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- Point accepted. I guess that I am being a bit bipolar. Great EULA that you have there. :) Here is a link to <a href="http://cexx.org/battle.htm">Battle of the Forms</a> by...
- Steve R. -- you might want to read the Web Site User Agreement for my web site http://zgp.org/~dmarti/meta/tos/ and do something similar. (I was thinking of something like "by reading my blog...
- Incredibly hollow post, contracts of adhesion are designed to unilaterally "protect" the seller by "restricting" (depriving) the consumer of their rights. To assert that we...
- Why don't more proprietary software vendors use a common license? The proprietary EULAs mostly say the same things -- couldn't the BSA or somebody issue a standard one?
- Twitter as we know it was built for about $15-20 million. Google lasted almost a year on $100,000 before taking over the world with $25 million of investor money. This is highway robbery, you could...
The Technology Liberation Front
The Technology Liberation Front is the tech policy blog dedicated to keeping politicians' hands off the 'net and everything else related to technology.The Technology Liberation Front » Archive » Cato Unbound: Towards a Copyriot Act
Started by TLF · 11 months ago
1 year ago
Antispammers are better at picking out poster boy spammers than copyright holders are at picking out poster boy defendants.
(The likely reason for the lameness with which copyright holder go after actual infringers is that generation after generation of DRM snake-oil sellers keep selling them on the idea that next year, the infringement isn't going to be technically possible, so no need to put your best people to work on smacking today's infringers.)
1 year ago
Similar to what I have previously expressed concerning the blatant disregard of corporation concerning "due process"; Art Butler (an attorney representing Americans for Fair Electronic Commerce Transactions (AFFECT)) stated in regards to Section 6(a) of S. 1625 -- the Counter Spy Act that "It would allow the provider to set itself up as an ad hoc police force to conduct warrantless searches and to act as judge and jury to conduct unilateral seizures. Private entities do not and should not have the right to conduct law enforcement activities. More troubling is the fact that the language of Subsection 6(a)(10) would effectively allow a software provider to unilaterally decide to remotely shut down the user's computer or Internet or other network connection or service. But whether the use of a particular software is 'unauthorized,' 'fraudulent,' or 'illegal' is often subject to legitimate dispute and merits some judicial consideration before a provider is allowed to unilaterally employ a drastic remedy like remote disablement."
1 year ago