When he withdrew the money his records may show it was valued as less than what the bank claimed. After all, that's what the banks say when the clean out the wrong house during a foreclosure.
Not only that, but if they made him a manager (or CEO) as claimed then there would be a paper trail of some sort. Certainly some email or letters, contracts.
But, no pay, no paper, no communications, website filings using an address Cooper claims he never heard of in a state he has never been to.
"There's not a case where we have not prevailed," insisted Duffy
The context of that is regarding the identity theft of Alan Cooper. I thought Judge Wright did rule on that and found that Cooper's signature was forged, he had sworn testimony to that effect.
That is more than not having prevailed in proof, it is now a finding of fact.
"None of us are interested ...", yet they post endlessly and immediately.
Hate to point out the obvious, but the traffic YOU bring is what keeps things alive.
Bored? Irritated? Whatever, solutions exist for you.
I will just point out the utterly obvious, that you attack the person at every turn, rather than the argument. Epic failure is yours to claim, you have proven yourself worthy.
If your audience is not able to comprehend your thorough instructions, perhaps consider releasing your intellectual property as a pop-up book.
How long until she files patents on her ideas and sues people for $3,400 in reverse-class-action suits? After all, her invention of using a long fork for roasting a marshmallow on an open fire (closed fires are owned by NSA). She could name them SaltmarshMallows.
They will probably argue that because copyright is more profitable, ever stronger copyrights mean ever increasing profits and therefore are good "for everyone".
It's a bit weird that he can register bunches of websites, file doc's with the various courts across the country, talk to his buddies who certainly know how to do basic computery-type stuff, and publicly talk about his most awesome copyright tracking software that they built in-house ...
but can't master the complexity or cost of free email.
The problem is sometimes the troll threads have a valid point, in this case where they are complaining about beating a dead horse.
The problem the troll has is they are shooting the messenger, rather than properly identifying that the horse is being beaten well past many lifetimes by the absurd court filings.
It's the absurd court filings which draw the crowd. Had Prenda simply left the building early on and not drag things out, there is no story to report on.
Something to do with his employer law firm being upset that he was working with the client regarding fees and collection and eventually he was working for them directly or some such thing. As I recall the law firm didn't get paid and lost a client, something like that.
The original comment is indeed most relevant, but only because Paul Duffy didn't get his memo about beating this old horse.
Maybe the appeal itself should have been properly considered, but since they deemed it important enough to bog down our court systems at the district court and appeals levels it probably is ok to waste a bit more on blogs and comments as well.
Darn it, I was just planning on a vacation to Florida so I could sit in my hotel room and play Solitaire.
Did they shut down the World of Warcraft access to Florida yet? How about Wifi, which offers a random chance at downloading things of value or entertainment, and which are by necessity part of a network?
Heck, any computer used to purchase a flight to Florida is a gamble, since you don't know until you show up at the gate if you are on the no-fly list.
On the post: DailyDirt: Bank Error In Your Favor....
On the post: Bad News Is Contagious For Prenda
Re:
But, no pay, no paper, no communications, website filings using an address Cooper claims he never heard of in a state he has never been to.
And, he was discussing it with his father-in-law (a retired sheriff) since the start, according to his sworn testimony. He stated that they were waiting on hearing something further before taking it to the police. That is from page 25 of the transcript at:
http://ia601508.us.archive.org/28/items/gov.uscourts.cacd.543744/gov.uscourts.cacd.543744.93.0. pdf
On the post: Bad News Is Contagious For Prenda
The context of that is regarding the identity theft of Alan Cooper. I thought Judge Wright did rule on that and found that Cooper's signature was forged, he had sworn testimony to that effect.
That is more than not having prevailed in proof, it is now a finding of fact.
On the post: Judge Wright Denies John Steele's Motion, Says Any Problem Is Steele's Own Fault, Directs Him To Legal Clinic
Re: Re: I'm not impressed, either!
Hate to point out the obvious, but the traffic YOU bring is what keeps things alive.
Bored? Irritated? Whatever, solutions exist for you.
I will just point out the utterly obvious, that you attack the person at every turn, rather than the argument. Epic failure is yours to claim, you have proven yourself worthy.
On the post: Judge Wright Denies John Steele's Motion, Says Any Problem Is Steele's Own Fault, Directs Him To Legal Clinic
Re: I'm not impressed, either!
On the post: Author Of The Patriot Act: Congress Will Not Renew If Intelligence Agencies Don't Change Their Ways
Re:
On the post: Pippa Middleton Sends Legal Threats Over Parody Twitter Account
How long until she files patents on her ideas and sues people for $3,400 in reverse-class-action suits? After all, her invention of using a long fork for roasting a marshmallow on an open fire (closed fires are owned by NSA). She could name them SaltmarshMallows.
On the post: Copyright Intensive Firms Are Excessively Profitable
On the post: John Steele Shows Up In Judge Wright's Court; Bet He Wishes He Hadn't
Re: Re: Re: Go play with your stuffed tiger.
On the post: John Steele Shows Up In Judge Wright's Court; Bet He Wishes He Hadn't
Re: Go play with your stuffed tiger.
On the post: John Steele Shows Up In Judge Wright's Court; Bet He Wishes He Hadn't
but can't master the complexity or cost of free email.
On the post: Site Told To Pay $338k Because Of Someone Else's Comments
On the post: Prenda Fails To Pay Filing Fee For Appeal, Now Owes $9,425 In Legal Fees
Re: Re: Re: A suggestion for TechDirt
The troll is right, but doesn't even know he is agreeing with us in that.
On the post: Prenda Fails To Pay Filing Fee For Appeal, Now Owes $9,425 In Legal Fees
Re: A suggestion for TechDirt
The problem the troll has is they are shooting the messenger, rather than properly identifying that the horse is being beaten well past many lifetimes by the absurd court filings.
It's the absurd court filings which draw the crowd. Had Prenda simply left the building early on and not drag things out, there is no story to report on.
On the post: Prenda Fails To Pay Filing Fee For Appeal, Now Owes $9,425 In Legal Fees
Re: Not surprised..
On the post: Prenda Fails To Pay Filing Fee For Appeal, Now Owes $9,425 In Legal Fees
Re: Re: Re: Re: This horse is dead.
Maybe the appeal itself should have been properly considered, but since they deemed it important enough to bog down our court systems at the district court and appeals levels it probably is ok to waste a bit more on blogs and comments as well.
On the post: Latest Leak Shows Microsoft Handed The NSA And FBI Unencrypted Access To Outlook, SkyDrive And Skype
MSA?
They already have an address, One MSA Way.
Is this NSA version 1.0 or 2.0?
Ohhh, the laughs go on and on. If all this were at all funny.
On the post: Way To Go Florida: Governor Signs Law That Accidentally Bans All Computers & Smartphones
Did they shut down the World of Warcraft access to Florida yet? How about Wifi, which offers a random chance at downloading things of value or entertainment, and which are by necessity part of a network?
Heck, any computer used to purchase a flight to Florida is a gamble, since you don't know until you show up at the gate if you are on the no-fly list.
On the post: Your Tax Dollars At Work: How Commerce Dept. Spent $2.7 Million Cleaning Out Two Malware-Infected Computers
Please tell me ...
The only thing that could make the story better is if the original 2 infected computers still remain operational and unmolested by re-imaging.
On the post: Blind Fear Of Cyberwar Drives Columnist To Call For Elimination Of The Internet
Re: Re:
(Sorry pressed submit)
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