor has it shown that failure to enter a stay would cause irreparable injury, and we therefore deny its emergency motion for a stay.
T: The so-called government's screwed. They got nothing, they can produce nothing so they get bupkus.
In other words, the government doesn't need to have access to all of our communications on the internet in order to protect systems which shouldn't be on the internet.
If there is a danger to secured SCADA systems or air traffic control communications, then rightfully the government should have some authority to police those systems.
It's interesting that a legislator would want this law seeing as how much of the government is perfectly comfortable with asking people to hand over vials of their own urine in order to get/stay employed.
We should all get down on our knees and thank everything that's holy that the US DOJ has caught, convicted, imprisoned and otherwise deactivated all violent criminals and terrorists so that they can now devote the proper amount of attention to saving Hollywood from the Internet.
This would be great if it were ALL and ONLY RIAA musicians, and the music was locked down as tight as possible and nothing but 22khz, 1-minute streams, no cover art larger than 320x240 pixels, etc.
Then, the RIAA could stop trying to destroy the internet in order to "stop piracy" and everyone else could go on about their lives.
As the commenter up thread said, we need a .movie and .cable domain too.
Why would the Department of Entertainment Justice risk having something silly like evidence get in the way of a perfectly good case against a "rogue site"?
On the post: Court Unanimously Keeps Lower Court's Injunction Against Trump's Immigration Order In Place
Trumplation
Court: To rule on the Government’s motion, we must consider several factors, including whether the Government has shown that it is likely to succeed on the merits of its appeal, the degree of hardship caused by a stay or its denial, and the public interest in granting or denying a stay.
Trumplation: You gotta figure in a whole lot of things, if they're gonna win, big things, like hard stuff caused and the other guy.
C: We assess those factors in light of the limited evidence put forward by both parties at this very preliminary stage and are mindful that our analysis of the hardships and public interest in this case involves particularly sensitive and weighty concerns on both sides.
T: It's too soon to tell, but we're taking lots, a whole lot of stuff into account.
C: Nevertheless, we hold that the Government has not shown a likelihood of success on the merits of its appeal, nor has it shown that failure to enter a stay would cause irreparable injury, and we therefore deny its emergency motion for a stay.
T: The so-called government's screwed. They got nothing, they can produce nothing so they get bupkus.
On the post: Charles Carreon Keeps Digging: Promises To Subpoena Twitter & Ars Technica To Track Down Parody Account
Found This
On the post: The Politicians Who Cried 'Cyber Pearl Harbor' Wolf
Re: Didn't read it all..... lol
In other words, the government doesn't need to have access to all of our communications on the internet in order to protect systems which shouldn't be on the internet.
If there is a danger to secured SCADA systems or air traffic control communications, then rightfully the government should have some authority to police those systems.
But this is not what they are asking for.
On the post: The Politicians Who Cried 'Cyber Pearl Harbor' Wolf
We Can Only Hope
On the post: Dear Hollywood: The 'Stakeholders' For Copyright Policy Don't Fit In A Room
Ha Ha Ha
The public isn't supposed to participate in copyright, they're just supposed to buy things protected by copyright.
On the post: It's Amazing The Lengths 'Music Supporters' Will Go To In Trying To Trash Success Stories
What Next?
Would they call themselves the VCAA?
On the post: Chinese Copyright Proposal Would Allow Compulsory Licensing Of Music After Three Months
Headline
Obama, "the RIAA Won't Let US Back Down"
On the post: Nathan Myhrvold's Delusions: Patent Wars 'Vindicate' The Importance Of Patents
Makes You Wonder
On the post: Why You Can't Have A Tacocopter Drone Deliver You A Taco For Lunch Today
Lemonade
So why not tweak the business model a bit and offer a murder-for-hire drone service?
This just means I'm going to revive my taco delivery idea, Tacobruchet™
On the post: Should We Outlaw Employers From Asking For Social Networking Logins?
Inevitable
On the post: Why Anti-Circumvention Laws Are Evil: Hollywood Gets To Veto DVD Jukebox, Despite Complete Lack Of Infringement
Awesome
On the post: UK Decides Hollywood, US Gov't's Interests More Important Than Own Citizens; Extradites Student For Linking
Let's Just Be Grateful
On the post: New Rules To Block 'Distracted Driving' Will Likely Make Things Worse, Not Better
Not So Fast
That pretty much put an end to people driving faster than 85.
On the post: Always A Gatekeeper: RIAA Backs .music Proposal... If It's Only Limited To 'Accredited' Musicians
dotBlackHole
Then, the RIAA could stop trying to destroy the internet in order to "stop piracy" and everyone else could go on about their lives.
As the commenter up thread said, we need a .movie and .cable domain too.
On the post: Megaupload Users Plan To Sue... As Their Files & Data Are About To Be Destroyed
Damn Straight
On the post: Misguided Twitter Protests... And Why Twitter Could Have Explained Itself Better
Under the Radar
I wonder if Twitter's clumsy announcement was worded specifically to be received positively by leaders of oppressive regimes?
On the post: UK Court Says You Can Copyright The Basic Idea Of A Photograph
Crowd Sourcing
I have a photo I need to submit.
On the post: Megaupload Shutdown Means Other Companies Turning Off Useful Services
Exodus
On the post: Why Apple Will Not Be Part Of The Real Tablet Revolution
So What
I don't think Apple will mind - they (and Microsoft) will just sue all the Android device makers and programmers to make up the difference.
On the post: Oh Look, I've Done 40,000 Techdirt Blog Posts
Cheers
Here's to the next 40k!
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