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Authored by: al_dunsmuir on Wednesday, May 30 2012 @ 12:41 PM EDT |
News clip regarding
Caleb asks about the elephant in Florian Mueller's
blog.
See Caleb Garling on Twitter for further jousting. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: feldegast on Wednesday, May 30 2012 @ 12:49 PM EDT |
Does this mean there is a chance that companies that
distribute products with the Linux kernel but without source
might finally be taken to court? I have lost track of all the
companies who might be sued over this....
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IANAL
My posts are ©2004-2012 and released under the Creative Commons License
Attribution-Noncommercial 2.0
P.J. has permission for commercial use.[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, May 30 2012 @ 01:05 PM EDT |
Judge Harvey has made a few recent decisions on the Megaupload / Kim Dotcom
file: here's a bit of his background.
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Judge David Harvey was appointed as a District Court Judge in 1989. He has been
closely involved with Information Technology initiatives involving the Judiciary
undertaken by the former Department of Justice and the present Department for
Courts, including the development of trial management software.
In addition to his Judicial duties, Judge Harvey is consultant editor for
Butterworths “Electronic Business and Technology Law” and a member of the
Editorial Board for Butterworths “Technology Law Forum”.
Judge Harvey is a part-time lecturer at the Faculty of Law, University of
Auckland, teaching Law and Information Technology. He has written extensively in
the field of law and technology and has presented a number of papers to
conferences both in New Zealand and overseas on related topics. He was Chair of
the Copyright Tribunal (2002 – 2008) and has had published a book on the law and
networked systems entitled internet.law.nz – Selected Issues , now in its second
edition. He is engaged in study for a PhD degree. -- nethui.org.nz
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Judge David Harvey is widely regarded as New Zealand's most technologically
savvy judge. Appointed to the bench in 1988 he serves in the District Court
holding warrants for general, jury and Youth Court jurisdictions. A former chair
of the Copyright Tribunal, he lectures part-time in law and information
technology at the University of Auckland, has been involved in the introduction
of information technology for the Judiciary since 1990, and is the author of
internet.law.nz - Selected Issues.
A former international Mastermind champion (his speciality was J R R Tolkien's
The Lord of the Rings), he writes widely on law and internet topics, is
currently completing a PhD and has been active in making submissions on our laws
relating to copyright and legislating against spam. -- nzherald.co.nz[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, May 30 2012 @ 03:19 PM EDT |
My guess is that this means Adobe is abandoning flash completely soon. On all
the Apple platforms, it is effectively dead. On Linux based platforms, they pass
it to Google. On Microsoft platforms, they gave it to Microsoft. It's par for
the course with a dying proprietary platform. But a lot of content and
applications have been created on this particular platform. Much more than any
other platforms that Adobe/Macromedia had destroyed over the years.[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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