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March 31, 2007

Yet more misuse of the DMCA - This time by Debunked Uri Geller

Uri Geller misusing DMCA to remove critical YouTube videos?:


Mark Frauenfelder:

According to Brian Flemming of slumdance.com, Uri Geller, who claims to be psychic, has been using the DMCA to force YouTube to remove videos that debunk his stunts (which include bending spoons and locating hidden objects.) By law, only the copyright holder of a video can make a Web site owner remove a video.


200703301548


The only bright spot is that Geller's actions to suppress criticism may expose him to legal liability (provided that one of his victims has the resources and will to fight this litigious spoon-bender).

His liability? Geller does not apparently own the copyrights to the videos that he demanded YouTube remove.

The DMCA allows copyright owners to file a "takedown notice" with a service provider such as YouTube, provided that the copyright owner swears under penalty of perjury that he or she owns the copyright in question ("I swear, under penalty of perjury, that the information in the notification is accurate and that I am the copyright owner of an exclusive right that is infringed").

It appears that on March 23, Geller or his representative filed with YouTube a series of these DMCA takedown notices, which should have included swearing to the stated facts under penalty of perjury. When internet griefer Michael Crook tried this method of critic suppression, it didn't work out too well for him.

You can see one of the videos pulled from YouTube here.

Link


Satan Loses His Clothing

The State | 03/31/2007 | Police blotters:


Taylor Street, 500 block: A woman called police at 9 a.m. Wednesday and said she had been assaulted by a naked man wrapped in a blanket who called himself Satan. The woman said the man was dropped off by a van at her home. He approached her wearing only a blanket and demanded his clothes. She told him he didn’t have any clothes at her house and went inside. He followed her inside, then locked himself in her bedroom with her and continued to demand his clothes. He threw her on the bed, and she began to scream until her roommates came in and pulled the man off her and threw him outside. When police arrived, the man was on the porch still wrapped in the blanket. He admitted he had been smoking crack cocaine, but Satan was the only name he would give them. He was taken to a hospital for evaluation and treatment.

More on .xxx - Joi Ito

ICANN Board votes against .xxx:


The application by ICM for the .xxx sTLD has been rejected by the ICANN Board by a 9-5 vote in favor of a resolution to reject the application. Susan Crawford's comments on why she voted against this resolution echo my feelings. I have continued to vote in favor of granting .xxx to ICM and voted against this resolution to reject the application. ICANN is not chartered to be involved in trying to determine whether specific content is appropriate or not. ICANN should not be determining whether top level domains (TLDs) will solve the world's problems or not. We were asked to review an application based on whether the application met the requirements of the Request for Proposal (RFP). My view is that the applicant met the requirements of the RFP and that not granting the applicant their request for the right to run the .xxx TLD is wrong. If the RFP was wrong, this should be taken into consideration when thinking about the next round and not affect our current decision.

On the other hand, as a member of the board, I will respect the majority vote of the board. We have been working on this proposal for years and we have spent a tremendous amount of effort in trying to understanding the arguments and evidence presented to us by a huge number of parties. I urge the public and people who have not been tracking this issue not to over-simplify this issue and read Susan's comments carefully. This is NOT about whether we are for or against pornography. This is about the ICANN process and the role of ICANN.

Comment - TrackBack

March 30, 2007

Why I Voted For XXX = Susan Crawford

As most of us know, ICANN has been arbitrarily choosing and denying new TLD applications for years now, based on criteria that are usually far beyond their mandate of "technical management." Susan Crawford, an ICANN board member, relates here how she voted and why. It's quite an interesting read. Ms. Crawford is one of the few board members who has the proverbial balls to stand up for what is right without apology.

Why I Voted For XXX
The ICANN Board voted today 9-5, with Paul Twomey abstaining, to reject a proposal to open .xxx. This is my statement in connection with that vote. I found the resolution adopted by the Board (rejecting xxx) both weak and unprincipled.

I am troubled by the path the Board has followed on this issue since I joined the Board in December of 2005. I would like to make two points. First, ICANN only creates problems for itself when it acts in an ad hoc fashion in response to political pressures. Second, ICANN should take itself seriously as a private governance institution with a limited mandate and should resist efforts by governments to veto what it does.

Role of the Board

This decision, whether to admit a particular non-confusing, legal string into the root, is put before the ICANN Board because (1) we purport to speak on behalf of the global internet community and (2) the U.S. Department of Commerce defers to the judgments of that community when deciding what to tell its contractor to add to the authoritative root zone file.

As a Board, we cannot speak as *elected* representatives of the global internet community because we have not allowed elections for Board members. This application does not present any difficult technical questions, and even if it did we do not as a group claim to have special technical expertise. So this is not a technical stability and security question. It seems to me that the only plausible basis on which the Board can answer the question in the negative (“a group of people may *not* operate and use a lawful string of letters as a top level domain”) is to say that the people affected by this decision have a broadly shared agreement that the admission of this string to the root would amount to unjustifiable wrongdoing. Otherwise, in the absence of technical considerations, the Board has no basis for rejecting this application.

Let me explain.  The most fundamental value of the global internet community is that people who propose to use the internet protocols and infrastructures for otherwise lawful purposes, without threatening the operational stability or security of the internet, should be presumed to be entitled to do so.  In a nutshell, “everything not prohibited is permitted.”  This understanding, this value, has led directly to the striking success of the internet around the world.

ICANN’s role in gTLD policy development is to seek to assess and articulate the broadly shared values of the internet community.  We have very limited authority and we can only speak on behalf of that community.  I am personally not aware that any global consensus against the creation of an .xxx domain exists.  In the absence of such a prohibition, and given our mandate to create TLD competition, we have no authority to block the addition of this TLD to the root. 

It is very clear that we do not have a global shared set of values about content online, save for the global norm against child pornography.  But the global internet community clearly *does* share the core value that no centralized authority should set itself up as the arbiter of what people may do together online, absent a demonstration that most of those affected by the proposed activity agree that it should be banned.

Process

More than three years ago, before I joined the Board, ICANN began a process for new sponsored top level domains.  As I have said on many occasions, I think the idea of “sponsorship” is an empty one.  *All* generic TLDs should be considered “sponsored” in that they should be able to create policies for themselves that are not dictated by ICANN.  The only exceptions to this freedom for every TLD should be, of course, the (very few) global consensus policies that are created through the ICANN forum.  This freedom is shared by the country code TLDs.

Notwithstanding my personal views on the vacuity of the “sponsorship” idea, the fact is that ICANN evaluated the strength of the sponsorship of xxx (the relationship between the applicant and the “community” behind the TLD) and, in my view, concluded that this criteria had been met as of June 2005; ICANN then went on to negotiate specific contractual terms with the applicant.

Since then, real and “astroturf” comments (filed comments claiming to be grassroots opposition that have actually been generated by organized campaigns) have come in to ICANN that reflect opposition to this application.  I do not find these recent comments sufficient to warrant re-visiting the question of the "sponsorship" strength of this TLD which I personally believe to be closed. 

No applicant for any “sponsored” TLD could ever demonstrate unanimous, cheering approval for its application.  We have no metric against which to measure this opposition, and thus we have no idea how significant it is.  We should not be in the business of judging the level of market or community support for a new TLD before the fact.  We will only get in the way of useful innovation if we take the view that every new TLD must prove itself to us before it can be added to the root.

It seems to me that what is meant by “sponsorship” (a notion that I hope we abandon) is to show that there is enough interest in a particular TLD that it will be viable.  We also have the idea that registrants should participate in (and be bound by) the creation of policies for a particular string.  Both of these requirements have been met by this applicant.  There is clearly enough interest (including more than 70,000 pre-registrations from 1,000 or more unique registrants who are members of the adult industry), and the applicant has undertaken to us that it will require adherence to its self-regulatory policies by all of its registrants.  To the extent some of my colleagues on the board believe that ICANN should be in the business of deciding whether a particular TLD makes a valuable contribution to the namespace, I differ with them.  I do not think ICANN is capable of making such a determination.  Indeed, this argument is very much like those made by the pre-divestiture AT&T when it claimed that no “foreign attachments” to its network (like answering machines) should be allowed, in part because AT&T asserted there was no public demand for them.  The rise of the internet was arguably made possible by allowing many “foreign attachments” to the network – called modems.

We established a process for sTLDs some time ago.  We have taken this applicant through this process.  We now appear to be changing the process.  We should not act in this fashion.

Politics

Discomfort with this application may have been sparked anew by (1) the letter from individual GAC members Janis Karklins and Sharil Tarmizi (to which Amb. Karklins has told us the GAC acceded as a whole by its silence), and (2) the letter from the Australian government.

I am not at all opposed to receiving advice from the Government Advisory Committee.  But the entire point of ICANN’s creation was to avoid the operation of chokepoint content control over the domain name system by individual or collective governments.  The idea was that the US would serve as a good steward for other governmental concerns by staying in the background and overseeing ICANN’s activities, but not engaging in content-related control.  Australia’s letter, and concerns expressed in the past by Brazil and other countries about xxx, are explicitly content-based and thus inappropriate, in my view.

If, after creation of an xxx TLD, certain governments of the world want to ensure that their citizens do not see xxx content, it is within their prerogative as sovereigns to instruct internet access providers physically located within their territory to block such content.  Also, if certain governments want to ensure that *all* adult content providers with a physical presence in their country register exclusively within xxx, that is their prerogative as well.  (I note that such a requirement in the U.S. would violate the First Amendment to our Constitution.)  But this content-related censorship should not be ICANN’s concern, and ICANN should not allow itself to be used as a private lever for government chokepoint content control by making up reasons to avoid the creation of such a TLD in the first place.  To the extent there are public policy concerns with this TLD, they can be dealt with through local law.  Registration in (or visitation of) domains in this TLD is purely voluntary.

If ICANN were to base its decisions on the views of the Australian (or US, or Brazilian) government, ICANN would have compromised away its very reason for existence as a private non-governmental governance institution.    

Conclusion

I continue to be dissatisfied with elements of the proposed xxx contract, including but not limited to the “rapid takedown” provision of Appendix S,[1] which is manifestly designed to placate trademark owners and ignores the many due process concerns that have been expressed about the existing UDRP.  I am confident that if I had a staff or enough time I could find many things to carp about in this draft contract.  But I am certain that if I complained about these terms my concerns would be used to justify derailing this application for political reasons. I plan, therefore, to turn my attention to the new gTLD process that was promised for January 2007 (a promise that has not been kept) in hopes that we will someday have a standard contract and objective process that can help ICANN avoid engaging in unjustifiable ad hoc actions.  We should be examining generic TLD applicants on the basis of their technical and financial strength, and we should avoid dealing with “content” concerns to the maximum extent possible. We should be opening up new TLDs.  I hope we will find a way to achieve such a sound process in short order.



[1] “5.  Rapid Takedown.  Analysis of UDRP disputes indicates that the majority of UDRP cases involve obvious variants of well-known trademarks. ICM Registry does not believe that the clearest cases of abusive domain registration require the expense and time involved in traditional UDRP filings. Accordingly, ICM Registry will institute a rapid takedown procedure in which a response team of independent experts (qualified UDRP panelists) will be retained to make determinations within 48 hours of receipt of a short and simple statement of a claim involving a well-known or otherwise inherently distinctive mark and a domain name for which no conceivable good faith basis exists.  Such determinations will result in an immediate termination of resolution of the domain name, but will not prejudice either party’s election to pursue another dispute mechanism. The claim requirements will be modeled after the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. (ICM welcomes IP community input on this procedure.)”


Oh dear. No "Chocolate Jesus Show." Whatever shall we do?

ABC News: Chocolate Jesus Show Canceled:


NEW YORK Mar 30, 2007 (AP)— A planned Holy Week exhibition of a nude, anatomically correct chocolate sculpture of Jesus Christ was canceled Friday amid a choir of complaining Catholics that included Cardinal Edward Egan.

The "My Sweet Lord" display was shut down by the hotel that houses the Lab Gallery in midtown Manhattan, said Matt Semler, the gallery's creative director. Semler said he submitted his resignation after officials at the Roger Smith Hotel shut down the show.

The six-foot sculpture was the victim of "a strong-arming from people who haven't seen the show, seen what we're doing," Semler said. "They jumped to conclusions completely contrary to our intentions."

But word of the confectionary Christ infuriated Catholics, including Egan, who described it as "a sickening display." Bill Donohue, head of the watchdog Catholic League, said it was "one of the worst assaults on Christian sensibilities ever."

The hotel and the gallery were overrun Thursday with angry phone calls and e-mails about the exhibit. Semler said the calls included death threats over the work of artist Cosimo Cavallaro, who was described as disappointed by the decision to cancel the display.

"In this situation, the hotel couldn't continue to be supportive because of a fear for their own safety," Semler said.

The sculpture was to debut Monday evening, the day after Palm Sunday and just four days before Roman Catholics mark the crucifixion of Jesus Christ on Good Friday. The final day of the exhibit was planned for Easter Sunday.

The artwork was created from more than 200 pounds of milk chocolate, and features Christ with his arms outstretched as if on an invisible cross. Unlike the typical religious portrayal of Christ, the Cavallaro creation does not include a loincloth.

Cavallaro is best known for his quirky work with food as art: Past efforts include repainting a Manhattan hotel room in melted mozzarella, spraying five tons of pepper jack cheese on a Wyoming home, and festooning a four-poster bed with 312 pounds of processed ham.

March 29, 2007

SSN: Identifier or Authenticator? - JSQ

SSN: Identifier or Authenticator?:


Spire Security Viewpoint lists some salient points about social security numbers (SSNs), among them this one:


There are over 150,000 people (my estimate) with "defendable" access to your SSN right now. They aren't secret.



SSNs Re-Re-Re-Revisited
,
8 March 2007


And you're ten times more likely, he says, to be victimized with identity fraud by one of these authorized people
than by somebody else.
And his main point is that the problem with SSNs is not their use as identifiers, rather their use as authenticators.
After all, if everybody knew SSNs as readily as names, credit card companies and the like would have to stop
using them as authenticators.
Then they'd have to use something better for authentication.
That would be better risk management.


-jsq

Special Circumstances My Foot - Karl Auerbach

Special Circumstances My Foot:


The "whois" system for domain names is the single greatest violation
of privacy rights on the internet.

A reasonable cure has been put forth that would require only that domain name registrants designate a contact, who could be an agent, to receive communications pertaining to the technical operation of the domain.  This is not unlike the way that corporations keep much of their structure private by designating an agent for the receipt of legal notices.  ICANN and Verisign both do this.

The industry that protects intellectual property (not to be confused with the industry that creates intellectual property) does not like this proposal; they would prefer that every person go naked on the internet, with their names and numbers tattooed to their chests, and live in glass houses.

The trademark industry wants domain name registrants to reveal their information, and that of their families and children, to the anonymous predators of the world on a 24x7 basis.

The trademark industry will allow but one exception - if a person claims sanctuary on the basis of "special circumstance".  What this means is that a few shelters for bettered women might be allowed to refrain from publishing their contact information.

This "special circumstances" proposal is contrary to one of the most fundamental tenets of modern society, that a person is presumed innocent until proven guilty.  The "special circumstances" proposal is nothing short of a systematic conclusion that you and I and every other domain name registrant is to be presumed to be a thief and unworthy of privacy.  The burden is placed not only on us to rebut that presumption but to do so in advance even of an accusation.

We are being told in no uncertain terms that our privacy, and that of our families and children, is worth less than a trademark.

The "special circumstances" shoe should be put on the other foot.  If a trademark owner wants to penetrate the privacy of the Whois data that owner should be obligated to make a specific accusation, saying on a permanent public record, what rights of that owner are being violated by the accused domain name owner and what facts exist to support that accusation.

In other words, the trademark owner should be required to demonstate, with concrete accusations backed by concrete facts, that special circumstances exist that are sufficient to violate a person's right to privacy.

We have seen how the music and movie vigilantes, the RIAA and MPOA, have run amok making groundless accusations against thousands of innocent people.  These are the law-firm office mates of the trademark people who want to violate our privacy in our domain names.  There is much reason to be skeptical of their intentions.


Scalia and Harvard Law Professor Trade Barbs in Court

Scalia and Harvard Law Professor Trade Barbs in Court:


Two outsized personalities clashed at the Supreme Court on Wednesday when Justice Antonin Scalia was briefly silenced by a barbed comment from longtime Harvard Law professor and television commentator Arthur Miller. Lawyers who argue at the Court are advised that jokes often fall flat -- but this one left other justices laughing and solicited an "ooh" from spectators. And it wasn't long before Scalia had his say.

Space junk falls around airliner: report

Space junk falls around airliner: report:


Flaming space junk from a Russian satellite narrowly missed hitting a Chilean airliner over the Pacific Ocean, reports said Wednesday.
The pilot of a LAN Chile Airbus A340 en route to New Zealand told air traffic controllers he had seen pieces of flaming space junk falling about eight kilometres (four miles) in front of the plane and behind it, TV3 said.

The aircraft was not struck by any of the debris and later landed safely in Auckland.

Airways New Zealand, which manages New Zealand's air traffic, said it had been warned by Russian authorities that an obsolete satellite was due to fall into the Pacific Ocean on Wednesday.

But the debris had apparently fallen into the area 12 hours earlier than the time advised by the Russians.

A spokesman for the Civil Aviation Authority, which is responsible for air safety, said it would launch an inquiry after it was advised of the details of the incident.

EVIL People Squashing Freedom of Religion! Spaghetti Monster to Exact Revenge

CITIZEN-TIMES.com: School: Pirates are not welcome:


Weaverville – When you’re a pirate, some dangers just come with the territory: scurvy, grog hangovers, a walk down the plank at sword point.

But being kicked out of school for a day?

Bryan Killian doesn’t think that’s a fair reaction to his decision to come to North Buncombe High School wearing an eye patch and an inflatable cutlass.

Buncombe County Schools says the eye patch was disruptive to classroom instruction. The student’s refusal to take it off after four warnings led to discipline, the district said.

“I feel like my First Amendment was violated,” Killian, 16, said. “Freedom of religion and freedom of expression. That’s what I tried to do, and I got shot down.”

Freedom of religion?

Yes, Killian says, his “pirate regalia” is part of his faith — the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.

The parody religion, whose “Pastafarian” members worship a sentient, airborne clump of noodles and meatballs, originated in a letter to the Kansas school board urging it to add the religion to its plans to teach evolution and intelligent design side by side.

It became an Internet phenomenon, spawning a belief system that holds pirates to be divine beings and blames global warming on the disappearance of the buccaneers.

Satirical though it may be, Killian isn’t laughing.

“If this is what I believe in, no matter how stupid it might sound, I should be able to express myself however I want to,” he said.

An eye patch is no more disruptive than a Christian cross around one’s neck, he said.

His teachers saw it the same way, he said, but Assistant Principal Sarah Cooley didn’t. She assigned him two days of in-school suspension before calling his home to add out-of-school suspension.

“It has nothing to do with religious beliefs,” school district spokesman Stan Alleyne rushed to say when asked about the suspension. “We respect students’ religious beliefs.”

Killian’s mother, Vanessa, agreed with the school’s decision despite sympathizing with her son.

“I think Bryan should be able to voice his opinion,” she said, “but he kind of got carried away.”

Killian planned to go back to school today. He doesn’t think he’ll wear an eye patch.

March 26, 2007

How to Save Money on Legal Work

On today's edition of "How to Save Money on Legal Work" we examine the recalcitrant client . The recalcitrant client relies on information garnered from such important professionals as the employee whose husband's sister's cousin is a lawyer and he says ______, the sales person who almost went to law school, contracts from other companies (well if it works for them, it MUST work for us if we just change the names around), or by digging through a law firm dumpster. But perhaps the worst form of recalcitrant client is the one who says, "I know what I'm doing, I've done this before and everything turned out ok."

Recalcitrant client then has a difficulty, most often of the form where a customer hasn't paid, or a customer has breached the terms of the "agreement." Enter the lawyer.

The most often provided legal opinion in this case consists of, "I do not think this means what you think it means." In other words, your contract sucks, is totally unenforceable, and now you get to eat whatever losses you have incurred. If you were stupid enough to turn over source code, trade secret information, or anything else of significant value, not only do you lose money, but you may lose your entire company. Then you can try suing your employee's husband's sister's cousin, the sales person, and the janitor. Good luck with that.

So, want to save money? Pay the damn lawyer to write your agreements. Thus sayeth the Psycho Sensei who is even now attempting to find some possible way of bailing out a Recalcitrant Client [tm].

Billable hours are good. Shooting ducks in a barrel provides no enjoyment and a little bit of "told ya so." Time to do the "told ya so" dance in slow motion.

March 25, 2007

Sununu Named N.H. Town's Hog Wrangler

Sununu Named N.H. Town's Hog Wrangler:


HAMPTON FALLS, N.H. (AP) - Former White House Chief of Staff John H. Sununu has a new title _ hog wrangler.

Sununu and his wife, Nancy, recently were named to the honorary post of Hampton Falls' hog reeve, complete with a swearing-in ceremony and a badge. The post, which dates back to the 1700s, means the couple are responsible for rounding up any loose pigs in town.

The title is usually given to an unsuspecting newcomer each year. The Sununus recently moved from Salem to Hampton Falls to be closer to relatives.

"Somebody had warned us," Sununu said. "We had some friends who had come to town earlier."

He was New Hampshire governor for three terms in the 1980s and chief of staff to President George H.W. Bush from 1989 to 1991, and now he's taking his new job in stride.


"It's one of the great honors," Sununu said. "We got a badge and everything. If you need any hogs rounded up, call me."

Now this is taking webcams just a LITTLE too far....

MyFox New York | Man Commits Suicide Live On Webcam:


Teleford, England  -- 
A man who apparently committed suicide while using an Internet chat room with other people died of hanging, police said Friday.

The body of Kevin Whitrick, a father of two children, was found Wednesday night after a chat room user contacted police to report that the 42-year-old had "self-harmed" while online via a Webcam.

Whitrick, of Telford, a town in central England, was found hanged at his house after police were alerted to the tragedy.

In a statement released by police Whitrick's ex-wife, who declined to be named, said: "Kevin was a loving father and family man. He was always the life and soul of the party, an extremely considerate and kind person and loved by many. He will be so sadly missed by us all."

Whitrick, who had 12-year-old twins, suffered a very serious car accident in July 2006 and never returned to full health, his wife said.

Police said attempts to resuscitate Whitrick failed and he was pronounced dead at the scene.

A police investigation was being conducted, but no one was being sought by police, they said.

Police Detective Chief Inspector Jon Groves said: "Whitrick was using an Internet chat room with a number of other people at the time of his death." Police have obtained Internet files for their investigation, he said.

Do not taunt happy fun mousie

Mouse makes off with captor's dentures - Peculiar Postings - MSNBC.com:


WATERVILLE, Maine - Never underestimate a mouse’s determination.

There’s a mouse in Bill Exner’s house that he says he has captured three times. Each time, the mouse escaped, and the last time the rodent made off with his lower dentures.

Exner, 68, said he and his wife Shirley scoured his bedroom after the dentures disappeared from his night stand.

“We moved the bed, moved the dressers and the night stand and tore the closet apart,” he said. “I said, ‘I knew that little stinker stole my teeth’ — I just knew it.”

They found a small opening in a wall where they suspected the mouse was coming and going, and their daughter’s fiance, Eric Holt, stepped in to help.

“He brought a crowbar and hammer and he sawed off a section of wood and pulled up the molding and everything,” Exner said. “It was quite a job.”

They retrieved the dentures, and Holt suggested his future father-in-law boil them in peroxide and whatever else he could find for to disinfect it.

The mouse apparently isn’t done. It frequently comes out and stares at Exner, his wife said.

“He’s taunting him — I swear he’s taunting him,” Shirley Exner said.

March 24, 2007

Federal Agency Bans Microsoft Vista

Now if they'd only get around to banning the REST of Microsoft's products in favor of open source.... oh wait. I think I'm dreaming again.

Federal Agency Bans Microsoft Vista:


The Transportation Department is refusing to upgrade its computers with Microsoft Corp.'s Windows Vista, citing concern over costs and compatibility issues. The agency's chief information officer imposed an "indefinite moratorium" on upgrading to Office 2007 and Internet Explorer 7.

";John Doe" Speaks Out Against NSL Gag Orders

"John Doe" Speaks Out Against NSL Gag Orders:


The Washington Post has published a powerful op-ed piece by the anonymous recipient of one of the national security letters, who is prohibited by law from disclosing even the fact that he received one. National security letters (or NSLs) are the demands for information, issued without any requirement of judicial approval, that were the focus of the recent scathing report released by DOJ’s inspector general earlier this month (as reported here). That report found that the FBI issued national security letters in great abundance (the FBI was so sloppy it is hard to know just how many) and contrary to the (minimal) limitations embodied in statute and internal DOJ policies. The Attorney General and FBI Director both admitted that the FBI had violated the law in its use of national security letters.


I found the op-ed very powerful because it moves beyond the typical dichotomous arguments between fighting terrorism and “protecting civil liberties” to examine the collateral impact of such pervasive secrecy on innocent bystanders such as the pseudonynomous author. The op-ed tells us that “John Doe” runs a small internet business and received a national security letter demanding information about a client. Rather than comply with what seemed like a fishy request, he courageously went to the ACLU. The secrecy rules mean he still can’t tell us why he was suspicious, although he does say that the FBI later dropped the request. But during the whole fight, he was forced to live a double life:


Under the threat of criminal prosecution, I must hide all aspects of my involvement in the case — including the mere fact that I received an NSL — from my colleagues, my family and my friends. When I meet with my attorneys I cannot tell my girlfriend where I am going or where I have been. I hide any papers related to the case in a place where she will not look. When clients and friends ask me whether I am the one challenging the constitutionality of the NSL statute, I have no choice but to look them in the eye and lie.


Even now, with the request for information withdrawn, he is forbidden to speak. That is a huge burden to place on someone. Forcing third parties into the role of involuntary government spies might be justified in highly exceptional circumstances, but the inspector general’s report demonstrates that their use has been anything but exceptional. As the better books by John le Carre demonstrate, there is a great personal toll to living a double life.


Of course, there are other systemic reasons why such secrecy is corrosive. My colleague Heidi Kitrosser has written about this issue in related circumstances, and John Doe points out that he could have warned Congress and the public about the likelihood of FBI abuses years ago if not for the gag order. If these practices had been reined in sooner, maybe our society would have created many fewer involuntary liars.



"Viacom Sued Over Colbert Parody on YouTube" - The Trademark Blog

"Viacom Sued Over Colbert Parody on YouTube":


News.com: "Viacom Sued Over Colbert Parody on YouTube":

"Viacom is misusing U.S. copyright law by forcing YouTube to remove a parody video of The Colbert Report, according to a lawsuit filed against the media conglomerate Thursday. However, Viacom denies the accusation and said it does not object to the video being on YouTube."


A victory for balanced use of copyright

Larry Lessig and his colleagues have struck another victory for balanced use of copyrights. Good for them!

Shloss v. Estate of James Joyce: Settlement:


As reported at the Stanford Center for Internet and Society, Shloss v. Estate of James Joyce has settled. As you can read in the settlement agreement, we got everything we were asking for, and more (the rights to republish the book). This is an important victory for a very strong soul, Carol Shloss, and for others in her field. I am grateful to our team for their hard work. (Contrary to some news reports, while I was instrumental in bringing this case and in setting its strategy, the settlement was effected by Anthony Falzone and David Olson.) (Press Release).

But this is only the first in what I expect will be a series of cases defending the rights of academics against improperly aggressive copyright holders. I hope this is the last case against this particular defendant. But we’ve already seen others that may prove as egregious as this. One important part of the mission of the “Fair Use Project” is to defend the rights of scholars and academics, drawing more clearly and practically the boundary that “fair use” is intended to defend in theory. Stay tuned.


March 22, 2007

COPA is struck down - Larry Lessig

COPA is struck down:


Another Philadelphia court has struck another effort by Congress to regulate “harmful to minors” speech. (ACLU v. Gonzales). No surprise. Though it has taken almost a decade, it is the right answer given the flaws in the statute.

The core of the court’s rationale was the effectiveness of filters. We should remember the ACLU’s own warnings about a world filled with private filters. They were right then; the warnings are more valid now.

As it happens, I have just completed the third of my legislative recommendations to Congress. As it happens, it is about regulating “harmful to minors” material. My friends won’t like it. My not-friends don’t like me. But here it is anyway. You can download it here. Or you can watch it on Google Video below:


Apple TV Does SOME things Well

Sound is great. Putting photos up for screen savers is great. Playing certain programs and movies is great. BUT....

AppleTV does not play .mov files, which makes no sense to me. The basic premise is that if you can't import the file into an iTunes library, you can't play it on AppleTV. I have many .avi files and .mov files I have collected. Apple CLAIMS to have a conversion for those via Quicktime Pro or, if you can bring them into iTunes at all, you can convert them into a format compatible with iPods and AppleTV should play that. However, each .avi file I've tried, after it takes HOURS to convert 45 minutes worth of program, has excellent audio but a white screen for video. The same thing happened with a .mov file I tried. Attempting to import the .mov file directly into iTunes gives you a black screen. Of course, this is very disappointing. If it's yet another stupid DRM broken feature, I'm going to be unhappy.

AppleTV! HOORAY!!!

Oh is this ever a wonderful little box. It was a snap to set up, except that it comes with NO VIDEO CABLES! Thanks so much, Apple. Could have at least shipped it with a component video cable. Anyway, the thing has an HDMI port, a component video output, optical and analog audio, a USB port, and an ethernet port. Be aware there is NO S-VIDEO output, so in case you have an older TV this will not function. It supports both 720p and 1080i (doesn't look like it supports 1080p yet...).

Setup is trivial. I plugged it into my Integra processor and turned the thing on. *poof* there it was. I'm currently syncing it to my video libraries. Apparently it makes copies of the video which can be a pain in the butt for large torrent files, but once it's done it should be fine and I'll be able to watch TORCHWOOD the way it should be seen. For music it's much faster. The optical audio input is a BIG win and makes a significant difference to the sound. Hooray.

In an attempt to sync photos, I seem to have crashed the connection between iTunes and the AppleTv box. I attempted to choose Aperture as the photo application which caused my devices list on iTunes to disappear and the picture to be lost for a few seconds. The music, however, continued to be fine. Restarting iTunes brought the devices list back and did not disrupt the music. Second time was the charm here, and Aperture was actually a selection in the dropdown menu. BIG WIN! It is now synching photos as well as everything else. Now I will see how quickly I can actually fill an AppleTV.

Looks like it's going to take a L O N G time to complete all this sync. Such is life :-).

The UI is typical Apple slick, easy for idiots, the manual is easy to understand and gives you a wonderful selection of probable scenarios for setup and use. The TV shows cute little album covers (when available) and length of time left in whatever song and times out to Apple's selection of photos. I have a feeling that will be replaced with my own photos once the sync finishes.

So... This is great! I like it! It's cool! I'm going to be playing with this thing all day long now, much to the dismay of my law partner. Woo hoo!

March 19, 2007

HOORAY!!!!!

Maybe I'll actually be able to go OUT again. I'd really like that.

Md. Senate Committee OKs Smoking Ban:


ANNAPOLIS, Md. - A panel of Maryland senators voted Monday to ban smoking in bars and restaurants, a vote seen as a critical first step for passage of a statewide smoking ban this year.

The 6-5 vote by the Senate Finance Committee means the full Senate will vote in coming days on whether to approve the ban, long advocated by health activists but opposed by some restaurant owners. A House committee is considering a similar smoking ban, with a vote expected in that committee by midweek.

If approved, Maryland's ban would take effect in January and ban smoking in all indoor public areas, including bars. Delaware and Washington D.C. already require smoke-free bars and restaurants.

It isn't just Northwest I suppose....

Transatlantic pilot 'more than six times over alcohol flying limit' | News | This is London:


An airline pilot turned up for work while almost six and a half times over the drink limit to fly a plane, a court has heard.
American James Yates, 46, smelled strongly of alcohol and was unsteady on his feet when he turned up for duty at Manchester Airport, it has been claimed.
A First Officer with American Airlines, he was to be one of three pilots on a 10.30am transatlantic flight to Chicago with 181 passengers on board on February 11 last year, Manchester's Minshull Street Crown Court was told.
But when he went to go through a security gate for flight crew in his pilots uniform he could not find his identification security pass.
Security staff could smell drink and called in police, who arrested Yates. He then failed a breathalyser test, Martin Walsh, prosecuting, told the jury.
"Police arrived and the defendant smelled strongly of intoxicants, alcohol, and he was asked to provide a specimen of breath," Mr Walsh added.
"He provided a specimen of breath and it was positive."
The first specimen showed Yates had 71 micrograms of alcohol in 100 millilitres of breath. The legal limit for driving a car is 35 micrograms and for an aircraft is nine micrograms, the jury were told.
Yates was arrested and taken to Altrincham Police Station where a doctor took a blood sample.
This gave a result of 129 micrograms of alcohol in 100 millilitres of blood, the court was told. The legal limit for flying an aircraft is 20 micrograms.
"He was approaching six and a half times the legal limit for flying an aircraft," Mr Walsh said.
Yates, from Ohio, US, told police he turned up for work to tell the captain he was sick and unable to perform his duties and it was not his intention to be part of the crew on that flight.
"The Crown say that is untrue," Mr Walsh said.
"He arrived at the airport in uniform. He tried to gain entrance through security checks used by the air crew, not by the passengers."
Yates had earlier missed a bus taking flight crew from a hotel to the airport. When the captain had gone to his hotel room he appeared "dishevelled" and followed the rest of the crew in a cab to the airport, the court heard.
Mr Walsh said: "The Crown's case, in essence, is he clearly had been drinking heavily, had consumed alcohol and when he got to the airport his intention was to go through security check-in with the intention of performing his function of first officer on the flight from Manchester to Chicago."
The flight was delayed and had to land in New York because it only had two pilots, not three as required by law for such a long flight, the court was told.
Yates is not charged with attempting to fly an aircraft while over the limit as he did not gain access to the plane.
He denies a single charge of carrying out an activity ancillary to an aviation function, that of acting as first officer, while over the limit.
The case continues.

So there you are in first class and you wake up to......

Airline Moves Dead Body to 1st Class:


LONDON (AP) - A first-class passenger on a flight from Delhi to London awoke find the corpse of a woman who had died in the economy cabin being placed in a seat next to him, British Airways said Monday

The economy section of the flight was full, and the cabin crew needed to move the woman and her grieving family out of that compartment to give them some privacy, the airline said.

The first-class passenger, Paul Trinder, told the Sunday Times newspaper that he was sleeping during a February flight from India and woke up when the crew placed the dead woman in an empty seat near him.

"I didn't have a clue what was going on. The stewards just plonked the body down without saying a thing. I remember looking at this frail, sparrow-like woman and thinking she was very ill," the newspaper quoted Trinder as saying. "When I asked what was going on, I was shocked to hear she was dead."

British Airways said in a statement that about 10 passengers die each year in flight and that while each situation is dealt with on an individual basis, safety is paramount.

"The deceased must not be placed in the galley or blocking aisles or exits, and there should be clear space around the deceased," the statement said. "The wishes of family or friends traveling with the deceased will always be considered, and account taken of the reactions of other passengers."

Because there was space in the first class cabin, that "allowed the family members traveling with the deceased some level of privacy in their grief," the airline said.

"We apologize to passengers in the first cabin who were distressed by the situation _ our cabin crew were working in difficult circumstances and chose the option that they believed would cause the least disruption," the statement said.

David Learmount, a former pilot and cabin crew member who now writes about the aviation industry for Flight International magazine, said that each airline has to deal with the relatively rare situation on an individual basis. He said that diverting the flight would be an unusual move, and that the captain would be consulted before the crew acted.

"Personally, I think they did the thing that was the best thing to do," he said. "Really, you want as much as possible to isolate the person.

"It's an isolated incident. It's not as if it happens every day, but you do have to take in people's sensibilities when it does happen."

March 17, 2007

Server issues temporarily vanquish Psycho Sensei

We had some server issues that caused a temporary non-functionality of this lovely and wonderful site. Not to worry. We're BAAAAACK :-).

March 15, 2007

German police rescue 91-year-old man glued to roof

Scotsman.com News - Latest News - German police rescue 91-year-old man glued to roof:


BERLIN (Reuters) - A 91-year-old German sparked a rescue operation when he slipped mending his roof and got stuck fast in tar "like a beetle on its back", police said on Tuesday.

Passers-by were so shocked to see the elderly handyman working on the roof they first thought he was planning to commit suicide, according to police in the eastern city of Magdeburg.

"In fact he was just re-coating the roofing with bitumen. But then he slipped," said a spokesman for police.

"When we got there, he was like a beetle on its back, with his arms and legs sprawled out and completely glued to the roof," he added. "Due to his age, he couldn't free himself from his unfortunate situation."

Local firemen carefully detached the man using ropes and ladders. He was unharmed, but had sticky clothes, police said.

March 11, 2007

The deuce you say....

EFF Calls For Aggressive Congressional Hearings on National Security Letter Misuse:


Report Says FBI Stepped Over the Legal Line in Searches for Personal Information

Washington, D.C. - The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is calling for Congress to hold aggressive hearings on the FBI's domestic intelligence authority after the release of a Justice Department report showing the Bureau abusing its power to collect telephone, Internet, financial, credit, and other personal records about Americans without judicial approval.

Sen. Patrick J. Leahy, D-Vermont, has said the Senate Judiciary Committee will hold hearings into the report's findings. But the widespread abuse detailed in the report requires more than just a cursory examination.

"The Bureau's misuse of its intelligence authority is an ongoing critical problem," said EFF Staff Attorney Marcia Hofmann. "Congress must use its investigative power to find out what's really going on at the FBI -- and then rein in the Bureau's investigative authority to where is was before the USA PATRIOT Act."

In the report, the Justice Department's inspector general identifies four dozen instances in which demands for personal information -- known as National Security Letters -- may have violated laws and agency regulations. The report also found that the Bureau lied to Congress about its use of the letters.

The FBI has had limited authority to issue National Security Letters for many years. However, a controversial provision of the PATRIOT Act greatly expanded the Bureau's ability to use them to gather information about anyone, as long as the agency believes the information could be relevant to a terrorism or espionage investigation.

Today's report follows the inspector general's findings last year that the Bureau had disclosed more than 100 instances of possible intelligence misconduct to the Intelligence Oversight Board in the preceding two years, a number of which were "significant."

In 2005, EFF argued in a friend of the court brief that the FBI's "unfettered authority" to issue National Security Letters "is ripe for abuse." The danger of such abuse has now been documented.

"This is not simply about errors in 'oversight,'" said EFF Senior Staff Attorney Lee Tien. "This is about disregard for the law. For example, FBI terrorism investigators ignored their own lawyers' advice to stop using so-called 'exigent' letters for about two years."

For the full report from the Justice Department:
http://www.usdoj.gov/oig/special/s0703b/final.pdf

For more on National Security Letters:
http://www.eff.org/patriot/sunset/505.php

Contacts:

Marcia Hofmann
Staff Attorney
Electronic Frontier Foundation
marcia@eff.org

David Sobel
Senior Counsel
Electronic Frontier Foundation
sobel@eff.org

Lee Tien
Senior Staff Attorney
Electronic Frontier Foundation
tien@eff.org


The deuce you say....

EFF Calls For Aggressive Congressional Hearings on National Security Letter Misuse:


Report Says FBI Stepped Over the Legal Line in Searches for Personal Information

Washington, D.C. - The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is calling for Congress to hold aggressive hearings on the FBI's domestic intelligence authority after the release of a Justice Department report showing the Bureau abusing its power to collect telephone, Internet, financial, credit, and other personal records about Americans without judicial approval.

Sen. Patrick J. Leahy, D-Vermont, has said the Senate Judiciary Committee will hold hearings into the report's findings. But the widespread abuse detailed in the report requires more than just a cursory examination.

"The Bureau's misuse of its intelligence authority is an ongoing critical problem," said EFF Staff Attorney Marcia Hofmann. "Congress must use its investigative power to find out what's really going on at the FBI -- and then rein in the Bureau's investigative authority to where is was before the USA PATRIOT Act."

In the report, the Justice Department's inspector general identifies four dozen instances in which demands for personal information -- known as National Security Letters -- may have violated laws and agency regulations. The report also found that the Bureau lied to Congress about its use of the letters.

The FBI has had limited authority to issue National Security Letters for many years. However, a controversial provision of the PATRIOT Act greatly expanded the Bureau's ability to use them to gather information about anyone, as long as the agency believes the information could be relevant to a terrorism or espionage investigation.

Today's report follows the inspector general's findings last year that the Bureau had disclosed more than 100 instances of possible intelligence misconduct to the Intelligence Oversight Board in the preceding two years, a number of which were "significant."

In 2005, EFF argued in a friend of the court brief that the FBI's "unfettered authority" to issue National Security Letters "is ripe for abuse." The danger of such abuse has now been documented.

"This is not simply about errors in 'oversight,'" said EFF Senior Staff Attorney Lee Tien. "This is about disregard for the law. For example, FBI terrorism investigators ignored their own lawyers' advice to stop using so-called 'exigent' letters for about two years."

For the full report from the Justice Department:
http://www.usdoj.gov/oig/special/s0703b/final.pdf

For more on National Security Letters:
http://www.eff.org/patriot/sunset/505.php

Contacts:

Marcia Hofmann
Staff Attorney
Electronic Frontier Foundation
marcia@eff.org

David Sobel
Senior Counsel
Electronic Frontier Foundation
sobel@eff.org

Lee Tien
Senior Staff Attorney
Electronic Frontier Foundation
tien@eff.org


March 10, 2007

Alleged 'D.C. Madam' pleads not guilty - CNN.com

I find this one very amusing because this woman only threatened to sell the list because all of her assets were seized and she had no way to mount a defense. Isn't that quite the thing? You are accused of a crime, and not permitted to mount a defense because the government already took all your money. I'd have sold the list too.

Alleged 'D.C. Madam' pleads not guilty - CNN.com:


WASHINGTON (AP) -- A former escort service owner who has threatened to sell a list of 15,000 phone numbers from her client list to help her defense pleaded not guilty Friday to racketeering.

Deborah Jean Palfrey, 50, of Vallejo, California, entered the plea in U.S. District Court. She was released but ordered to wear an electronic monitoring device.

The alleged "D.C. Madam" ran Pamela Martin and Associates, an upscale escort service in the Washington area, from her home for 13 years before it closed in August. (Watch Palfrey's attorney explain why she wants to sell her client list )

A federal indictment alleges that it was a prostitution ring that yielded $2 million in assets, including cash and homes. In October, the federal government froze the assets after a 2½-year IRS investigation. Palfrey is suing to have the assets returned.

A federal judge on Friday delayed a ruling on a request to block Palfrey from publicizing her client list. Also Friday, an attorney for Palfrey sued in U.S. District Court, seeking $75,000 in damages from a former employee she accused of illegal sexual activity.

Lawyer Montgomery Blair Sibley said that Palfrey's business was a legal fantasy service and that her employees signed contracts agreeing not to break the law.

more: right here

Small plane crashes on suburban Chicago street, killing 2 - CNN.com

Small plane crashes on suburban Chicago street, killing 2 - CNN.com:


MUNSTER, Indiana (AP) -- A small plane crashed on a city street Friday evening in suburban Chicago, killing two people who were on the plane, authorities said.

There were no initial reports of any injuries on the ground, said Elizabeth Isham Cory, a spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administration.

It did not appear that the plane hit any people, cars or buildings.

The crash left much of the twin-engine Beechcraft Baron's wreckage on four-lane Calumet Avenue.

The crash site is near the state line and within a mile of the Lansing Municipal Airport in Lansing, Illinois.

Cory said she did not immediately have information about the plane's travel route.

Very sad news for Boston fans

Boston lead singer found dead in his home - CNN.com:


WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- Brad Delp, the lead singer of the 1970s and '80s rock band Boston was found dead at his home in southern New Hampshire on Friday, local police said.

Delp, 55, apparently was home alone and there was no indication of foul play, Atkinson, New Hampshire, police said.

With Delp's big, high-register voice, Boston scored hits with "More Than a Feeling," "Long Time," and "Peace of Mind."

The band's popularity peaked in the late 1970s, but it remained active off and on, producing its last album "Corporate America" in 2002.

Delp was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and bought his first guitar at age 13 after seeing the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show, according to his Web site. Since 1994, he spent his spare time working in a tribute band called Beatle Juice, the band's Web site said.

The band's Web site carried a statement, "We've just lost the nicest guy in rock and roll."

Very important!

A "must have" for those games of office politics. Skiff approved.

Amusing Four words: USB-powered office c...:


Four words: USB-powered office cannon

Here we go AGAIN!

So let's check this against my SATAN Test. Would Georgia allow literature classes on The Satanic Bible? Would they allow literature classes on, say... Harry Potter? If no, then NO BIBLE! Egads! What does it take to get these people to understand.

Georgia to OK Bible-based lit classes - Education - MSNBC.com:


ATLANTA - Georgia is poised to introduce two literature classes on the Bible in public schools next year, a move some critics say would make the state the first to take an explicit stance endorsing — and funding — biblical teachings.

The Bible already is incorporated into some classes in Georgia and other states, but some critics say the board's move, which makes the Bible the classes' main text, treads into dangerous turf.

On a list of classes approved Thursday by the Georgia Board of Education are Literature and History of the Old Testament Era, and Literature and History of the New Testament Era. The classes, approved last year by the Legislature, will not be required, and the state's 180 school systems can decide for themselves whether to offer them.

The school board's unanimous vote set up a 30-day public comment period, after which it is expected to give final approval.

Senate Majority Leader Tommie Williams, the Republican who sponsored the plan, said the Bible plays a major role in history and is important in understanding many classic literary works.

"It's not just 'The Good Book,'" Williams said. "It's a good book."

Charles Haynes of the First Amendment Center, a nonpartisan civil liberties group, has said the Georgia policy is the nation's first to endorse and fund Bible classes on a statewide level.

The bill approved overwhelmingly in the Legislature was tailored to make it clear the courses would not stray into religious teaching, Williams said.

The measure calls for the courses to be taught "in an objective and nondevotional manner with no attempt made to indoctrinate students."

But critics say that while the language may pass constitutional muster, that could change in the classroom if instructors stray.

Maggie Garrett, legislative counsel for the Georgia branch of the American Civil Liberties Union, said the curriculum approved Tuesday — like the legislation itself — is vague.

"They didn't put in any outlines describing what they can and can't do constitutionally," she said. "The same traps are there for teachers who decide to teach the class."

Some teachers might seek to include their own beliefs or be pushed by students into conversations that include religious proselytizing, Garrett said.

During last year's campaign-period legislative session, Democrats surprised majority Republicans by introducing a plan to teach the Bible in public schools. Republicans, who control both chambers, quickly responded with their own version, which passed and was signed into law by Gov. Sonny Perdue.

March 09, 2007

Now why didn't I think of that?

German settles divorce with chainsaw | NEWS.com.au:


A 43-YEAR-OLD German decided to settle his imminent divorce by chainsawing a family home in two and making off with his half in a forklift truck.

Police in the eastern town of Sonneberg said the trained mason measured the single-storey summer house - which was some eight metres long and six metres wide - before chainsawing through the wooden roof and walls.

“The man said he was just taking his due,” a police spokesman said.

“But I don't think his wife was too pleased.”

After finishing the job, the man picked up his half with the forklift truck and drove to his brother's house where he has since been staying.

March 07, 2007

RIAA v. Fair Use Act - John Quarterman

RIAA v. Fair Use Act:


According to the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA):


"The DMCA has enabled consumers to enjoy creative works through popular
new technologies," the RIAA said in a statement. "The DVD, iPod and the
iTunes Music Store can all be traced to the DMCA. Online games, on-demand
movies, e-books, online libraries, and many other services are coming to
market because of a secure environment rooted in the DMCA's protections."

RIAA slams FAIR USE Act by Eric Bangeman, Ars Technica, 2/28/2007 4:14:26 PM, by Eric Bangeman

Eric Bangeman points out that the DVD actually precedes the DMCA, but "secure" is more or less accurate. Secure in the sense that a traditional newspaper is secure: those pesky readers can't alter it; they have to read it as they get it. Kind of like the old AT&T telephone network before the Carterfone decision let other companies attach equipment to it. That decision led to mobile phones, the Internet, and other benefits.

Anyway, the current RIAA complaint is over the so-called Fair Use Act introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives 27 Feb 2007 by Rep. Rick Boucher (D-VA) and Rep. John Doolittle (R-CA). This bill would modify the Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA) slightly to bring it more in line with traditional U.S. fair use doctrine, letting users copy more for their own use.

Meanwhile, the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) is for the Fair Use Act. Which illustrates what I don't like about RIAA's approach to copying. protecting copyrights is a useful thing (as long as it somehow redounds to the benefit of the original artists, which is somewhat dubious with music as traditionally distributed in the U.S.). But RIAA uses the DMCA to sue grade school and college students and tries to force modifications to electronics that may only peripherally if ever be used for listening to commercial music or videos. Why should the relatively small recording industry or even the not very large motion picture industry be permitted to force modifications to equipment produced by the much larger electronics and computing industries, to the detriment of the public at large? That doesn't seem like good risk management for everybody else, and probably not for RIAA, either, because a business model that requires such strenuous legal activity is probably a flawed business model that will be leapfrogged by something better. Some equipment manufacturers have already discovered it's not good for their reputations. And history shows that the blockbuster and hit mentality of the movie and record industries has been superseded in the past.

Anyway, there's another matter:

The RIAA also takes issue with the bill's narrow exemptions to the DMCA. "Proponents of H.R. 1201 claim it legalizes hacking only for 'noninfringing' uses," reads the RIAA's statement. "But as Congress recognized when it enacted the DMCA, the difference between hacking done for noninfringing purposes and hacking done to steal is impossible to determine and enforce. That's why Congress created a review process that takes place every three years to determine whether fair uses of copyrighted works are in peril—and why Congress gave the power to the Librarian of Congress to take away DMCA protections in cases where fair use is in danger."

Ah, let's demonize the problem by misusing the term hacking, which people like RIAA have turned into a scare word. And let's trot out the wait-and-see argument. Meanwhile, Congress has the power to just change the law, which is what the Fair Use Act proposes to do.

Not change the DMCA enough, by, for example, repealing it, but somewhat, at least. It seems to me that more participants enabled by the Fair Use Act will lead to more innovation and creativity and thus more music and video, and that should be a good thing for everyone. Will it be good risk management for RIAA? Maybe not, but neither is RIAA's current approach.

-jsq


Moscow Bureau of Tourism Declined to Comment

Americans believed poisoned in Moscow - CNN.com:


MOSCOW, Russia (CNN) -- Two American women have been released from a Moscow clinic after they were hospitalized with possible thallium poisoning, a hospital official said.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Marina Kovalevsky, 42, and her daughter Yana, 26, were well enough to walk out of Sklifosovsky Clinic Wednesday and were expected to leave the country shortly.

The U.S. Embassy confirmed earlier on Wednesday that the women had possibly been poisoned from thallium, a radioactive element.

Moscow's top public health doctor, Nikolai Filatov, said thallium poisoning had been confirmed, according to the RIA-Novosti news agency. (Watch how the investigation is progressing)

U.S. Consular officials had visited them in the clinic and were in contact with family members in Russia. The embassy declined to give more details.

The Russian media said both women were Soviet-born and emigrated to the United States in 1989, and that they had often visited Russia since then. Reports said they arrived in Moscow in mid-February for a wedding, according to The Associated Press.

Russian authorities are investigating how they may have been poisoned, the embassy told CNN. Typical symptoms of thallium poisoning include dehydration, heart complications and hair loss.

Thallium is a colorless, tasteless substance that can be fatal in doses of as little as one gram and has the reputation as a poison of choice for assassins.

It was used by Saddam Hussein to kill several of his Iraqi opponents, AP said. The CIA also reportedly considered using thallium against Fidel Castro, the agency added.

In November, former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko died in a London hospital in a suspected radioactive poisoning.

March 06, 2007

Poor poor Liz.

FOXNews.com - Wassup! Princes Pull Phone Prank on Queen Elizabeth II - International News | News of the World | Middle East News | Europe News:


LONDON  —  Princely pranksters William and Harry have been accused of recording a bogus message on Queen Elizabeth II's answering machine.
The pair were asked for help by their regal gran when she was baffled by the technology.
But she was reported to be mortified when she heard the end result.
"Hey wassup!" their message said. "This is Liz. Sorry I'm away from the throne."
Click here for FOXNews.com's Europe center.
"For a hotline to Philip, press one. For Charles, press two," the recording continued. "And for the corgis, press three."
According to The Daily Star, the Queen saw the funny side later when she thought about which VIPs might have heard the message.
But her private secretary was not so amused.
The paper says he almost fell off his chair the first time one of his calls was put through to the voicemail.
The Queen, who is 80, has been taught by Prince William and Prince Harry how to send text messages on her mobile phone.

Another case of really crappy law.

*sigh* DMCA extends its reach ever more. *UGH*

TracFone resellers held liable for DMCA violations:


TracFone Wireless, Inc. v. Dixon, -- F.Supp.2d --, 2007 WL 570540 (M.D. Fla.)

In this uncontested case, TracFone achieved an unsurprisingly broad reading of copyright, trademark and unfair competition law against defendants who bought and resold TracFone prepaid phones in bulk. Part of defendants’ conduct was “unauthorized and unlawful” unlocking of TracFone phones, “alteration” of TracFone’s software, and sale of “counterfeited” phones to end users. The fact that the case was uncontested makes it inherently a bad one for legal doctrine, but I’m having a hard time figuring out what was counterfeit about the phones – there is no allegation that these were other than TracFone-manufactured phones.

Likewise, the allegation about software was that the phones were “hacked” to “erase, remove and/or disable” TracFone’s copyrighted software. The court found that this conduct constituted trademark infringement, copyright infringement, and violation of the DMCA, and probably other legal violations as well. I can see trademark infringement if the phones weren’t properly marked as varying from original condition, but erasing, removing, and disabling software doesn’t, as far as I know, implicate any exclusive rights of a copyright owner, any more than my recycling of my old newspapers does.

The court addressed the recent exemption for certain cell phone-related conduct in the Library of Congress DMCA exemption proceedings. Because that exemption allows circumvention “for the sole purpose of lawfully connecting to a wireless telephone communication network,” the court ruled it inapplicable – defendants were circumventing for the purpose of profitable resale, not connection. (I would read the exemption more broadly, since the Librarian made clear that the “sole purpose” requirement is directed at preventing things like circumventing copyright controls on ringtones; the ability to connect to a wireless network is central to the ability to resell the phone. The rulemaking itself speaks of the “consumer,” but also points out that firmware-imposed restrictions on switching networks have nothing to do with the incentives at which copyright is directed, so copyright owners as such have no interest in maintaining firmware locks.)

Intriguingly, the court stated that, because the exemption didn’t apply, the court need not address its validity, suggesting that TracFone had argued in the alternative that the exemption was improperly granted – perhaps a sign of future ligitation strategy against a defendant who chooses to fight back. TracFone submitted untimely comments to the Librarian, which were not considered in the rulemaking (search for “wireless” to find the relevant portions). Possibly TracFone thinks that its failure to comply with the Librarian’s rules justifies relitigating the exemption in court.

TracFone also alleged defendants engaged in fraudulent manipulation of TracFone’s Refer-a-Friend promotion through their websites, which used TracFone’s marks and logo to deceive consumers into thinking they were legitimately associated with TracFone, recruited customers to claim free airtime, then sold the airtime to unsuspecting third parties. The court granted relief on these claims as well; though the court’s laundry list of liability didn’t distinguish between the cell phone resales and the websites, my guess is that the applicable claims were trademark infringement, “domain name misuse” (the ACPA isn’t mentioned, and one of the offending websites didn’t use any variant of TracFone in the top-level URL), and various common-law torts.



March 05, 2007

Awww, poor moose.

Charging moose brings down hovering helicopter - CNN.com:


ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -- A helicopter is not necessarily a match for an angry moose.

Instead of slowing down after being shot with a tranquilizer dart, a moose charged a hovering helicopter used by a wildlife biologist, damaging the aircraft's tail rotor and forcing it to the ground.

Neither the pilot nor the biologist was injured, but the moose was maimed by the spinning rotor and had to be euthanized, wildlife officials said.

"It just had to be one of those quirky circumstance. Even dealing with bears and goats and moose and wolves, this is pretty unusual and truly a very unique situation," said Doug Larsen, regional supervisor for the Division of Wildlife Conservation.

Biologist Kevin White was aboard the chartered helicopter on Saturday for a study of moose near Gustavus, a community of 459 people about 50 miles northwest of Juneau in southeast Alaska. Moose outnumber humans there 2-to-1, White has written in an essay for the Department of Fish and Game Web site.

He shot the animal with a tranquilizer dart, Larsen said, and the pilot maneuvered the helicopter to keep the animal from slipping into a tight space or collapsing in water and drowning.

"The moose would start to move, and then the helicopter would back off and try to keep the moose out in the open," Larsen said.

But instead of moving toward open space, the moose charged the helicopter.

"As the animal got closer and closer to going down, an animal sort of loses its thinking -- its ability to rationalize what's in its best interest," Larsen said.

March 02, 2007

Swiss accidentally invade Liechtenstein - Boston.com

Swiss accidentally invade Liechtenstein - Boston.com:


Swiss accidentally invade Liechtenstein
March 2, 2007
ZURICH, Switzerland --What began as a routine training exercise almost ended in an embarrassing diplomatic incident after a company of Swiss soldiers got lost at night and marched into neighboring Liechtenstein.
According to Swiss daily Blick, the 170 infantry soldiers wandered just over a mile across an unmarked border into the tiny principality early Thursday before realizing their mistake and turning back.
A spokesman for the Swiss army confirmed the story but said that there were unlikely to be any serious repercussions for the mistaken invasion.
"We've spoken to the authorities in Liechtenstein and it's not a problem," Daniel Reist told The Associated Press.
Officials in Liechtenstein also played down the incident.
Interior ministry spokesman Markus Amman said nobody in Liechtenstein had even noticed the soldiers, who were carrying assault rifles but no ammunition. "It's not like they stormed over here with attack helicopters or something," he said.
Liechtenstein, which has about 34,000 inhabitants and is slightly smaller than Washington DC, doesn't have an army.

March 01, 2007

Hellooooo cockatoooooooo

Stupid Man may lose license for driving ...:


Man may lose license for driving around with his cockatoo on his shoulder. When asked to comment, the driver said, "Arrrr"

Who needs that steenking privacy, anyway?