As much as I would love to influence my EU representative he/she is not dependent upon my votes. In Spain they are appointed by the respective political parties in proportion to the number of representative seats they have won in the general election.
Indeed in Spain there is no requirement that any "representative" actually be from your area and those "winning" the seats are in fact nominated by the relevant political party based upon their votes garnered in the general election. The parties may fire the representative and replace them with anyone else from their party. The parties control all aspects of the representatives including how much they can earn. So, in Spain a representative is more interested in keeping their seat than doing anything of importance for the public.
The entire vote for the party concept is ridiculous. In such a system there is no need for actual representatives (since they only tow the party lines). Rather, we could all save a huge amount if a single representative from each party showed up and was able to vote that number of votes that they represent.
Courts have long differentiated between commercial and non-commercial speech when viewing the impacts of laws and regulations. I really see no difference here. The issue clearly involves a commercial transaction. I do not see it as over reaching to require that property owners provide documentation confirming that they have in fact registered their property for use on the platforms. Indeed, the platform could easily confirm registration directly with the governmental authority.
You obviously have not heard. There is a new agency - the FCP - who also searches the boxes of unsuspecting expats who move out of the US to another country. The confiscate any book or other material that has not been authorized for distribution in the country of destination. They are nice enough to place a card inside the box informing you that if you wish to recover their confiscated items you can change your mind about moving................
By removing the CS provisions from trade deals is the EU now opening themselves up to a Corporate Sovereignty claim based on the fact that the provision was removed?
I can only wonder why Slater would agree to an obligation to report all income from the image. Net result: PETA - who had no real standing has now obtained a contractual right to a perpetual royalty stream. I can only imagine the "demands" Slater will be receiving in the future to have his finances audited for compliance.
Most comments miss the real issue here - jurisdiction. Google was indeed subject to the jurisdiction of the Canadian courts. As such, Canada could order Google to do whatever the court was legally permitted to order under the laws of CANADA. The fact that this required Google to undertake actions outside of Canada is irrelevant.
What this case does show is that while the Internet is global, the judicial system is inherently linked to specific jurisdictions. In several areas treaties were created to deal with similar issues - an example is maritime shipping.
Here Google's only available option is to go from jurisdiction to jurisdiction and obtain court orders that actual prohibit Google from undertaking the action within each specific jurisdiction.
What does informs mean? It could be "sorry nothing here to see, move along". It could mean we looked but there was just so much shit in the files we could not find anything......
The MPAA in conjunction with the White House announced today that Chris Dodd has been nominated as the director of the newly minted Department of Copyright (a/k/a MPAA East)..........
And now for other news.....
Nothing to see here folks, move along, move along.
He may have waived his moral rights. HOWEVER, even if he neither waived nor assigned his moral rights, he ASSIGNED all of his "causes of action" which would include any right to recover anything. This was extremely clear from the language:
TRANSFERS and ASSIGNS ..... all right, title and interest to the Sculpture and all materials related thereto ..... including but not limited to the copyright therein, and any CAUSE OF ACTION that Tobin may have with respect thereto.
One can retain all rights BUT also assign the benefits of a claim based upon those rights.
Re: Goodbye Politicians, Too bad you are criminals
I think this is a great law!! Think if the roar of silence. No more politicians promising shit they can and will never provide. No more PACs. It would be truly wonderful. And with the politicians and PACs silenced there is no reason for Joe or Joan public to publish anything. So no risk of harm to the masses.
Sort of like a law that obligates advertisers to state "claims not independently substantiated" if they cannot link to an I dependent laboratory proving the product performs as advertised.
In the US he has to show malice because his allegations for damage admit she is.
He filed in the US to obtain discovery that he can then use in the U.K. action - the U.K. Does not require malice to be proven and in fact imposes the burden upon the defendant to show truth.
Duh.......Its all about timing. People who claim to be transparent do so only when it is beneficial OR it is mandated by some authority. If you remember that rule it is easy to understand Chicago's belief that it is "transparent" and at the same time requiring each request to proceed to litigation.
Before we launch into creating rights we need to fully understand what we are actually addressing.
AI - this is as yet a largely undefined term that means anything from generating responses based upon rapid search metrics and the ability to adjust those metrics based upon observed input. This is not "intelligence" IMHO. This is repetitive behavior no different than a mouse learning to navigate a maze based upon rewards.
Sencient. When is anything deemed to be sentient and under what standards?
Robot. And exactly what is a robot? Is it any machine or a machine that has human-like features?
GO SLOW. This is an area where we need to go it slow. We in the US are still reeling in many respects from court decisions granting "personification" to corporate entities (e.g. Family United and political contributions).
Some point to the difficulties in making the "creators" responsible for behavior of an "AI" ("Is it Microsoft's fault? They just created the base AI. If later interactions teach it bad behavior, that's not their fault. No more than they're responsible for crimes committed using Windows or Word.). In my view the current legal structure already provides for this. MS may be at fault if it can be shown that they should have inserted protective programming limitations (just as any manufacturer could be responsible for not building in protection devices or a pharma company could be responsible for adverse reactions to drugs).
Going slow may result in more moderate advances in this field. However, if we have learned anything from the LOT craze it is measure 2x and cut 1x.
I had always thought that generically altered seeds would produce sterile plants.
I don't understand how a patent can apply to prevent seeds that have been created by the plant. The seeds are not a derivative work and the farmer did not "create" the seed as a copy. How can infringement occur? If Monsanto did not prevent the 1st generation plant from producing seeds that could germinate that seems to be its own decision not to interfere with the natural reproduction system of the plant.
There must be a contractual obligation created in the purchase agreement for the underlying seeds. However, as a contract it would be subject to the laws of the various jurisdictions (or the jurisdiction specified in the contract). It would be interesting to see if the underlying agreement clearly specifies this AND whether is properly presented so as to be enforceable against farmers who I (ignorantly) presume to be illiterate.
How would this stand up with other genetic uses? For example, I sell you genetically altered sperm for a bull and you use it to artificially insimonate a cow. How does this restrict the use of any offspring of the 1st calf who was given birth by natural processes?
Mike, I would like to offer whatever services might be appropriate. I am a California licensed attorney and am happy to help with strategy, drafting etc in connection ith your defense. I can be reached at paul@law.es.
I am the legal guardian of my minor child. As such I may (and in many cases must) exercise his legal rights. I may (and in many cases must) approve or consent to the waiver of his rights. This should include the right of privacy as noted in the daughter's lawsuit.
The main issue with Archive.org is that it preserves the underlying hamlet and NOT the actual image. Thus html code that "calls" another file from another location will display whatever that file currently contains. An example is a d date code call.
A far better solution is screenshots.com which captures an actual static image of the homepage. While it doesn't capture other pages it does a great job of showing how tha ho epage actually appeared.
So, is archive.org evidence? Yes. BIT it is open to a great deal of attack in depending on what the archive actually contains and whether or not there have been changes.
On the post: European Parliament Moves Forward With 'Terrorist Content' Regulation That Will Lead To Massive Internet Censorship
Non-democracy in Spain
As much as I would love to influence my EU representative he/she is not dependent upon my votes. In Spain they are appointed by the respective political parties in proportion to the number of representative seats they have won in the general election.
Indeed in Spain there is no requirement that any "representative" actually be from your area and those "winning" the seats are in fact nominated by the relevant political party based upon their votes garnered in the general election. The parties may fire the representative and replace them with anyone else from their party. The parties control all aspects of the representatives including how much they can earn. So, in Spain a representative is more interested in keeping their seat than doing anything of importance for the public.
The entire vote for the party concept is ridiculous. In such a system there is no need for actual representatives (since they only tow the party lines). Rather, we could all save a huge amount if a single representative from each party showed up and was able to vote that number of votes that they represent.
On the post: Ninth Circuit Tells Online Services: Section 230 Isn't For You
The TYPE of speech matters
Courts have long differentiated between commercial and non-commercial speech when viewing the impacts of laws and regulations. I really see no difference here. The issue clearly involves a commercial transaction. I do not see it as over reaching to require that property owners provide documentation confirming that they have in fact registered their property for use on the platforms. Indeed, the platform could easily confirm registration directly with the governmental authority.
On the post: Apple Didn't Delete That Guys iTunes Movies, But What Happened Still Shows The Insanity Of Copyright
Frontier Copyright Police
On the post: Lawyers Gearing Up To Hit UK With Corporate Sovereignty Claims Totalling Billions Of Dollars Over Brexit
Removing Corporate Sovereignty in Trade Deals
:-)
On the post: Monkey Selfie Case Reaches Settlement -- But The Parties Want To Delete Ruling Saying Monkeys Can't Hold Copyright
STUPID IS AS STUPID DOES......
I can only wonder why Slater would agree to an obligation to report all income from the image. Net result: PETA - who had no real standing has now obtained a contractual right to a perpetual royalty stream. I can only imagine the "demands" Slater will be receiving in the future to have his finances audited for compliance.
On the post: Google Asks US Court To Block Terrible Canadian Supreme Court Ruling On Global Censorship
Canada is Correct Legally
What this case does show is that while the Internet is global, the judicial system is inherently linked to specific jurisdictions. In several areas treaties were created to deal with similar issues - an example is maritime shipping.
Here Google's only available option is to go from jurisdiction to jurisdiction and obtain court orders that actual prohibit Google from undertaking the action within each specific jurisdiction.
On the post: NSA Boss: Section 702 Should Be Renewed Because It Helped Prove Russia Hacked Election
Informs ???
On the post: Chris Dodd 'Stepping Down' From MPAA
Chris Dodd To Run New Copyright Office
The MPAA in conjunction with the White House announced today that Chris Dodd has been nominated as the director of the newly minted Department of Copyright (a/k/a MPAA East)..........
And now for other news.....
Nothing to see here folks, move along, move along.
On the post: Artist Sues Church For Moving His 9/11 Memorial Sculpture
Waiver vs Assignment
TRANSFERS and ASSIGNS ..... all right, title and interest to the Sculpture and all materials related thereto ..... including but not limited to the copyright therein, and any CAUSE OF ACTION that Tobin may have with respect thereto.
One can retain all rights BUT also assign the benefits of a claim based upon those rights.
On the post: California Lawmakers Looking To Make Bad Law Worse By Banning 'False' Political Speech
Re: Goodbye Politicians, Too bad you are criminals
Sort of like a law that obligates advertisers to state "claims not independently substantiated" if they cannot link to an I dependent laboratory proving the product performs as advertised.
On the post: Court Tells Melania Trump She Can't Sue The Daily Mail In Maryland, So She Refiles In New York
Defaming a famous person
He filed in the US to obtain discovery that he can then use in the U.K. action - the U.K. Does not require malice to be proven and in fact imposes the burden upon the defendant to show truth.
On the post: Chicago Mayor Promises To Turn Over Emails From His Private Accounts Following Courtroom Losses
Transparency # Voluntary Disclosure
On the post: EU MEPs Call Again For 'Robot Rules' To Get Ahead Of The AI Revolution
Measure 2 times - cut once
AI - this is as yet a largely undefined term that means anything from generating responses based upon rapid search metrics and the ability to adjust those metrics based upon observed input. This is not "intelligence" IMHO. This is repetitive behavior no different than a mouse learning to navigate a maze based upon rewards.
Sencient. When is anything deemed to be sentient and under what standards?
Robot. And exactly what is a robot? Is it any machine or a machine that has human-like features?
GO SLOW. This is an area where we need to go it slow. We in the US are still reeling in many respects from court decisions granting "personification" to corporate entities (e.g. Family United and political contributions).
Some point to the difficulties in making the "creators" responsible for behavior of an "AI" ("Is it Microsoft's fault? They just created the base AI. If later interactions teach it bad behavior, that's not their fault. No more than they're responsible for crimes committed using Windows or Word.). In my view the current legal structure already provides for this. MS may be at fault if it can be shown that they should have inserted protective programming limitations (just as any manufacturer could be responsible for not building in protection devices or a pharma company could be responsible for adverse reactions to drugs).
Going slow may result in more moderate advances in this field. However, if we have learned anything from the LOT craze it is measure 2x and cut 1x.
On the post: Tanzanian Farmers Face 12 Years In Prison For Selling Seeds As They've Done For Generations
Seeds and First Sale
I don't understand how a patent can apply to prevent seeds that have been created by the plant. The seeds are not a derivative work and the farmer did not "create" the seed as a copy. How can infringement occur? If Monsanto did not prevent the 1st generation plant from producing seeds that could germinate that seems to be its own decision not to interfere with the natural reproduction system of the plant.
There must be a contractual obligation created in the purchase agreement for the underlying seeds. However, as a contract it would be subject to the laws of the various jurisdictions (or the jurisdiction specified in the contract). It would be interesting to see if the underlying agreement clearly specifies this AND whether is properly presented so as to be enforceable against farmers who I (ignorantly) presume to be illiterate.
How would this stand up with other genetic uses? For example, I sell you genetically altered sperm for a bull and you use it to artificially insimonate a cow. How does this restrict the use of any offspring of the 1st calf who was given birth by natural processes?
On the post: Techdirt's First Amendment Fight For Its Life
Contributions to Litigation
On the post: Austrian Teenager Sues Parents For Posting Pictures From Her Childhood To Facebook
Ugly baby
On the post: Austrian Teenager Sues Parents For Posting Pictures From Her Childhood To Facebook
Photos of my child
On the post: More Details On How Corporate Sovereignty Provisions, Like Those In TPP & TTIP, Are Dangerous
ISSA. APPLE. IRELAND
On the post: Funniest/Most Insightful Comments Of The Week At Techdirt
Foreign travel
On the post: Federal Judge Says Internet Archive's Wayback Machine A Perfectly Legitimate Source Of Evidence
Not so fast
A far better solution is screenshots.com which captures an actual static image of the homepage. While it doesn't capture other pages it does a great job of showing how tha ho epage actually appeared.
So, is archive.org evidence? Yes. BIT it is open to a great deal of attack in depending on what the archive actually contains and whether or not there have been changes.
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