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Authored by: Neeld on Monday, August 20 2012 @ 10:39 PM EDT |
Random things [ Reply to This | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, August 20 2012 @ 10:48 PM EDT |
I understand that in the big picture we might find this information usefull...
But in a court where facts are weighed in and disclosures are given when a
witness testifies ... why does this matter to the court?[ Reply to This | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, August 20 2012 @ 11:28 PM EDT |
I think Google could have been a bit clearer that the issue is
that they don't know which of those people they have paid are
commentators, hence the impossibility of providing that list
rather than providing a list of the millions of people they
have paid, which while unfeasible, would be possible.[ Reply to This | # ]
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Authored by: artp on Tuesday, August 21 2012 @ 12:39 AM EDT |
Eror -> Error in TItle block if at all possible.
Skipping other canonical threads as PJ is puttin' em out
faster than I can read 'em.
---
Userfriendly on WGA server outage:
When you're chained to an oar you don't think you should go down when the galley
sinks ?[ Reply to This | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, August 21 2012 @ 12:53 AM EDT |
I was going to post this as a reply to a OT comment on
a previous article but since PJ has already written about this I thought I
should post it here. The referenced comment read:
This is tne
point at which Google literally buries the judge with data. 100+ DVDs with 9GB
of data on each, listing nothing but names and contact information of eberybody
who has ever had anything close to a passing relationship of any kind with any
of the organizations or groups it has contributec money to, in the last two
years.(name, phone number, email address, organization, known blogs, known
social networking sites, known forum hangouts, etc)
While I
imagine "backing up the dump truck" would likely get Google cited for contempt
of court, I do hope Judge Alsup realized that Google's specialty is search when
he wrote:
Again, Google need only disclose those commenters that
can be identified after a reasonably diligent search.
After a
Google search (matching their normal search against their AdSense
database), there might be a few more entries there than the good judge bargained
for!
[ Reply to This | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, August 21 2012 @ 02:54 AM EDT |
Yup, Flo Mo uses Google Blogger, which saves him
considerable cost in setting upon alternative blogging
platform. He also uses android for free,which as we know is
worth beelions. This is definitely quid pro quo for all the
positive things he says about Google.
If anything were to show the absurdity of implying influence
due to using free blogging or advert services, this would be
it.
I don't think the judge is after this though, I think he
wants info on universities and organisations who have
received donations and commented on the case.[ Reply to This | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, August 21 2012 @ 06:10 AM EDT |
But didn't have to list them. They got away with a blanket
statement "Certain Oracle employees may have blogged about
issues relating to the case... Oracle did not ask or approve
any of its employees to write about the case and does not
track employee bloggers". But Google says essentially the
same thing - they didn't ask or pay anyone to write about the
case - and they get told to find and list everyone? Doesn't
seem fair.[ Reply to This | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, August 21 2012 @ 07:58 AM EDT |
Could this include PJ and Groklaw readers? [ Reply to This | # ]
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Authored by: Kevin on Tuesday, August 21 2012 @ 09:23 AM EDT |
Last year, I served as a mentor for Google Summer of Code. For my time and
effort, Google made a contribution to the sponsoring organization. Hence, in
some sense I have been "paid by Google." I've also commented
sporadically in this forum, in a personal capacity and without Google's
knowledge, except to the extent that Google has ingested the postings into its
search engines. Certainly, I have never sought nor received Google's consent for
any posting. I suppose it is possible that Google could identify my postings by
the '73 de ke9tv/2, Kevin' in my signature line, which I use regularly in a
number of forums.
My relationship with Google Summer of Code has not affected my opinion on the
merits of this case. Nor was my participation as a mentor there contracted under
any sort of understanding that I would speak or remain silent about Google. I
speak here in purely a private capacity.
Google paid the sponsoring organization to provide mentors; I happened to be one
that the organization chose, and I'm sure they have a record somewhere of mentor
names. I happen to have commented on this case here, in a forum that PJ assures
us is outside Google's control.
And it is precisely this sort of arm's-length relationship that the judge
appears to be ordering Google to track down. Should I be writing to the court?
Should all the thousands of GSoC mentors be writing to the court because their
sponsoring organizations took Google's money and they have still felt free to
speak in a private capacity?
I find it disturbing that my posting here gives the appearance of impropriety.
Given the tangled web of corporate relationships, I begin to wonder if the law
restrains me from speaking publicly on any subject, lest some company with whom
I have a financial relationship have an interest in the topic unbeknownst to
me.
I expect that this litigation may well lead to companies' adopting new Draconian
restrictions on when people are allowed to communicate. I can easily see
standard contracts being changed to "you may not post anything, on any
topic, to an online forum, even in a private capacity on matters that you deem
unrelated to the scope of the contract, without first receiving clearance in
writing from the corporate public affairs office, the patent and legal
department, and an export control attorney."
And the whole affair is crazy. What bearing does Oracle's relationship with
Muller have on the facts of the case? The jury is already enjoined from reading
about the case in the media. Why does the court need to take judicial notice
that a given reporter was paid by a party, much less then follow up with a broad
inquiry against Google when Oracle answers, 'tu quoque?'
---
73 de ke9tv/2, Kevin (P.S. My surname is not McBride!)[ Reply to This | # ]
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Authored by: DannyB on Tuesday, August 21 2012 @ 10:31 AM EDT |
Google should just come out and say it like IBM did. Simple. Unambiguous.
Straightforward.
In a nutshell: Google has no financial or editorial control over Groklaw.
Something like that may be what the judge is looking for.
---
The price of freedom is eternal litigation.[ Reply to This | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, August 21 2012 @ 11:07 AM EDT |
I would not be surprised if Groklaw is one of the sources of commentary that
Judge Alsup is concerned about. I have often wondered about the vitriolic tone
and lopsided content of your commentary. In fact, this article is a good
example.
Judge Alsup was not responding to Google’s request for clarification as your
title suggests. He was reprimanding Google for failing to comply with his
previous order.
It was clear from Google’s submission on Friday that they had cynically dodged
the question. The order did not ask the parties to identify commenters that they
had paid to write about the case, it asked them to identify any commenters that
had written about the case and with whom they have or had a financial
relationship (other than subscriptions, AdSense, etc.).
It is also clear that the Judge isn’t at all confused about AdSense. You are.
What is it about “payments do not include advertising revenue...” that you don’t
understand?
The real question is: are you genuinely as confused as you appear to be? Or are
you being remunerated in some way to pretend to be confused in order to confuse
other people?
Also, in my opinion, the “payments” in Google’s next submission really ought to
include:
- Direct or indirect sponsorship of a commenter’s Research or White Papers
- Direct or indirect sponsorship of Conferences from which the commenter or
their organisation profits
- Payments in kind, such as being given privileged access to high-value Google
employees or early access to newsworthy information in exchange for favorable or
editorially-directed coverage.
I would also ask both parties to reveal if they have ever encouraged their own
employees or hired a third party to pose as “ordinary users”, posting or
tweeting messages disguised to look like grass-roots user commentary.
[ Reply to This | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, August 21 2012 @ 01:36 PM EDT |
Instead of saying who have either party paid who may have commented on this
case, I thought I would look at who has commented on the case and see if it is
plausible that they may have been paid to do so.
What I did was to do a
simple Google search on "oracle versus google" and check the first two pages of
links. This is what I found:
- Joe Mullin - arstechnica.com -
Interviewed two Google lawyers after the trial.
- PJ - groklaw.net - No
comment necessary.
- AdamOutler - xda-developers.com - Article is
anti-Oracle on the basis that copyright of APIs would be bad.
- Rachel
King - zdnet.com - Neutral.
- Bryan Bishop - theverge.com - Violently
pro-Oracle. The "article" is basically pro-Oracle PR spin.
- Dan Rowinski
- readwriteweb.com - Neutral.
- Caleb Garling - wired.com -
Neutral.
- no author - economist.com - Neutral.
- Rachel King and
Dan Farber - cnet.com - Neutral.
- Declan McCullagh - cnet.com - -
Neutral. Quotes both Florian Meuller and Groklaw. Author is married to a Google
employee.
- generic story search page - cnet.com
- Sue Gee -
i-programmer.info - Neutral. Story is about judge knowing how to
program.
- Michael Gorman - engadget.com - Neutral.
- John Oram -
brightsideofnews.com - Article is anti-Oracle. Quotes Groklaw and PJ. Opposition
to Oracle is based on a general dislike of "unreasonable" IP
lawsuits.
- John Letzing - wsj.com - Neutral.
- Soulskill -
slashdot.org - Neutral (the story summary that is, no the
comments).
- Joe Mullin - arstechnica.com - Neutral.
- document
search page - cand.uscourts.gov - Neutral.
- Geoff Duncan -
digitaltrends.com - Neutral.
- Chris Davies - slashgear.com - Article is
anti-Oracle on the basis that copyright of APIs would be bad.
So,
out of 20 links, we get the following:
- 13 are simply neutral
reporting of the facts, mostly by news sites.
- 2 are just embedded
search pages, and so don't express opinions of their own.
- 3 don't like
Oracle due to the side effects they think Oracle's arguments would
have.
- 1 is violently pro-Oracle, but it's not possible to find a
rational reason in the article for his opinion. This one however might be just
the frustrated screams of an anti-Google Apple fan-boy rather than someone who
is directly pro-Oracle.
- Groklaw is the number 2 link.
- I
didn't see Florian Meuller's blog in the first two pages. Who is connecting him
with journalists?
- One journalist disclosed being married to a Google
employee. I wonder if the judge consideres that as "accepting money from
Google"? It doesn't seem to have affected his reporting
however.
The thing that I find most interesting is that if there
are any paid shills out there, it's not easy to find them by doing a simple web
search for them. If they are getting into the public consciousness, it's
indirectly by being quoted or linked by other more normal channels. The question
is then, how do shills get public notice? Do company PR departments phone up
journalists and put them in touch? Journalists are always looking for "sources"
that they can rely on to give them a quote (note that I said "rely on to give a
quote", not "give a reliable quote").
If you are a professional shill,
you would make those connections and then hunt for company contracts which take
advantage of them. Your blog posts would simply be filler material for
journalists ("I need a supporting quote for this argument") rather than
something which is meant to be read directly by the public. If someone wanted to
do a detailed study on this issue, what they would need to do is to find a large
representative sample of news stories and see which "independent" third parties
were quoted and then try to make a connection from there.
Oh, and on
the Internet PJ is #2, while Florian is number no-where. Some things you can buy
with money, and some things you can't.
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Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, August 21 2012 @ 09:02 PM EDT |
One of the things judge Alsup has explicitly asked both
parties to list before Friday is the various "associations"
and "groups" that are sponsored by or represents the
parties.
In other words, things like (*these names are fictional*):
"The association for distributed search" (with Google as the
biggest member).
"The Byte code society" (a Java organisation founded by Sun
and now run by Oracle).
"The Software Printing Industry Alliance" (with both as
members).
Etc.
Such a list is very useful if an organization on the list
later tries to intervene as a neutral friend of the court.
[ Reply to This | # ]
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