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- Since that $750 per family is money we don't have, that would be $750 per family plus interest on the debt in perpetuity. Or it could be monetized, in which case it regressively taxes everyone...
- For the record, the supporters of "Google violates its 'Don't be Evil' motto swept the floor with the Google apologists, even with Googleboy Larry Lessig in the audience. See the...
- Slippery slopes are everywhere, so I wouldn't worry about them. These issues about probable cause only apply to the government, as I understand them, but IANAL. Assuming there were something to...
- Apparently I can reply to your comment via e-mail. We'll see if this works. (later) Indeed it does, with a few formatting weirdnesses is all.
- Same here. My response to you hasn't shown up.I guess Disqus doesn't want to get anyone upset.
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1 year ago
The issue of public access to the MLS surfaced several years ago. On the radio, a realtor (of course) advocated that the public should not see the MLS listing because the realtors had this important role of "making the market". Utter nonsense of course.
Considering the current abominable state of copyright law, an innovative lawyer NAR may be able claim that this data is "intellectual property" and not subject to public disclosure as a means of sidestepping the monoply issue. The recent issue of "who owns the baseball statistics" raises the concept that data aggregators would be entitled to control the data even after it is released. Ironically, why aren't data aggregators required to pay royalties to the data sources when the data is sold????
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/16/sports/baseba...
1 year ago
On the other hand, if you don't like things created by the govt, then perhaps you disagree with the patent case law handed to society by the CAFC, or the Defense Department's DARPA wing which initiated a lot of basic research leading up to our modern Internet.
1 year ago
1 year ago