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Apple Wins Against Bloggers

linuxwrangler writes "Saying that no one has the right to publish information that could have been provided only by someone breaking the law, judge James Kleinberg ruled that online reporters for Apple Insider and PowerPage must reveal their sources. No word yet on an appeal."

672 comments

  1. A refreshing victory for common sense by daveschroeder · · Score: 4, Insightful

    (Note: More coverage in this news.com story)

    This judge has clearly shown that he has a grasp of the fundamental issues surrounding this case, and has realized that this is not a case about whether online sites are "journalists" or about the "right to blog". It's about when it's about when the dissemination of information in the public interest clearly overrides any other legal concerns or contracts and entitles journalists to not reveal their sources - and when it clearly doesn't.

    And if you're not going to RTFA, here is some of the jugde's ruling:

    "Unlike the whistleblower who discloses a health, safety or welfare hazard affecting all, or the government employee who reveals mismanagement or worse by our public officials, [the enthusiast sites] are doing nothing more than feeding the public's insatiable desire for information.[1]

    [...]

    Defining what is a 'journalist' has become more complicated as the variety of media has expanded. But even if the movants are journalists, this is not the equivalent of a free pass.

    [...]

    The journalist's privilege is not absolute. For example, journalists cannot refuse to disclose information when it relates to a crime.

    [...]

    [The information about Apple's unreleased products] is stolen property, just as any physical item, such as a laptop computer containing the same information on its hard drive [or not] would be. The bottom line is there is no exception or exemption in either the [Uniform Trade Secrets Act] or the Penal Code for journalists--however defined--or anyone else.

    [...]

    The public has had, and continues to have, a profound interest in gossip about Apple. Therefore, it is not surprising that hundreds of thousands of 'hits' on a Web site about Apple have and will happen. But an interested public is not the same as the public interest."


    Note that the judge did not say that Think Secret and other online sites weren't journalists; indeed, he tacitly acknowledged that they, and many others, may in fact be "journalists". But that fact is, correctly, irrelevant. In other words, online sites or bloggers may in fact be journalists; this isn't about "the right to blog". However, being a "journalist" does not automatically mean the mechanisms of obtaining information, the information itself, and the sources of the information are automatically protected by journalist shield laws and exempt from discovery, especially when otherwise applicable laws (such as the UTSA) may have been violated. In other words, when a crime may have been committed (and the burden of whether or not this information constitutes a "trade secret" still rests on Apple, even after this ruling).

    Further, the judge makes no distinction between online publications and mainstream newspapers, simply a distinction that any and all information gathering mechanisms are not necessarily protected if other laws are violated. The assertion on the part of some that "these subpoenas wouldn't exist if it was the New York Times or salon.com" is baseless at best.

    No doubt someone will find issue with what is or isn't "public interest" and the fact that the courts (i.e. the "government") must make such a determination and is simply shifting the importance of whether someone can be considered a "journalist" to another consideration, essentially allowing the government to decide what is "acceptable" to be leaked and what isn't, and will make arguments that this will make it easier for corporations and/or the government to hide abuses, stop whistleblowers, etc. However, all of these arguments are red herrings. The court clearly acknowledged that sources information in the clear public interest must indeed be protected. Further note that the court DID NOT rule on the merits of Apple's claim itself, i.e., that the information was in fact a trade secret: "The order of this court does not go beyond the questions necessary t

    1. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by ravenspear · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Wow, I think that's the most insightful first post I have EVER read on /.

    2. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      technically, it's a third post... but your point is still valid assuming you meant first post unless you're reading at -1.

    3. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps, but it seems to fit the definition of a Pyrrhic victory. Alienating the people willing to pay a premium for your hardware is generally not the best way to build your business, and using the courts is generally seen as the nuclear option in business.

    4. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by f0dder · · Score: 2, Funny

      pfft... he only had the whole day to compose it. /money says he's been hitting refresh on slashdot just ready to post.

    5. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by SpryGuy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Does this mean that Robert Novak has to reveal his sources in the Valerie Plame story? Since that involves TREASON, which is a bit more serious than revealing trade secrets, doesn't this ruling apply there as well?

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    6. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alienating.

      Oh please. People all over the world are banging down Apple's door to get their hands on minis, iPods, and G5s.

      Dream on clown.

    7. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by mark-t · · Score: 3, Interesting
      While it's certainly appreciable that journalists cannot refuse to disclose information when it relates to a crime, there is no hard evidence that a crime was actually committed, only an allegation that a crime was committed. That's why, IMO, the identities should have remained protected. The fact that they couldn't prove a crime had occurred _unless_ they knew the identities of the sources is irrellevant as far as I can tell and to assume otherwise is tantamount to saying that a person is guilty until proven innocent.

      Although my feelings on the matter are irrellevant... the judge made his decision, I only hope that the consequences for the precedent aren't unmanageable.

    8. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think "treason" means what you think it means.

    9. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by daveschroeder · · Score: 3, Informative

      Does this mean that Jeff Gannon aka James Guckert was just as much of a "journalist" as anyone else in the White House Press room? Since there is a BLOGGER in the White House now, and apparently anyone with a web site is a journalist, doesn't this apply there as well?

      (Yes, I'm being a little sarcastic there.)

      Or shall we stay on topic here?

      And to directly answer your question, yes, Novak should reveal his source if there is ever any court action that compels him to do so. (Disclaimer: I am not familiar with shield laws on this topic in Novak's jurisdiction or Washington DC.)

      And it's not treason. Treason in the US is very specifically defined as only "levying war against the United States or 'in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort,' and requires the testimony of two witnesses to the same overt act or a confession in open court for conviction."

    10. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alienating.
      Oh please. People all over the world are banging down Apple's door to get their hands on minis, iPods, and G5s.


      This would indicate that ThinkSecret's page did not harm Apple -- in fact, it would seem to support the contention that it generated interest in the product. Considering that the court decision just happened, I think it's too early to claim it's a great victory.

    11. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looking at your web site, it seems that you are an avid Apple fan.

      Strange how your long-winded pro-Apple post forgot to mention that bias?

    12. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 0, Troll

      Thank the boys in Apple's marketing department.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    13. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The focus of this whole issue has been shifted, and I think that you, along with most people, missed the point. Apple isn't going after their customers. Apple isn't going after the rumor sites. Apple is going after someone who broke the law to provide trade secrets.

    14. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Wow, I think that's the most insightful first post I have EVER read on /.

      I don't think it's insightful at all. It is one of the most informative posts I've ever seen. It's spot on in explaining the ruling. I don't agree with the conclusion. I don't see the public interest in enforcing trade secrets laws that is more important than the chilling effect of this ruling. If this was rape or murder, sure, but violating trade secrets isn't as important of a crime to enforce.

      I wish people would understand there is a difference between the three I's on Slashdot. It doesn't help to meta-moderate when someone uses the wrong I, because you're punished if you don't agree with other more lazy meta-moderaters.

    15. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looking at your web site, it seems that you are an avid Apple fan.

      Strange how your long-winded pro-Apple post forgot to mention that bias?


      It wasn't forgotten, he simply signed an NDA with Apple.

    16. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "This would indicate that ThinkSecret's page did not harm Apple"

      No it wouldn't.

    17. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I don't think "treason" means what you think it means."
      Inconceivable.

    18. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      Please, Apple's sales figures are far below where they were back in the Performa days -- When anyone could go buy a magazine and read all about Apple's upcoming models. This secrecy crap has done nothing to sell computers, it's only about the perverse relationship between Jobs and his Fanboys.

      And those people "banging down Apple's door" tend to the exact people who read the rumor sites anyway.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    19. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by mark-t · · Score: 2, Insightful
    20. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The focus of this whole issue has been shifted, and I think that you, along with most people, missed the point. Apple isn't going after their customers. Apple isn't going after the rumor sites. Apple is going after someone who broke the law to provide trade secrets.

      And the RIAA is going after people who break the law to provide copyrighted material. You can follow the law to the letter and still annoy your customers.

    21. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think you understand why people don't like this.

      It's not because the judge made a mistake, or because the law doesn't side with Apple.

      Apple *chose* to do this. And they *chose* who to sue.

      Why on earth would Apple do this to their *supporters*? Where they really harmed by it? Or is this just Steve Job's ego and/or an overzealous legal department?

      Would Apple have done this 2-3 years ago? Would they have done this before the iPod? No. Just like Google, Apple is taking their success and shoving it in our faces.

      Dave Winer said it best on his blog today. Google succeeded by treating users with respect when the other search engines didn't. Apple is winning over Microsoft for the exact same reason.

      But now both Google and Apple are abusing that relationship.

      I was expecting Apple to go "evil", just not so suddenly and not so blatently. To me this is a step below suing someone in the open source world over some minor patent, or something along those lines. What would you think of apple if they did that?

      Suing online journalists over product info (products that you want to *sell* and generate buzz over) is like punishing a 1-year old for playing too loud by beating him with a stick. Yeah, he needs to be guided in the right direction, but what the fuck?

      As an Apple shareholder (only around 400 shares but I have been holding them for a LONG time), this is truly disappointing. You can hear this reverberating through all the blogs and online media outlets can't you? This is big and bad PR.

      I still love Apple products but between iPod DRM and this lawsuit I can see the writing on the wall: Apple is ready to begin the downward spiral again that nearly killed it.

      If Apple has any sense they will STOP THIS RIGHT NOW. We get the message. The "leaks" that gave this info to the bloggers get the message.

    22. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by amper · · Score: 1

      I thank Dog that there is at least one judge in this country with a brain. Justice has prevailed here, people...move along, now.

    23. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by hyfe · · Score: 2, Informative
      This, of course, completely ignores the basic ideas of property, including intellectual property, and good-faith agreements to not reveal your employer's secrets, not to mention fundamental ideas of ethics, and further ignores the idea that free speech is not, and never has been, absolute, in that it has ramifications.

      1. One would assume that one finding "trade secrets" and the UTSA unconstitutional wasn't all that keen on intellectual property in the first place, and most certainly would dismiss that it has anything to do with real property. This line of argueing is thus only valid if you agree with the conclusion in the first place.

      2. Secondly; yes, free speech has always had ramifications. Somebody most certainly broke a non-disclure contract here, and they most certainly are liable by whatever stipulated there. The kicker is however, how does this pertain to third parties in poessesion of the 'illegal information'? A great many people find the prospect that they should be held liable for publishing information gotten legally (from their point of view that is) just because whoever they got it from brok a NDA ridicilous. Not everybody accepts the notion that some information can suddenly be flagged as secret, and that you have to go around pretending not to know it. Signing away your own free speech is one thing, signing away others' is a whole different slew!

      3. Moreover, I also believe quitr alot of people would be against the notion that these bloggers have to give up their sources. A potential breach of a NDA should be treated as a contract dispute, and this shouldn't have anything to do with special tradelaws, and shouldn't involve courts/police at all! It ain't the governments job to create special provions for certain kind of contracts just because somebody crybabied themselves to it. This is just artificially plugging the market something it's perfectly able to fix itself (god forbid somebody actually had to try to keep their employees happy!)

      --
      "" How about taking the safety labels off everything, and let the stupidity-problem solve itself? """
    24. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      that's the most insightful first post I have EVER read

      No, I believe this is the very insightful first post.

    25. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes it does. Journalists don't have a free pass to break the law.

    26. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by delmoi · · Score: 1

      I'd say no. You could make the argument that the Valerie Plame story involves public intrest, because it revolves around alleged nepotism and poor quality research done at the CIA.

      Not that Novak shouldn't be put in jail for being a douche. I'm just saying...

      --

      ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
    27. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Does this mean that Jeff Gannon aka James Guckert was just as much of a "journalist" as anyone else in the White House Press room?

      The difference between Gannon and a "real" journalist is that Gannon tells you his bias up front.

      Let's not pretend that journalists are magic beings. They had their chance and these past few years demonstrated that they aren't as ethically pure as they claim.

      Since there is a BLOGGER in the White House now, and apparently anyone with a web site is a journalist, doesn't this apply there as well?

      Democracy sure sucks, eh? What next, anybody who's good at selling things can be a businessman? Anybody with a computer is a an open-source programmer? Anybody who plays the piano is a musician?

      There's only one thing that matters for any journalist, online or otherwise: do you have the reputation? And as Dan Rather proves, your reputation is only as good as your last story.

    28. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your comment is a refreshing victory for sucking up to megacorps and general apple fanboyism.

      Apparently you've run afoul of an Apple fanboy. :)

    29. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a good day for the fundamental idea of rights being couple with responsibility, and the fundamental concept that actions have consequences.

      Do you have trouble getting up on that high horse of yours?

      I wonder what the "consequences" of those actions might be: buzz gets generated over a new Apple product?

      This is just an angry child having a temper tantrum. A child that's now spoiled by nice iPod sales and forgot what it was like to be "beleaguered" and kept alive by customer loyalty.

    30. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to look up the definition of treason, idiot.

    31. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by John+Newman · · Score: 3, Informative
      I'd say no. You could make the argument that the Valerie Plame story involves public intrest, because it revolves around alleged nepotism and poor quality research done at the CIA.
      But two other reporters with only tangential links to the story, the New York Times' Judith Miller and Time magazine's Matthew Cooper, are being held in contempt of court, and are facing 18 months in prison for not naming their sources in connection with the case. Clearly the judge in their cases feels the Valerie Plame story involves critical public interest, so the only question is why these two and not the guy who actually published it?
    32. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by wcdw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not true - the only way for that information to have come into the possession of the bloggers was for someone to have committed a crime - stealing trade secrets.

      The only way for that not to be true is if Apple itself had authorized the release, which clearly they did not.

      --
      If you're not living on the edge, you're just taking up space!
    33. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      The real lesson here is "Cover your ass".

      Meaning, that from now on websites and the like will destroy incoming emails after they have been read and disclaimers will accompany all of their announcements like "An anonymous source claims..." about any upcoming advances.

      The outlet itself will be able to avoid direct lawsuits because they have given notice that what they have published is speculation and they haven't claimed it to be factual. When they are subpoena'd for records they can honestly say "Your honor, we don't keep any records about that."

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    34. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by boardin_1 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "...isn't as important of a crime" ???

      Are you for real? Now we are determining which crimes are more important? Breaking the law is breaking the law. Period. End of story.

      As for the ruling, I believe this is the correct one. There is a big difference between being a whistleblower and giving out trade secrets, and leaving the distinction in the case at large to be determined was also spot on.

      The First Ammendment is not absolute. (ie. Crying Fire! in a crowded theater) And if that, the most sacred of the ammendments, is not absolute, then neither is a journalist's shield.

    35. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by node+3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This, of course, completely ignores the basic ideas of property, including intellectual property, and good-faith agreements to not reveal your employer's secrets, not to mention fundamental ideas of ethics, and further ignores the idea that free speech is not, and never has been, absolute, in that it has ramifications.

      You're rolling a whole lot under one umbrella there. Physical property is different from so-called intellectual property, is different from ethics and deception.

      Apple is trying to create a false reality--a reality in which secrets are kept merely by agreement. That's not realistic on any large scale. Equating 'secrets' with 'physical property' doesn't change reality.

      I disagree with forcing TS to reveal their sources in this case, not because I think there should be no repercussions for those who violate confidentiality agreements, but because I don't think Apple has the right to force (via the courts) TS to do their work for them. Apple has leaks, and needs to find and fix them themselves. It should be up to TS whether to help Apple or not.

      We're not talking about info critical to solving a major crime, we're not talking about private personal data, we're not even talking about critical strategic data, we're talking about a contract violation, a contract of confidentiality on some hardware audio input that Apple was planning to release shortly anyway--and a contract that TS is not even a party to. This is about Apple not getting to control the hype they want. Too bad. Apple doesn't have a right to get the hype they want, only the right to try. You don't always get what you want, and it's unfair of Apple to use force in this case.

    36. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Someone, perhaps... not necessarily any of the magazine's sources, however. And knowing the identity of the sources may bring Apple no closer to finding out exactly who their own leak is... we'll find out soon enough, I guess.

    37. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by teslatug · · Score: 1

      That weasel already has done so.

    38. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by alexo · · Score: 1


      > This, of course, completely ignores the basic ideas of property,
      > including intellectual property [...]


      "intellectual property" is a figment of your imagination.

    39. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by bird · · Score: 1

      Actually, evidence is that Robert Novak *has* reveal ed his sources. Since it's grand jury testimony, we may never know for sure, but two other journalists in this case who publicly declined to do so are currently being pursued quite vigorously.

    40. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Grasping at straws, are we?

    41. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you for real? Now we are determining which crimes are more important? Breaking the law is breaking the law. Period. End of story.

      Are you saying a traffic violation is as important as murder, or just that you have trouble distinguishing the two?

    42. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by scheme · · Score: 2, Insightful
      But two other reporters with only tangential links to the story, the New York Times' Judith Miller and Time magazine's Matthew Cooper, are being held in contempt of court, and are facing 18 months in prison for not naming their sources in connection with the case. Clearly the judge in their cases feels the Valerie Plame story involves critical public interest, so the only question is why these two and not the guy who actually published it?

      How do you know Novak hasn't already been called and revealed everything? Grand jury witnesses and testimony is usually kept secret and Novak hasn't been forthcoming.

      The prosecuter could be trying to get other colloborating sources so that it doesn't turn into a he said/she said argument between Novak and a senior administration official.

      --
      "When you sit with a nice girl for two hours, it seems like two minutes. When you sit on a hot stove for two minutes, it
    43. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't beleive Novak is covered by any shield laws in this case. The investigation is being pursued under federal law which, as I understand it, has no journalistic shield provisions save for the first ammendment.

    44. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, you would just let dumbass employee's blab about products that are supposed to be kept under wrap? None of this is "evil". Sheesh..

    45. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by amper · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I disagree. The fact that wrongdoing was involved (and here I hesitate to characterize the act as criminal, as opposed to civil, being as I am not familiar with CA contract law) is empirically demonstrated by the fact that the only way that the information in question could have been released is if someone under prior restriction (as in an NDA) revealed it to the journalists involved.

      The relevant question is, does Apple have a right to discover the identities of the violator(s)?

      I believe that they do. Declan McCullagh's article (news.com) on the topic is indicative of the false assumptions made by many people as concerns this case. As the judge correctly surmised, an "interested public" does not equate with "the public interest". The Watergate scandal involved criminal acts that clearly reached to highest levels of government. Apple v. Doe involves a tort committed against a corporation inclear violation of prior agreements. The two are not equivalent.

      Freedom of speech and freedom of the press do not, and should not, extend to an ability to withhold the identities of persons who have committed an illegal act. The same would be true even if we were discussing the attorney/client privilege. An attorney who is privy to physical edvidence that his client is guilty can be lawfully compelled to reveal that information.

      This is not about corporate interests v. the public interest.

    46. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by vought · · Score: 1

      pfft... he only had the whole day to compose it. Um, the decision in the case wasn't released until a couple of hours ago, smarty-pants.

    47. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      This, of course, completely ignores the basic ideas of property, including intellectual property, and good-faith agreements to not reveal your employer's secrets, not to mention fundamental ideas of ethics, and further ignores the idea that free speech is not, and never has been, absolute, in that it has ramifications.

      1)Real, tangible property, 2)government-mandated artificial scarcity of artificial (intellectual) property, 3)contractual obligations, and 4)ethics are four different subjects. Lumping them together like that does us all a disservice.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    48. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a California judge. The California Constitution provides exactly for the protection sought by these journalists. The judge's ruling shows he ignored his State's own Constitution:

      The bottom line is there is no exception or exemption in either the [Uniform Trade Secrets Act] or the Penal Code for journalists--however defined--or anyone else.

      Yes, but there is a full and complete exception for journalists in The Constitution of California. There are too many bad judges on the bench.

    49. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      pfft... he only had the whole day to compose it. Um, the decision in the case wasn't released until a couple of hours ago, smarty-pants.

      I'm not saying he was prepared, but he does have a harshly critical post ready if it's overturned on appeal.

    50. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by wcdw · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter - there is still a link from the magazine to the source, however obfuscated. Appple's only recourse (assuming they feel they need one, with which view I don't necessarily agree) is to follow that chain from the only visible link.

      If someone, for example, gives you a stolen TV, and it gets discovered, you will either tell them where you got it, or go to jail. No matter how innocent you are or how much good faith you had in the deal.

      --
      If you're not living on the edge, you're just taking up space!
    51. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Yes, Apple does indeed have that right, but not at the costs of innocent people's rights. The point is that there is no actual proof that the magazine's sources are the ones who violated the NDA (indeed, they may have heard it from a friend that heard it from a friend that heard it from a friend that violated the NDA), but those are the ones whose identies are being disclosed.

    52. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      >>pfft... he only had the whole day to compose it.
      >Um, the decision in the case wasn't released until a couple of hours ago, smarty-pants.

      Oh, yeah? Well maybe he got the information from a blog before it was released, mister not-so-smarty-pants.

      nyah, nyah! c.p. c.p. c.p. c.p.

    53. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Let's assume that it wasn't the magazine's source.

      Then not only is the magazine liable (yes, you are liable if you should have known or guessed that the information is protected as a trade secret), but the person upstream of them is liable. As is the original source. Everyone in the chain between the original source and the magazine is liable.

      Receiving trade secret information functions nearly exactly like receiving stolen goods - if you get some, even if you did so in good faith, you are at fault. Doesn't matter how far down the chain you are, you remain at fault.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    54. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by brokencomputer · · Score: 2, Informative

      "giving them Aid" Disclosing information about an undercover government agent seems to mee like it is giving aid to the enemies of the United States

    55. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by BasilBrush · · Score: 1
      A great many people find the prospect that they should be held liable for publishing information gotten legally (from their point of view that is) just because whoever they got it from brok a NDA ridicilous.

      They are not being held liable. They won't have to pay a cent. But they are not allowed to withold evidence, that's a different thing entirely. They have to hand the names/address(es) over and that will be the end of it as far as the bloggers are concerned.

    56. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by nicovl · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Breaking the Law is Breaking the law? End of Story?

      I have never heard such nonsense! Find a judge or lawyer who has never broken the law!

      The law is a complete and corrupt disaster.

      It is a tool of the rich and powerful (don't believe me? See if you can afford a lawyer! The law isn't made for you, you can't really afford it!)

      To add insult to injury, the legal system is so complex that even lawyers don't understand it all. One lawyer can't help you with all your possible problems. In theory to avoid getting in trouble you need to have a pack of about 20 lawyers running all over the place with you to make sure you don't do something that could get you in trouble.

      Laws are:

      • A tool for huge corporations and the almighty elite to control us. Even our thoughts (eg. software patents)!
      • A tool to empower these same corporations. They have more rights than we people do!
      • A system created to protect us from crime that has been converted into a system to commit crime. When a lawyer writes you a letter threatening to sue you if you don't pay a certain amount of money... How is that different to extortion? Ever lost a case where you know that you were innocent?

      The law is a system controlled by idiots, hypocrites and liars! Don't believe me? Look at your country's Internet laws or patent laws. Only a bunch of idiots could have come up with that!

      Like many other things in our world today, the legal system is a disgrace to the human race.

      A lot more could be said but I can't even be bothered. The people of today don't seem to give a shit about anything... not even themselves!

      Please just start thinking and stop regurgitating!
    57. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by wcdw · · Score: 1

      As I said -- "if you don't tell them where you got it". I never suggested there was any liability on the part of the conveyers of information -- the employee(s) who broke their employment contracts are the the only people who have any liability, per se.

      Even if it can be proven that the people involved knew that a crime was being committed, they were not party to the NDA, and thus have no liability.

      Unless they try to shield their sources - one or more of whom are actually guilty of something....

      --
      If you're not living on the edge, you're just taking up space!
    58. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by amper · · Score: 1

      You are assuming that any innocent people will not be protected. The aim of the action, for Apple, is to discover tha *guilty* parties. In this case, at least, the innocent have nothing to fear.

    59. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by bani · · Score: 1

      it's not treason. but it is a felony punishable by 10 years in prison.

    60. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      That works.

      Once.

      And then the judge *orders* you to keep records in the future if you're going to engage in conduct likely to provide reason for subpoenas, and when you don't, you're hit with a charge of contempt of court/obstruction.

      Nice try, though. If your idea worked, don't you think an ISP would have gone ahead and said "We don't keep logs at all! Come warez on our network like crazy!" by now?

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    61. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Sure they do... if none of the magazine's sources actually ever worked for Apple they are no more guilty of anything (possibly even less so) than the magazine itself for having published the information in the first place. Yet, regardless of whether or not the sources are guilty of a crime, their identities have been forced to have been revealed. That's my reason for taking the stance that I do... and it can create a very slippery slope.

    62. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by dr.badass · · Score: 1

      A great many people find the prospect that they should be held liable for publishing information gotten legally (from their point of view that is) just because whoever they got it from brok a NDA ridicilous.

      It wasn't aqcuired legally, and that's the whole point. These sites are basically begging for secret inside information. The only sources for such information are probably under NDA of some kind or another. Ergo, the only sources for the information would be people violating their NDA.

      Signing away your own free speech is one thing, signing away others' is a whole different slew!

      You can't sign away another persons right to secret information. They never had the right in the first place. You only had the right to be privy to it because you signed an agreement. They certainly didn't have the right to print it in their publication for a profit.

      A potential breach of a NDA should be treated as a contract dispute, and this shouldn't have anything to do with special tradelaws, and shouldn't involve courts/police at all!

      Contracts are legally binding agreements, they have everything to do with the law. They are backed by the power of the court. What you're suggesting is completely at odds with reality.

      --
      Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
    63. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      You're wrong. You might choose to ignore the law, but that makes you the deluded wacko.

    64. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by amper · · Score: 1

      Now, see, there's a point worth discussing! *Should* Apple be trying to discover the guilty parties? It could be argued that they should just leave well enough alone. However, I am not Apple, so I don't know if there are other cirumstances involved that might help me decide one way or the other...

      In the end, I think this case will be of little consequence, though I will admit a passing personal interest in seeing Jason O'Grady humbled a bit. I knew Jason back when, and I think he's (or at least, he was then) an arrogant jerk lacking in actual technical skills.

    65. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No more than physical property is. Or Government. Or speed limits.

    66. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Why do you think the number of steps removed matters? Do you think you can buy a stolen laptop if you don't buy it directly from the thief? No. It's still stolen.

    67. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by amper · · Score: 1

      I don't know, I think you might be wrong there. If any of the parties involved willfully passed on information that they could have reasonably suspected fell under trade secret protection, then ethically, at least, I think they should be held accountable. Legally, of course, it's not necessarily the same.

      I also don't think that the "slippery slope" argument is compelling. I see no reason to believe that, from this case, the public is in any particular danger of the encroachment of corporate "rights" upon those of individual rights.

      Of course, one other possible scenario is that the ultimate source(s) of the information are not, in fact, under an NDA...wouldn't *that* be interesting to find out?

    68. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would the reporters who are being penalized have their names published and not Novak? In what manner can anyone argue that outing Valerie Plame as a CIA agent serve any public interest. Novak should be charged with treason.

    69. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      And then the judge *orders* you to keep records in the future if you're going to engage in conduct likely to provide reason for subpoenas, and when you don't, you're hit with a charge of contempt of court/obstruction.

      This only fuels the spiral of move and counter move. The next step is to use someone outside of that judge's jurisdiction to manage your comunications. In this case, don't you think that there are some Canadian Mac Addicts who would happily strip and forward incoming emails?

      Nice try, though. If your idea worked, don't you think an ISP would have gone ahead and said "We don't keep logs at all! Come warez on our network like crazy!" by now?

      You mean Like this?

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    70. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by mark-t · · Score: 1
      That explanation is indeed very interesting.

      I don't personally give it a high likelihood of being the case, but it certainly would be interesting, and would only further exemplify how this ruling is presuming guilt until innocence is proven, rather than the other way around.

      Personally, I think that the magazines sources are no more accountable for this breach of confidentiality than the magazine itself, as long as, of course, they didn't work for Apple (and I would suspect that none of them ever did).

    71. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Slack3r78 · · Score: 1

      On your second point, the bloggers aren't heing forced to not speak in this case, only to reveal where the information came from. If you read the decision, there's no order for them to remove the order, only for the subpeonas for the names of their sources to move forward.

    72. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by g00set · · Score: 1

      There is nothing to say that he has not already. He may have already have been deposed for all we know. The people who have choosen not to be deposed are the ones taking fire now.

      --
      ... and furthermore ... I don't like your trousers.
    73. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Rauser · · Score: 2, Informative

      Time to refresh your memory:

      NEW YORK, January 13 (newratings.com) - Apple Computer's (AAPL.NAS) share price appreciated more than 10% in early trade on Thursday, after the company reported its highest-ever quarterly sales and earnings for 1Q FY05.

      Apple Computer said in a statement late on Wednesday that its earnings more than quadrupled in the fiscal first quarter this year. The company's net income increased to $295 million or $0.70 per share in 1Q FY05 ended December 25, while sales increased to $3.5 billion, representing 75% y/y growth. Apple Computer's first fiscal quarter results were ahead of the Wall Street forecasts. The company's iPod shipments increased to 4.58 million units in the quarter, from the year-ago figure of 2 million units. The company witnessed robust y/y growth in the shipment volumes of its Macintosh computers as well during the quarter. Apple Computer has projected earnings of $0.40 per share and sales of $2.9 billion for the current quarter ending March this year, which is ahead of the current consensus forecasts. Earlier this week, the company introduced low-priced versions of its popular iPod music player and Mac personal computer, iPod Shuffle and Mac Mini.

      --
      The white zone is for loading and unloading only. If you need to load or unload go to the white zone. It's a way of life
    74. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by thpr · · Score: 1
      ...there is no hard evidence that a crime was actually committed.... The fact that they couldn't prove a crime had occurred...

      While I understand the concern that many have with the decision that has been made, the analysis you make is insufficient to stand up to scrutiny (even when IANAL).

      For example, there is little to no hard evidence a crime has been committed if someone steals something from your house. After all (assuming no broken windows) is your word that something is missing better than Apple's word that information was leaked? So what power do you have to have an investigation performed to determine who took the item(s)? Thus, your 'hard evidence' standard is very high. I would note that neither the federal rules of criminal procedure (which, barring PATRIOT, require a warrant and reasonable suspicion) nor the federal rules of civil procedure (which requires very little in the way of proof before you file and get to perform discovery) provide the privacy protection you desire.

      In addition, by the laws and procedures of the United States, many of which are derived from English common law, juries are finders of fact. It is absolutely impossible to 'prove' a crime has occurred until the jury finds that the crime has been committed by an individual. So your argument that they were unable to "prove a crime had occurred _unless_ they knew the identities of the sources" also presents fundamental problems in implementation. Even toned down, the court will balance the right to move the case forward vs. the damage to the parties IF they are _innocent_. (which - simply being identified - is [for better or worse] relatively minor).

      Lastly, the person they are asking for the information is not the party that will be charged. Therefore, any protection of "innocent until proven guilty" cannot protect the individual from testifying as to what they know. It also should not give privacy to those who exposed trade secrets. The actual phrase, as it first appeared in the US (Supreme Court decision of 1894, Coffin vs. U.S.): is "The law presumes that persons charged with crime are innocent until they are proven by competent evidence to be guilty". The key words here are 'charged with a crime' and 'innocent' not 'private' or 'anonymous'. Such a privacy standard as you suggest is impossible to achieve and is not part of "due process" (the constitutional phrase that provides us - under certain circumstances - the "innocent until proven guilty" standard).

      Overall, if the bloggers witnessed a crime (such as receiving a trade secret from a person who was under a confidential disclosure agreement), absolutely nothing can prevent them from testifying unless they themselves were involved in the crime (in which case they are protected by the 5th amendment). The protection for journalists that exists is in protecting other sources of information (NOT what they have personally witnessed). The Supreme Court of the US has explicitly stated that no protection (to avoid testimony) exists for a journalist that actually witnessed a crime to prevent them from testifying (note in the particular case by the SCOTUS it was before a grand jury).

      By that analysis, I'm not sure any precedent was set at all by the judge.

    75. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by g00set · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Where have you read that he refused to reveal his sources? From what I understand the trial proceedings are closed door stuff. He may have already been deposed and is waiting till they call him next. They only people you are hearing about are the people who are refusing to comply with the courts.

      --
      ... and furthermore ... I don't like your trousers.
    76. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by wcdw · · Score: 1

      I think at this point Apple has to, and the same logic is possibly what got them into this situation in the first place.

      If they DON'T punish the employee(s) who broke their NDA, what message is sent to those - and other - employees regarding their employment contracts?

      I think an internal process, where the guilty were given amnesty - and reeducation - might have been a better approach, given the hit Apple is taking in the user community over this. But I don't work there, so....

      --
      If you're not living on the edge, you're just taking up space!
    77. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i think you mean e.g. not ie.

    78. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Calibax · · Score: 5, Informative

      I honestly can't see why these two reporters are protecting their sources in the Valerie Plame case. Supposedly, someone (or some people) wanted to settle a score with the operative's husband and decided that the best way was to ruin this lady's career. This was a criminal act under Section 421 of Title 50 of the United States Code (better known as the Intelligence Identities Protection Act) which is designed to protect the agent, the agent's contacts in the USA and in foreign countries, and prevent impairment of the country's national security efforts.

      In short, these reporters were used to do someone's dirty work. They must have known this, but they still protect the person or persons who used them, possibly even to the extent of going to jail.

      Here's an example of the difficulty in allowing the reporters to keep secrets. Suppose that I happen to know that a friend of mine is a spy and I tell anyone this fact, then I can go to prison for 10 years. But (by the reporters reasoning) if I tell a journalist, he can publish that information with impunity and doesn't even have to say where he got the information. Doesn't that seem wrong somehow?

      In any case, how does it serve the interests of the country to publish the name of an American spy? The idea of shielding journalists is so that they are free to communicate freely and to report on scandals that need to be exposed to public scrutiny. In this case, the sources that the reporters are protecting were not whistleblowers with knowledge of a scandal. Indeed, the sources ARE the scandal. They are not brave tellers of truth, determined to get a dastardly plot out in the public eye - they are nothing but craven scoundrels bent on settling a score. I would have thought that real journalists would hate being used in this fashion. I know I would.

      Wouldn't it serve the best interests of the press to expose these people rather than protect them?

    79. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many times does this have to be gone over? Passing on what you can reasonably be expected to know is a trade secret is a crime in California. Every single last motherfucking person in the line is liable.

    80. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by CynicalGuy · · Score: 0

      It is a tool of the rich and powerful (don't believe me? See if you can afford a lawyer! The law isn't made for you, you can't really afford it!) dumbass, if you can't afford a lawyer, they will appoint one for you..

    81. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why have certain things fallen under your claimed "closed door" proceedings and other things have not?

    82. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you hate the Bill of Rights of the Constitution?

    83. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by RickHunter · · Score: 2, Informative

      Unfortunately, the problem is that the Valerie Plame story:

      a) Does not involve nepotism. Valerie and her husband were both very clear that she had not been involved in any way with his selection, and reliable sources at the CIA confirmed this. Wilson was qualified.

      b) Does not involve poor-quality research. Plame and her husband's research on the Niger Yellowcake documents was one of the few shining high points in the events surrounding Dubya's bullheaded rush to war. The two of them confirmed that the documents were faked and that Iraq had not tried to acquire weapons-grade uranium from Niger. Unfortunately, the neo-cons in power decided that the facts were the wrong facts and lied their way to war anyway.

      c) Does involve the public interest. Revealing the identity of an undercover CIA agent is treason. Plame's identity was a closely-guarded secret and, by revealing it, someone in the White House put a lot of people in direct mortal danger and severely damaged our ability to gain intelligence about the very threat they have been claiming to be fighting. The outing was also not due to concerns about nepotism; rather, it was revenge against Plame and her husband for speaking out against the Cheney/Rove administration.

    84. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by g00set · · Score: 1

      I would assume that since she is a CIA agent that there may be certain topics discussed that would not be made available to the public. I don't believe it is uncommon to have sealed or closed door proceedings for such a circumstance.

      --
      ... and furthermore ... I don't like your trousers.
    85. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He acknowledged that he DID reveal his sources. thats why he's not in contempt right now, but other journalists are.

    86. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "Wow, I think that's the most insightful first post I have EVER read on /."

      It certainly is a refreshing change from the default "Here's the painfully obvious quip about why it's bad" +4 Insightful post.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    87. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by thecabinet · · Score: 0

      The judge doesn't really seem to get it:

      [The information about Apple's unreleased products] is stolen property, just as any physical item, such as a laptop computer containing the same information on its hard drive [or not] would be.

      So the judge says that knowledge of a product that someone doesn't want disclosed is the same as having stolen the product. That's a great precdent. The information isn't "stolen property" anymore than downloading a song is stealing. It's copyright infringement at worst, which is not, and never will be, the same thing as depriving someone of the use of a physical object. Apple's product did not cease to be simply due to a wider audience knowing more about it.

    88. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by alexo · · Score: 1


      > No more than physical property is. Or Government. Or speed limits.

      Not really.

      Physical property - you can be deprived of it.

      Government - a (potentially) useful construct to help coordinate a large group of people acting as a unit.

      Speed limits - a method that allows said goverment to either lower the chance of the people it "governs" to get smashed into a bloody pulp or, alternatively, to enrich its coffers (depends on how reasonable those limits are).

      Intellectual "property", on the other hand, is a ridiculous attempt to own ideas. Note that various concepts like patents and copyrights are about granting limited exclusivity on the implementation and/or presentation of these ideas (for the sole purpose of enriching the public domain by providing incentives to create), not about "ownership".

      The difference may seem insignificant but it is not.

      In effect, society tells you that if you create a new toy, you will be the first to play with it for a while but then it goes into the common box so all the other kids can enjoy it as well. Now, if the original ideas were adhered to, then whoever does not "play nice" with the toys (e.g., patenting a concept only to sue those that try to actually implement it), would get their hands slapped and the toy taken away by the nursery teacher (the abovementioned government).

      Unfortunately, some people find it advantageous to twist the original meaning in order to limit the flow of ideas into the public domain to a mere trickle.
      Some of these people were smart individuals who realized that by controling language, one can control perception and thought. Thus, time-limited distribution rights turned into "property", copyright infringement became "theft", illegal distribution (and sometimes legal sharing) were referred to as "piracy"... All in an effort to keep as much as possible in the hands of as few as possible for as long as possible.

      Therefore, while I acknowledge that copyrights, patents, etc. can have a positive role in the modern society, I stand by my assertion that intellectual _property_ is a fiction.

    89. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by rs79 · · Score: 1

      "Wouldn't it serve the best interests of the press to expose these people rather than protect them?"

      Not if they would kill you.

      --
      Need Mercedes parts ?
    90. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by esme · · Score: 1

      As much as I hate to say anything in defense of a slimeball like Novak, I don't think this precedent applies.

      Novak was reporting on something that was clearly in the public interest (nepotism). So that means that the journalist shield laws would apply in his case. It's also not clear that he knew that exposing an undercover operative was a crime -- though I'm not sure that's relevant.

      Of course, there are a couple of other journalists being held in contempt of court over this, so I'm not sure what the status is. It does seem a little odd that they'd try to get the info out of unrelated journalists (some of whom never published articles about the subject) instead of Novak, though.

      -Esme

    91. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by penix1 · · Score: 3, Informative

      "dumbass, if you can't afford a lawyer, they will appoint one for you.."

      Dumbass, not for a CIVIL case they dont. And trade secret *IS* a civil case.

      B.

      --
      This is a sig. This is only a sig. Had this been an actual sig you would have been informed where to tune for more sigs.
    92. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously don't understand a single thing the poster had to say, or anything about what the court had to decide upon. Anyone, I mean anyone who didn't agree with the judge--IN THIS CASE--has to really have a screw loose or some very fundamental objection to law, order, decency, sense of responsibility. It's no wonder some/many companies are reluctant to have outside consultants (despite NDA's). The judge even went so far as to consider the bloggers journalists, that's giving the bloggers WAY too much credit. Hopefully, you don't believe the world of /. is the way all media should be.

    93. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by demachina · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Wouldn't it serve the best interests of the press to expose these people rather than protect them?"

      It would serve the best interests of the public, yes, but it would mean these two reporters would effectively destroy their careers because no confidential source would ever trust them again, therefor they would never get any confidential information which is what most good journalists live for. There isn't much demand for journalists who only write about things that are already public knowledge.

      I'm inclined to say Judith Miller does deserve some jail time but not in this case. She wisely opted to not publish this story, presumably because she appreciated the dangers of outing a CIA agent, or she realized that by doing it she was just being a pawn in a White House scheme to punish Wilson and his wife for daring to challenge the White House or their sham case for war against Iraq.

      The thing Judith Miller does deserve some hard time for was being a lead cheerleader for the invasion of Iraq and the shameless extent to which she pumped up the national paranoia about biological weapons in particular. I'd dearly love to know what the motivation was for her little campaign to whip America in to a frenzy over biological weapons:

      - Legitimate concern for the safety and well being of Americans
      - Realized it would be a way to make a lot of money, especially by writing a book on biological weapons
      - Unwitting pawn of the Bush administration in their desire to whip up a case for sham war in Iraq
      - Witting pawn of the Bush administration in their desire to whip up a case for sham war in Iraq

      The only two reporters who deserve some hard time in the Plame/Wilson affair are Robert Novak and maybe Jeff Gannon, but since they are both fanatical conservatives and darlings of the one party in charge of the one party state we live in now chances are they will get off scott free while the reporter from the despicable psuedo liberal rag the one party state hates so much, the New York Times, will go down and down hard.

      The Bush administration seems to have a flair for sham investigations. For example this week the Pentagon investigation in to an apparent global epidemic of prisoner abuse and torture remarkably found the Pentagon to be completely innocent and it just happens elisted soldiers in Gitmo, Iraq, Afghanistan, and probably other secret locales around the world all took it upon themselves to torture prisoners, and of course the CIA's Rendition program was delivering 100's of prisoners to despotic regimes like Saudi Arabia's specificly for the purposes of interrogating them via torture. The irony here is either the chain of command ordered the torture, or the chain of command failed to prevent it. You cant have enlisted men do bad things in the military without an officer either ordering it, or being derelict in his duty for letting it happen without orders. Enlisted soldiers aren't free spirits who can just do their own thing in the military. They have a chain of command whose job it is to insure they do what the chain of command tells them to do.

      --
      @de_machina
    94. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you're really a pathetic moron. Sounds like you've been burned in the past for something you thought was okay, but the law disagreed with. A divorce perhaps? A drug bust? Or were you discovered to be a pedophile and the Michael Jackson defense didn't work?

    95. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by SA+Stevens · · Score: 1

      He has a star after his name. You don't think _Apple_ might have paid for that account, do you?

    96. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by SA+Stevens · · Score: 1

      The fact that wrongdoing was involved (and here I hesitate to characterize the act as criminal, as opposed to civil, being as I am not familiar with CA contract law) is empirically demonstrated by the fact that the only way that the information in question could have been released is if someone under prior restriction (as in an NDA) revealed it to the journalists involved.

      You are absolutely and completely WRONG.

      The info may have arrived from a second hand, third hand, fifteen hand source. It's entirely possible the blogger does not KNOW who at Apple was the original leak source.

      Without said proof, no culpability can be established.

    97. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong! It's copyright infringement if it's already been "published". Trade secrets are another entity totally. Revealing IP or trade secrets could very conceivably deprive someone of a product. If someone had plans to build the ultimate better mousetrap, and someone else stole the plans and built it, the original designer would be forever out the profits and public reputation of having done so (thus, exactly like stolen physical property).

    98. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      I dont get this - why would I ethically be bound to protect other people's secrets that they failed to protect (keep from me)? Especially if they are strangers to me?

      I mean, it's human nature to spread rumors, and people saying they can confirm the rumors with jucier details always have talking time.

      Even worse is being legally liable for contracts involving corporations I am not party to. I mean, that doesn't sound chilling to free speech? Now, because I'm not an expert - I will be afraid to pass on any info I hear about a company that isn't already widely discussed. How would I know if it's a trade secret? I'm not a lawyer, and no company has ever posted (that I'm aware of) titles or something about what is a protected trade secret. I cannot see how this can work in any fair manner.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    99. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Welcome to Amerika! Isn't ironic that someone in the so-called "War President's" administration who are supposedly keeping us safe from terrorists, outed the identity of a covert CIA operative responsible for preventing the proliferation of nuclear weapons? This was not done to expose "nepotism", as some have suggested, but as a retaliation for her husband's critique of the phony Nigerian yellowcake story which the administration kept harping on as part of it's "proof" of Saddam's weapons programs. If Bush were truly concerned with truth and accountability, why has he not taken the lead here and gotten to the bottom of this? We spent millions investigating Clinton's extramarital affairs, but the "party of morality" can't investagate any of the many shady things this administration has done? The news media runs story after story on the the Swift Boat Vets bashing Kerry (and who are now known to have been lying), but CBS fires Dan Rather for citing a single document regarding Bush's dereliction of duty with questionable veracity? Liberal media my ass!

    100. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      I think the point is that asking someone for information should not be illegial. It doesn't matter what it is. Now, if the idiot tells you protected information, he is liable for being stupid. However, he - and anyone else who wanted it kept secret - is ought to be SOL.

      I mean, again, I have no interest in keeping the information secret. And I have no contract about keeping it secret.

      The only way I could agree with this legal setup is if there was conspiracy to commit a crime. I would say it's the difference between asking if anything interesting is going on (Ok IMHO) and saying "Get me the latest Schematics on the new release for ConX, and I'll cut you in on the ad sales".

      Now, I don't know if these people were specifically going to employees place of work or stopping them on the street bugging for info or just had a website that said "Email Info here!". If it's the latter, I really have a hard time holding the people liable for keeping a secret.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    101. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      This brings up another issue I hadn't thought of. This isn't a criminal proceding. Society HASN'T been harmed, or it would have been a crime rather than a tort. Should individuals have the right to place people in jail for obstruction of justice in regards to personal wrongs?

      Torts should be strictly NON-JAIL. No matter how they touch, unless a crime is found.

      I agree with having to provide evidence to help solve crimes - where society is wronged.

      I don't think I should be compelled in the same way to help an individual if I don't want to.

      I also think it's crazy that I have no liability to leaving a stranger to die on the street (assuming I'm just walking along[Note the example is for NYS law only - as I was informed by a Criminal Lawyer]) but I do have a liability to keep their secrets for them[in California at least].

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    102. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      Dude, don't dignify. Calling somebody a name isn't an argumentum ad hominem. It's just being a cock.

      Argumentum ad hominem is an attempt to refute an argument by attacking the person making it. And you know what? It's not always fallacious.

      Example: If you say, "The sky is green," I might respond by pointing out that your wife left you for a younger man. Do we really want to take the word of a man who can't satisfy his wife in bed?

      That would be an argumentum ad hominem.

      Counter-example: If you say, "The sky is green," I might say that you're color-blind.

      That's not argumentum ad hominem. To the contrary, that would be a perfectly valid point. Your assertion, in that case, would be unreliable because you can't distinguish colors, which is a perfectly valid argument.

      The only thing more annoying than people who make argumentum ad hominem are people who accuse others of doing so. Especially when they're wrong.

    103. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay. Why have some acts taken with respect to certain reporters been revealed to the public in this case and other acts allegedly taken with respect to another reporter in this case have not? Seems like there is a double standard in place here for what is revealed and what is not. Washington is leaking, and it's not only through Novak's conservative column.

    104. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The two reporters who won't speak never published the information. Only Novak did. I am not sure their reasoning for keeping quiet, but they did not prima facie violate the treason law. Prima facie, Novak did. And I hope the whole setup (as positioning competing interests against each other) is not a deliberate conspiracy (by the prosecutors, et al.) to keep this issue from ever being resolved publicly and accurately.

    105. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Maserati · · Score: 1

      Excellent points. However, revealing the name of a CIA agent isn't treason in the eyes of the law, but it is a federal crime carrying a ten-year sentence.

      Morally, yeah... it is treason. If any of Plame's contacts get killed I'd fully support their survivors filing a wrongful death suit against whoever did out her as being CIA.

      --
      Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
    106. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Kenrod · · Score: 1


      He should and must, if a court compels him to.

      Journalists usually hide behind the 1st ammendment not because they are pricipled, but because it's good business, and good for their careers. No source will talk to a journalist if they know the journalist will rat them out if leaned on. If someone has knowledge of a crime, they should be talking to the authorities, NOT journalists. Whistleblowers have legal protection.

      --
      Good heavens Miss Sakamoto - you're beautiful!
    107. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by bigpat · · Score: 1

      "Freedom of speech and freedom of the press do not, and should not, extend to an ability to withhold the identities of persons who have committed an illegal act."

      When judges compel people to speak through threats they violate the fundamental purpose of the 1st ammendment for the sake of convenienve, not justice, and are no better than a common thug.

      Telling people to say things because if they don't you will hurt them is evil.

    108. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Boronx · · Score: 1

      The rumor is that he's already squealed.

    109. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I would have thought that real journalists would
      > hate being used in this fashion. I know I would.

      Did you write this with a straight face?

      When the media repeats like like WMD and soccer stadium massacres, youre gonna tell me that reporters dont know theyre being used?
      Either theyere totally clueless or they know the real deal and dont mind.

      You have to put up with a lot of bs in that job, the integrity gets beaten out of you quickly.

    110. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it is easy to see the motivation, $. I am sure the whitehouse paid her just as they have everyone else who has trumpted there hair brained schemes

    111. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      There is a big difference between being a whistleblower and giving out trade secrets, and leaving the distinction in the case at large to be determined was also spot on.

      My favorite quote from the ruling is "an interested public is not the same as the public interest."

      That's it in a nutshell.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    112. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Revealing state secrets is a crime of treason. Novak and his source BOTH are treasonous scum. However, Novak has done some fine work as a White House Operative, so he'll manage nicely through all this.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    113. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      But don't you think Novak would tell us that he had been called to a closed door session? I mean, he's a journalist*, right? What a scoop! He could get the interview of a lifetime, and not even have to get out of his bed or change out of his PJs.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    114. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      The charge of nepotism was made by the unnamed source. The request for the former ambassador to investigate the claims of yellow cake was made by the Office of the Vice-President.

      An ethical journalist, i.e., not an undercover operative for the White House, would have looked into things a little more, perhaps even confirmed the story with another source. At the very least, he could have asked Cheney's office whether it was true or not that they asked the ambassador to undertake the mission.

      What irks me is when Novak called for Dan Rather to be compelled to reveal his sources, during the campaign.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    115. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      What does liability have to do with anything? Apple was subpoena-ing these journalists to compel them to answer some questions, not suing them.

      This is separate from the Think Secret case.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    116. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by FLEB · · Score: 1

      Legally, at what point does a Trade Secret not become protectable as Secret anymore? IIRC, there is some sort of trademark-esque principle that if the secret is not protected (and becomes disseminated too widely), the protected status can be lost.

      Then again, I might be completely wrong... I only vaguely remember reading this somewhere.

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    117. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      If it turn out that there was an intermediary or intermediaries, then Apple has moved up the chain by one link, and can question the intermediary about the source. If the intermediarry is unwilling, Apple can ask the court to compel testimony with a subpoena.

      If you witnessed an accident, and were unwilling to testify to what you saw, the court can compel you to answer questions. There is no constitutional basis to refuse. If you witnessed a crime and refuse (or give wrong or misleading answers), you can also be found guilty of obstruction of justice (and related offenses).

      There is no constitutional right to "mind one's own business".

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    118. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're assuming Novak didn't disclose his sources. He's already given testimony, and may have revealed who told him (it's not public yet.)

      There's also the fact that several people have mentioned they knew she was CIA in the 90's, after her cover was blown by a mole in the CIA. Not to mention the fact that after getting this information Novak called they CIA and they confirmed she worked for them. Generally speaking that's not the sort of thing they would reply with "oh her? Yeah she works for us." if she's undercover.

    119. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by ErikZ · · Score: 1

      Maybe the press is different where you come from, but here they'll psych themselves up to a fever pitch if they can make anything sound dangerous.

      "How deadly is a bucket of water? Tune in tonight or your children will face a horrible grisly death and it will be ALL YOUR FAULT."

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    120. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      WTF are you talking about,

      how this ruling is presuming guilt until innocence is proven, rather than the other way around

      No one has accused either of the two sites in question of guilt.

      Are you saying that there might not be any guilty party at all? That this information just magically appeared to the journalist, or that given the vast amount of speculation, it's only a coincidence that one of the rumors was proved correct? Do you dispute that someone broke their NDA and revealed trade secrets?

      I'm sorry if I'm harsh, but you seem to neither understand the facts of the case, nor the applicable law. It's possible that you're not an idiot, and I'm just not getting your point. If that's the case, I apologize.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    121. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by miu · · Score: 1
      Trade secrets have been outed in the past by accident with absolutely no wrongdoing involved. Someone copied on an email who shouldn't have been, an unlisted web page going up on a public server with no link on the front page is stumbled upon, a pdf going up on a public ftp server for convenience, mail admin gets copied on an error, etc.

      There are an infinite number of ways for someone to come into possession of trade secrets with no wrongdoing on the part of an NDA signatory or the recipient of the trade secret. That is the point people are trying to make about the assumption of a crime having been committed.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    122. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 2, Informative

      I dont get this - why would I ethically be bound to protect other people's secrets that they failed to protect (keep from me)?

      You're not. Let me explain a little for you. I just harshed out in another post, so I'll try to keep this more amicable.

      If you were involved, even tangentially, in a transaction that was either unlawful (the breaking of a contract, for instance) or illegal (the dissemination of trade secrets, for example), even if you bore no guilt whatsoever, you would still be required to make testimony about the case, to provide evidence as a witness.

      The people who published the information aren't necessarily guilty of a crime nor liable for a tort. However, they are witnesses, and as such, can be compelled to reveal their sources. They tried to use a loop hole given journalists who need to protect sources for the socially beneficial purpose of whistle blowing.

      The court didn't agree with this, and ordered that they must reveal their sources. The main reason was not whether or not that they are "really journalists", but that even if they are journalists, they weren't entitled to protection under the loophole because the material they published in no way whatsoever could be considered in the public interest. There was no malfeasance or illegal behavior that was being revealed.

      I hope that clears things up. You did put your statements in the form of a question, and I've always been a big Jeopardy fan.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    123. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Still, the information was wrongfully leaked at some point. If employee A leaks the info to intermediary B, who then passes the info to rumor site C, Apple can still ask the court to compel C to reveal their source, so that Apple can then ask B who A was. If B refuses to answer, they can be compelled to by the court. And so forth, until Apple learns the identity of A.

      If there was no direct relation between the leaker and the publisher, there is still a chain of connections. Are you saying that such a chain shouldn't be investigated?

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    124. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      A witness isn't required to say things, a witness is required to tell the truth. If a witness is unwilling or even hostile, they are still legally responsible to tell the truth.

      You're saying it's OK to withhold evidence in this particular case? On what basis?

      The websites argued that they were protected from telling the truth by the California shield laws, laws designed to protect whistle blowers that might reveal crimes and bad behavior by government and corporations. However, the judge ruled that there was no whistle blowing involved, that an interested public does not equal the public interest.

      If you are a witness to either a crime or a tort, you're required to tell the truth. That's the law. Are you saying that enforcement of the law is evil?

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    125. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by hyfe · · Score: 1
      They are not being held liable. They won't have to pay a cent.

      Yes, I know, but under current EU/US trademark laws, they actually could be held liable, and that's what scares the shit out of me

      But they are not allowed to withold evidence, that's a different thing entirely.

      That is assuming there was a crime here. I'd hardly call breaking a contract a criminal, it ought to be purely civil matter. The right to not say something as important to free speech as the right to say something. Just because somebody wants to know, doesn't mean I should have to tell, and just because I signed a contract with somebody, doesn't mean both parties suddenly have the right to get court orders to investigate eachothers lives!

      --
      "" How about taking the safety labels off everything, and let the stupidity-problem solve itself? """
    126. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you're under the miss-conception that freedom of speach (or any other right) is an absolute...

      If courts were unable to compell witnesses to testify, the leglal system would be unable to work.

    127. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by UniverseIsADoughnut · · Score: 1

      Actually, the CIA has stated that what happened was a act of treason, but the man focus is on who gave the info to Novak (who is a shithead regardless) . The CIA has stated that someone in the whitehouse committed treason and they have a sort list of who it could be since you have to be at a decent level up.

      Last I read the path is basically focused on Cheney and his immediate staff, and Rove. Since people below wouldn't have known unless those above told them.

    128. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how many times this must be repeated before it sinks in, but, in this case, the two websites are not being "held liable". They are not being sued, they are being subpoenaed for information. The judge has said that they cannot withhold that information and that their standing as journalists has no relevance either way.

      The Think Secret case is a different case. In that matter, Apple claims that Nick induced the leaker to break a contract (the NDA) and reveal the secrets. We don't really know all the facts in that case, so it's premature for anyone to start proclaiming either the innocence or culpability of Nick.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    129. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by lmlloyd · · Score: 1

      I love the power of Apple!

      If Microsoft gets upset because people are illegally violating their EULA to reverse engineer their OS, or install unsupported OSs on their game console, then Microsoft is a slavering pack of monsters that use the law to bully free-thinking individuals. If Microsoft gets upset because employees leak information about bugs, holes, flaws, and detrimental weaknesses in their biggest money making product, then they are just a bunch of lame hacks trying to use secrecy to cover up their poor coding skills.

      By the same token, when courts uphold a major studio's rights to prosecute people for copying and distributing their copyrighted material, then they are clueless dinosaurs who don't understand the topology of the digital media age, and a slave to big media corporate interests.

      But if Apple files a punitive suit against some of its loyal fans, because they were irked at someone messing up their product roll-out marketing strategy, it is an important day for IP law, and a victory for all law abiding citizens! Apparently, Think Different really means that there is one way of thinking that is applied to anything Apple does, and a completely different mode of thought applied to the rest of the world.

      Personally, I think that if a precedent is truly being set that any publication can be forced to reveal any source who broke an NDA, provided that the material doesn't address a threat to the public welfare, then pretty much the entire tech reporting industry might as well pack up and find new jobs, because companies are quite capable of putting out their own carefully controlled press releases without all the expense of 'reporters' having to copy them down and parrot them back on websites and in magazines.

      The simple fact is that pretty much the entire tech press relies on people leaking information, and usually far more sensitive information that some simple marketing slides show to the sales force. This has yet to bring about the total collapse of our system of capitalism, and it is very doubtful that it ever will. However, if companies are given a legal tool to compel any media entity to reveal the source of any story that had to have come from an internal source, then the tech press has just become nothing more than, at best, an outlet for official information, and the occasional post-release review.

      Now I know this is all well and good as long as it is just being used so that Steve Jobs can maintain his god complex, but lets see how the people here at /. feel about this ruling the first time someone gets the ax from Microsoft for leaking news about a bug, or specs of the next Xbox, or an internal memo about how they are dealing with the 'linux threat,' using this ruling as the precedent for identifying the source!

    130. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      It's not that a Judge can order you to keep records in the future, it's that destroying evidence is illegal. If you don't get prosecuted for it, you can still get sanctioned by the court. Even if the case comes up after the fact, if you could reasonably assume that there would be a case. (Example: Apple comments that they're going after the employees who broke their NDAs, you destroy the records, you get in a world of shit.)

      OTOH, if you're not keeping any records or verifying your sources, there is no way that you can publish accurate information. The rumor sites have had their asses handed to them before for falling for hoaxes. They lose credibility. If it's totally anonymous, then anyone who comes up with a plausible rumor will get the front page, and no one will read your site because there is no way to tell the useful info from the bad.

      LK definitely has a point, but to effectively run a news site, you need news, not just made up shit. If these sites were merely publishing rumors with no factual basis, then they couldn't claim to be journalists. Taken to the extreme that he
      recommends would be a disaster for a news site. In other areas he might be right about this strategy, but I'd consult a lawyer before taking LKs advice. (No offense, LK.)

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    131. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Apple is trying to create a false reality--a reality in which secrets are kept merely by agreement. That's not realistic on any large scale. Equating 'secrets' with 'physical property' doesn't change reality.

      I think that's absurd. How do you propose that secrets be kept, if not by agreement? Are you advocating a "Code of Silence" in which leakers of secrets are murdered?

      Oh, and you're also a bit confused. The ruling wasn't about the Think Secret case. It might be a good idea if you limited your comments to things you actually know shit about. OK, that was flamebait. Sorry. =)

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    132. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Trurl's+Machine · · Score: 1

      While it's certainly appreciable that journalists cannot refuse to disclose information when it relates to a crime, there is no hard evidence that a crime was actually committed, only an allegation that a crime was committed.

      I can hear you in the courtroom, making a great speech worth of another John Grisham-based blockbuster - "Your Honor, my client Thinksecret.com had no knowledge that this information is secret, just as my another client, Appleinsider.com had no knowledge that the information comes from Apple insiders".

    133. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by node+3 · · Score: 1
      I think that's absurd.

      All that I stated was that once you start telling people a secret, it becomes less and less secure a secret--that's not absurd, that's reality.

      How do you propose that secrets be kept, if not by agreement?

      Let's consult my post, maybe the answer is already there:
      "... not because I think there should be no repercussions for those who violate confidentiality agreements, but because I don't think Apple has the right to force..."

      Yup, there it is. I clearly state that I agree (or literally, I stated that I don't disagree, which can be assumed to be the same in this context) with Apple's right to use and enforce contracts.

      Are you advocating a "Code of Silence" in which leakers of secrets are murdered?

      Obviously not.

      Oh, and you're also a bit confused. The ruling wasn't about the Think Secret case. It might be a good idea if you limited your comments to things you actually know shit about.

      Yeah, oops, I thought it was about the TS case, that doesn't change the mechanics involved.

      OK, that was flamebait. Sorry. =)

      No problem.

      Oh, and your mom's a crack ho.

      Hmm, that wasn't nice. No hard feelings, 'k :-)
    134. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      This is true; if a trade secret is revealed, if the company loses its secrecy through negligence it can become unprotected.

      However, even if the status as a trade secret is lost, if it is lost through an actionable means, the fact that it is no longer secret is no bar to prosecution of the person responsible for the loss of that status.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    135. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      Considering the action against these two was being brought under UTSA, I think that liability has everything to do with it. Apple is subpoenaing the journalists, using UTSA as the legal cause of action to force them to reveal their source. Since UTSA's provision is that revealing trade secrets is actionable, they are in fact liable, and Apple is using that liability to force them to talk.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    136. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by defile · · Score: 1

      There is no constitutional right to "mind one's own business".

      How do you tell the difference between someone refusing to answer because they have a right not to incriminate themselves, and someone refusing to answer because they don't want to name their source?

      Plaintiff: Tell us what you know!
      Defendant: No
      Judge: I order you to tell us what you know
      Defendant: It was me :(
      Judge: GUILTY!

    137. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Tassach · · Score: 1
      Breaking the law is breaking the law. Period. End of story.
      Our records indicate that you were clocked doing 36MPH in a 35MPH school zone. Please report for immediate execution.
      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
    138. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by SA+Stevens · · Score: 1

      So Apple is legally entitled to go out on a witchhunt, after whomever they can fish out and harass.

      They truly HAVE been taken over by the lawyers. Another nail in the coffin of Apple Computer. Another reason for hackers to keep Apple stuff at bargepoles length away.

    139. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Stu+Charlton · · Score: 1

      Telling people to say things because if they don't you will hurt them is evil.

      No, it's not. It's the basis of the justice system -- the coercive threat of contempt of court. "Hurt" is a relative term. Civil contempt would generally hurt you in the pocket book with fines, for example $X daily until you comply with the court order.

      People didn't have a problem when MIcrosoft was being held in contempt by the EU and threatened a fine of something around $100m a day. "Oh but they're big and evil!" that's not justice, that's mob rule...

      --
      -Stu
    140. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Stu+Charlton · · Score: 1

      usually you have to claim that you're invoking the 5th amendment. Though the prosecution can give you immunity as another way of coercing out your testimony...

      --
      -Stu
    141. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do not have to reveal anything if doing so will incriminate you, regardless of the felony or misdemeanor.

      (Do not remember which Amendment it is)

    142. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amending my previous comment:

      It's the fifth.

    143. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by tndtnd · · Score: 1

      You clearly do not understand the concept of "whistleblowing" or how to weigh the relative importance of information.

      The "public interest" angle of the story was the manipulation of evidence leading war NOT a phony charge of nepotism.

      Let's see . . . "misstating" the facts surrounding a potential source of uranium in Nigeria that supported taking the nation to war versus an unsubstantiated charge of nepotism which, by the way, reveals a undercover agent who has worked for years to ferret out WMD. And . . .by the way . . .J. Wilson spent many years working in Nigeria and TF has qualifications to take on the job. Hmmm . . .

    144. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      You're kiding right? You should be able to tell anyone you like that your "friend" is a spy. He shouldn't be telling you squat, but if he does it shouldn't, in any way, be your responsibility to keep his dirty secret.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    145. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by gad_zuki! · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >And as Dan Rather proves, your reputation is only as good as your last story.

      And pray tell, if this is true then how does Judith "front page WMD stories for 2 years at the NYTimes" Miller still have a job? Novak still has his column and TV spots.

      Your rule only applies if you go against a certain party's agenda. If you're a biased journalist doing said party's agenda, you're golden.

    146. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      People who don't think like me must not be thinking...I'm so smart...

      (I posted the last message)

    147. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Foiling an ongoing intelligence operation conducted by your own country by revealing classified information isn't treason?

    148. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by bigpat · · Score: 1

      I have no problem with saying that someone may be compelled to appear and stand before a jury and be questioned, but judges have gone too far when they punish individuals who don't answer questions to the satisfaction of the court. This approach does not have my support. Punishing those that lie yes, but those who don't wish to answer certain questions no.

      Judges have recognized that people accused of crimes should not be compelled to testify against themselves, why does it make sense that others should be? Sure it would make it harder for prosecuters to try some cases and for some types of civil suites. But if no one is willing to freely stand up and give compelling testimony and there is not enough physical evidence to draw a conlcusion, then so be it.

      Citing contempt because of the content of someone's answer to a question is unnacceptable to me.

    149. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by bigpat · · Score: 1

      "If courts were unable to compell witnesses to testify, the leglal system would be unable to work."

      I have no problem with judges compelling witnesses to testify. Just with judges compelling people to answer questions a certain way.

    150. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Stu+Charlton · · Score: 1

      Citing contempt because of the content of someone's answer to a question is unnacceptable to me.

      It's more about refusing to testify in the face of a court order, AND that information has nothing to do with incriminating you. It's balancing your rights and the right of the court to get evidence.

      Anyway, if you don't agree with that, that's fine, but it's a hard thing to change.

      --
      -Stu
    151. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by bigpat · · Score: 1

      "No, it's not. It's the basis of the justice system"

      That doesn't mean it isn't an evil practice.

      ""Hurt" is a relative term. Civil contempt would generally hurt you in the pocket book with fines, for example $X daily until you comply with the court order."

      Hurt is not a relative term. A fine is involuntary servitude, unless you inhereted the money.

      I draw the line so that I would say courts should be able to order witnesses to appear and to give testimony, but that the content of their testimony should not be open to threat of contempt. And by content I mean you can say whatever you wish in response to a question.

      I am certain that this would have minimal impact on all but the most extreme circumstantial cases and would generally lead to a better system of justice. Also, people should not be forced to actively provide physical evidence in civil cases, they should be able to choose between actively providing evidence and attesting to that and having their property searched for evidence.

      whenever possible, government should respect the dignity of people when seeking public values. There is no real need to force people to give specific answers to questions in a trial. Regardless of the contempt power, Judges are essentially powerless to make someone answer a question. Taking away the contempt power in regards to the content of a witnesses testimony would merely be a recocgnition of that truth that respects the dignity of the person.

    152. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by dago · · Score: 1

      Except that you can't be sure that the violator(s) broke an NDA or some other restriction. I would guess that in large coporation, there are always people which didn't signed any NDA for some reason (forgot to sign it, lawyer was sick, ...).

      --
      #include "coucou.h"
    153. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by FLEB · · Score: 1

      However, even if the status as a trade secret is lost, if it is lost through an actionable means, the fact that it is no longer secret is no bar to prosecution of the person responsible for the loss of that status.

      Good point.

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    154. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by bigpat · · Score: 1

      "It's more about refusing to testify in the face of a court order, AND that information has nothing to do with incriminating you. It's balancing your rights and the right of the court to get evidence."

      Well, it is one thing to refuse to show up and answer questions at all and another to not want to fully answer a specific question. Besides, how does the court know that the information will not incriminate you in some other matter, unless they already know the answer. It is always conceivable that any testimony will incriminate you, just saying you were at a certain place might incriminate you in some matter that the court is unaware. Which creates a paradox, in order to convince the court that the testimony that you would give would actually incriminate you, you would have to incriminate yourself. Besides, it is an essentially unecessary power that is disrespectful of human dignity. Most people can be convinced to fully answer questions in other ways or will just lie if it suits them when there is little chance of getting caught in the lie. How many lies would be prevented if people were free to testify instead of compeled to?

      "Anyway, if you don't agree with that, that's fine, but it's a hard thing to change."

      I agree that it will be a hard thing to change. But an easy thing for any new justice system to establish. So, maybe someone can try it out the next time around.

    155. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      Right, I know that they are not being held liable. I am basically arguing against a lot of posters who think they should be. I'm also not arguing the law, but what I think the law should be.

      I do have problems with people being supenaed (coerced to testify) in any way for private wrongs. I believe obstruction of justice or the requirement to give out relevant information should be limited to criminal cases.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    156. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by cait56 · · Score: 1

      Treason has a very specific definition under US Law that is far narrower than the moral usage.

      For example, if you could prove that an American president deliberately lied to the public and Congress for the purpose of fraudulently leading them to approve offensive military action against another nation that would be a high crime, a war crime, many different felonies, but it would not be treason.

    157. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I do have problems with people being supenaed (coerced to testify) in any way for private wrongs. I believe obstruction of justice or the requirement to give out relevant information should be limited to criminal cases.

      OK, that's certainly a valid position to take. I disagree, but you've made a valid point.

      But consider this: You witness an car accident in which person dies. The person who you saw cause the accident was not acting criminally in any way, yet, based on what you saw, one party is clearly responsible. You are the only witness.

      Do you honestly think you shouldn't be made to testify, if you are unwilling? This would be a non-criminal matter, although the fact that a person died makes it a serious matter.

      I mean to suggest that it really isn't so easy to draw the line, as you have, between the court's power of subpoena in either criminal or civil cases.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    158. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      How did you know that about my mom? =)

      OK, I get your point now, at least a little bit. It's still absurd, although less so than what I thought your point originally was.

      My contention is still that "keeping a secret" can still be a condition to be met in a contract, and if the condition is not met, that's breaking a contract.

      And it's reasonable for both parties to a contract or agreement to expect that the contract or agreement be fulfilled. Otherwise, why do we bother with contracts and agreements?

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    159. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      Yes, I do think that. There could be any number of reasons I don't want to testify, and no one person is any better than any other, to compel me to do something I don't want to.

      I also believe that courts shouldn't force morality on someone - to force me to help someone hurt. I should be able to make that decision on my own.

      I also think they ought to be able to sue me if I refuse, but I think it most likely would be thrown out of court as I have no obligation to a stranger.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    160. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by node+3 · · Score: 1

      My contention is still that "keeping a secret" can still be a condition to be met in a contract, and if the condition is not met, that's breaking a contract.

      And it's reasonable for both parties to a contract or agreement to expect that the contract or agreement be fulfilled. Otherwise, why do we bother with contracts and agreements?


      I agree with this. That doesn't change the fact that Apple would be retarded to not expect leaks.

      It's two different issues. One is that Apple can't think, "leaks? Hah! That's impossible, why they signed a contract. There's no possible way this information could be leaked." The other is that once there is a leak, Apple is right to try to track down the leaker and enforce their contract.

      In my post, I made both points, plus one more--that I don't believe Apple should be able to force TS or AI or anyone else not contractually obliged to them, to help them track down the leak. If AI or TS wants to help, fine, but they should also be able to decline.

      I have a question for you: Do you believe Apple has the right to force an innocent third party to help them enforce their contracts?

      One can be a party to a crime, but a party to a contract violation? How can you be a 'party' to a contract violation for a contract you are not a 'party' to? It just seems utterly stupid ('absurd' would be your term of choice, I think).

    161. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by scheme · · Score: 1
      Why would the reporters who are being penalized have their names published and not Novak? In what manner can anyone argue that outing Valerie Plame as a CIA agent serve any public interest. Novak should be charged with treason.

      The reporter's names are being published because they are fighting the subpoena and I think they publicized the cases themselves.

      Secrecy rules prevents the prosecuter from publicizing whether someone has testified or not but the witnesses can tell others that they have or have not testified.

      --
      "When you sit with a nice girl for two hours, it seems like two minutes. When you sit on a hot stove for two minutes, it
    162. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by m50d · · Score: 1

      No, but it does have precedence over some things and not others. I don't consider a journalist's right to protect his sources more important than murder, but it is more important than (for example) traffic violations. If someone is giving an anonymous interview about a secret meeting in a restaurant and mentions they parked on a double yellow line, it shouldn't be possible to force the journalist to reveal their source just because a law has been broken.

      --
      I am trolling
    163. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by m50d · · Score: 1

      Are you sure you can't recieve stolen goods in good faith? I'm sure I've read there's nothing wrong with that in my country. If you sell stolen goods, you are liable, but only to the value of the goods to the person who bought them from you, and you can go straight back upstream to the person you brought them from and sue them for the value of them to get your money back.

      --
      I am trolling
    164. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by m50d · · Score: 1

      I don't think that would be true. To be defended properly, you need to be able to discuss everything with your attorney, without fear of any consequences. So you should have absolute privilidge. A fair trial with today's laws necessarily implies a competent and fully informed attorney.

      --
      I am trolling
    165. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by m50d · · Score: 1

      Where's the difference between the valid example you give and just calling someone a name? Either way the purpose and method is the same: trying to discredit someone by saying something bad about them which is irrelevant to the matter under discussion.

      --
      I am trolling
    166. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      Where's the difference between the valid example you give and just calling someone a name?

      Are you kidding? The different is obvious. In the one case, someone tries to cast doubt in the mind of a third-party observer by calling the qualifications or impartiality of the other party into question. In the other case, he's just being a penis.

    167. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      OK, we're not as far apart as I thought, probably due to my own inability to think. We still do have major differences which we probably won't be able to resolve, not because we don't share the same values (approximately), but because we differ on which value takes priority.

      To answer your somewhat loaded question, I do believe that Apple has the right to ask the court to compel a third party to give evidence in a civil court case. We know this is a fact of the law, that they have the legal right, but beyond that, I believe in this principle philosophically/ethically. Your right to be "left alone" is outweighed by you duty as a citizen to insure that justice is done.

      Do you see our differences and our similarities? I do believe that an individual has a right to be "left alone" and "to do as they see fit (within certain bounds, of course)", but I also believe that there are times when other principles outweigh these rights. And I don't think the weighing and balancing of the priorities of principles, even on a case-by-case basis, in any way hinders our most basic rights. In short, I'm not an absolutist. Nor do I think you are an absolutist. We just have different criteria or preferences for how the law should be exercised and where the lines should be drawn.

      In regards to Apple's expectations that an NDA will stop leaks, I think that it's a reasonable expectation, although probably not a completely realistic expectation. Do you see the distinction I'm making here? Of course you do. You basically said the same thing in different words. Furthermore, I don't think Apple, nor the courts, would maintain that, realistically, we can expect that all contracts and agreements will be fulfilled and honored. If this was realistic, we wouldn't have need of the courts to enforce contracts. We'd all be on the honor system, and all commerce would either grind to a halt, or we'd have a perfect society. Now, given that we want to be realistic, which of the two paths do you think society would follow? (Heh heh, and no looking at the back of the book for the answer. I know you can get this on your own. Oh, gee. There I go, being abrasively patronizing again. Sorry. =)) Anyway, I'm guessing we're actually fairly close on this underlying issue, though you might differ on how, when, and if it should be carried out.

      Oh, and your mother dresses you funny.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    168. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I don't think I will be able to persuade you, so we'll just have to agree to disagree.

      It is my contention, however, that as a member of society you have certain duties and responsibilities to society. While you have a right to be "left alone", at times these duties outweigh that right. If they didn't we wouldn't have society or the benefits of society. It would be every man (woman and child) for himself. I believe in the rights of the individual, but not in an absolute sense. The individual does not exist in a vacuum.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    169. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      But I do agree with you about duties to society. That is why I am fine with compelling testimony in wrongs against society - ie, crimes. I just think that the rules ought to be different for private matters - that the state ought to stay out of private matters as much as possible. Now, if they want to make contract law criminal law (which I think would be wrong) that would change my statement.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    170. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      Actually, after checking, you won't be charged for receiving in good faith - however, you can (and will) be charged if a "reasonable and prudent person" would have had suspicions regarding the items being stolen.

      That said, if you receive in good faith and don't give up the name of the upstream, I suspect you become liable for obstruction of justice. And you're going to lose the goods without recompense whether or not you roll, so you might as well roll!

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    171. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by ncstockguy · · Score: 1

      Actually the Slashdot headline is misleading. Apple has not won until the writers ordered to reveal their sources capitulate. As of now, they have not.

    172. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      We're really not that different, then. It's funny how people can be totally at odds, when in reality they hold very similar positions.

      Now, let me explain why you are a fool and an idiot for holding an opinion only slightly different from my own. . .

      Just kidding. =)

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    173. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      In this case it is very simple. If you are the guilty party and the judge orders you to speak, then you either speak and are found guilty of the crime and do the time for it, or you do not speak and you do the time for contempt of court.

      Either way you end up in prison, but since you were guilty to start with this is not unjust.

    174. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by esme · · Score: 1

      You're clearly not able to read what I've written objectively.

      I know that Wilson was very well qualified to be the fact-finder in the Niger uranium case -- no sane person disputes that. And from what I've read, the forgery and misrepresentation of the documents was a far greater government abuse.

      But that doens't mean that handing a job to your spouse (which is what was being alleged by Novak, et al., whether or not it's true) would still be a government abuse worth exposing.

      -Esme

    175. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by esme · · Score: 1
      Indeed, Novak hasn't displayed an abundance of judgement or journalistic integrity. But that doesn't mean he wasn't exposing alleged government abuse, or that he's not entitled to whatever journalist shild laws were in place.

      -Esme

    176. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by tndtnd · · Score: 1

      I typed up a fairly thorough respone but it never seemed to post. If this is, in fact, accurate, do not think that my silene is acquiesence . .. to the contrary!

    177. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by esme · · Score: 1

      There wasn't any other post than this.

      Though I think that, in the end, I agree with you. I think Novak is a conservative tool. I think he behaved terribly in this case -- probably criminally.

      And yet, he can plausibly assert that he was exposing nepotism. Novak was told that Wilson got the job because Plame suggested his name, and that suggestion got forwarded to Cheney. Prosecuting Novak for this will make it a lot easier for the govt to suppress other, legitimate whistleblowers by intimidating journalists and editors.

      -Esme

    178. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense by tndtnd · · Score: 1

      I completely agree. I had crafted a reply that mitigated the abrasiveness of my first post . . . but I guess I screwed up. Anyway . . . it will be interesting to see how the Plame resolves itself. Cheers!

  2. Huh? by Toloran · · Score: 0, Redundant

    wasn't this posted a few days ago? Or am I still dilerious with fever?

    Note to self, learn how to spell dilerious.

    --
    Speaking is NOT communication
    1. Re:Huh? by NaruVonWilkins · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up. This is a dupe.

    2. Re:Huh? by xstonedogx · · Score: 1

      A dupe from when? Five minutes ago?

  3. What to think... by ozric99 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do we like this because it's Apple, or do we hate this because 'geeks' lost their case...

    1. Re:What to think... by MegaManXcalibur · · Score: 1

      I belive the Apple card trumps the geek card.

    2. Re:What to think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Fortunately for me, I'm a geek who doesn't like Apple OR reporters, so don't have that dilemma.

    3. Re:What to think... by qwasty · · Score: 1

      Do we like this because it's Apple, or do we hate this because 'geeks' lost their case...

      When in doubt, run and hide. Or, you could form your own opinion...

    4. Re:What to think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What to think, what not to think, that is the question.

    5. Re:What to think... by EraserMouseMan · · Score: 1

      I bet the mac zealots would hate this ruling if Microsoft was suing. But since it's Apple winning something they love it.

      Which shows that they don't care about the ramifications of the law. They just like ANYTHING Apple does. Even if it tramples on free speech.

    6. Re:What to think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Even if it tramples on free speech.

      Okay, let me take this moment to say a few choice words pubically about your mother. It's free speech after all. And while I'm at it, I could talk about your race, beliefs, form of income, educational background. Let me also publish your home address, phone number, make/model of car. It's free speech after all.

    7. Re:What to think... by humina · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately thinksecret was reporting something that apple was going to publicly announce anyhow. Think secret could also have been wrong about the information that they got. If you want to publish everything you know about me and I'm going to do the same tomorrow anyhow, I wouldn't really care. If you publish a whole bunch of stuff about me and it's all wrong and I then correct you the next day, I wouldn't care too much either. As it stands I think the thinksecret's case falls under the announcing a few days before apple did category. Apple is not going to look good forcing someone to rat on their friend.

      Apple may very well be right. If apple tried asking nicely without slapping expensive legal fees on someone that can't afford it then, I would side with apple 100%. Unfortunately apple went straight to legal action against them. Makes apple look like a bully. Perhaps a totally correct bully, but still a bully.

      --
      check out the best blog ever:
      http://oehlberg.com
    8. Re:What to think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Off course, the fact that they have been sending cease and desist letters for the past year is irrelevant right...???

  4. Sources by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 5, Funny

    Dear Apple,

    I heard it on Slashdot.org

    There was this guy, I think he was call Anthony Coward or something, and he was telling me all about the fab new stuff. ...

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
    1. Re:Sources by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > Dear Apple,
      >I heard it on Slashdot.org
      >There was this guy, I think he was call Anthony Coward or something, and he was telling me all about the fab new stuff. ...

      Oh, no you don't. No fuckin' way. Not again. One fuckin' joint and I'm unemployed, but you go on national TV and become a celebrity. Don't you dare sell me out, Ellen, or it's over like Carly and Capellas!

      - The Dell Dude.

      (And it wasn't even really fab new stuff.)

    2. Re:Sources by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Anthony Coward?" Is that like "Abby Normal?" :)

    3. Re:Sources by Anthony+Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      --
      This .sig is the short tail.
  5. Apple is evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    head spinning ...must stop self destruct sequence..

    1. Re:Apple is evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well, duh - it is the 2nd Friday of the third month of the first year after a leap year.

      Surely you got the calendar?

      (It's going to really blow your mind on 14th April, 2:07pm GMT, 2013. That's the minute that Microsoft is good...)

  6. What were they thinking. by FrankieBoy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This isn't about protecting sources, this is corporate espionage plain and simple. They're not protecting reporting sources, they're shielding criminals.

    1. Re:What were they thinking. by bw5353 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      While I do agree with you that the ruling in this case probably was correct, I firmly disagree that it was a simple case.

      The ruling means that I cannot go to a journalist with suspicions that my current employer may use illegal methods. It probably means that I cannot go to a journalist even if I am absolutely certain my employer uses illegal methods, because it would be illegal of me to disclose that my company behaves illegally. On the other hand, it is illegal not to denounce criminals... Oh, well, I guess I could go to the police.

      But what if my company's practices are perfectly legal, but highly immoral? (They may for example use sweat shops in poor countries or buy material from sweat shops or pollute poor countries in desperate need of cash.) I cannot go to the police with that information, because the police doesn't care about immoral behaviour, as long as one doesn't break the law. And with this ruling, I cannot alert the press either, because the press will have to disclose who gave them information, which my company considered secret.

      In the case with Apple, the law worked well, but it is by no way certain that we will like that it is interpeted this way next time.

    2. Re:What were they thinking. by RetardSmith · · Score: 1

      It all truly depends on whether or not the information was stolen or leaked under a non-disclosure agreement. A) is a crime and B) could consitute a crime depending on the wording of the agreement.

      If sources, even of a future press release are leaked under NDA, the law is/can still be broken.

      Does anyone have first-hand knowledge, as to whether Apple employees are working under NDA?

      Interestingly enough, even visitors of an employee are bound under the NDA. Even if they do not sign it (and the employee takes all responsibility). I can recall signing at least one of such nature.

    3. Re:What were they thinking. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Does anyone have first-hand knowledge, as to whether Apple employees are working under NDA?"

      yes. all of us. down to the kitchen staff. if you have any remote chance of seeing anything you sign a 4 page NDA. the punishment for leaking info is spelled out.

      you are shown videotapes and warned not to leak info during orientation.

      I honestly have no sympathy for anyone dumb enough to leak Apple trade secrets.

    4. Re:What were they thinking. by tfoss · · Score: 1
      The ruling means that I cannot go to a journalist with suspicions that my current employer may use illegal methods.


      I cannot go to the police with that information, because the police doesn't care about immoral behaviour, as long as one doesn't break the law. And with this ruling, I cannot alert the press either, because the press will have to disclose who gave them information, which my company considered secret.


      Very different things. The judge notes as much:

      Unlike the whistleblower who discloses a health, safety or welfare hazard affecting all, or the government employee who reveals mismanagement or worse by our public officials, [the enthusiast sites] are doing nothing more than feeding the public's insatiable desire for information.

      This ruling does not suggest that you can't say anything about illegal/hazardous behavior to a journalist. Nor does it mean that your anonymity is at risk in those cases...rather in this specific set of circumstances, where it is clear that non of those situations is occuring, then there is no legal reason why the bloggers can't be compelled to name the criminals. This is very, very far from the sky-is-falling scenarios you suggest.

      That's the things about judges...usually, they are pretty smart, have a decent grasp of the law, and actually consider the particulars of a case before passing judgment. That obviously can't be said for the general /. readership.


      -Ted

      --
      -=-=- Quantum physics - the dreams stuff are made of.
    5. Re:What were they thinking. by bw5353 · · Score: 1
      I obviously wasn't clear enough for everyone to understand my point.

      The point is: this is not simple. The parent poster claimed it was simple. I say it is not.

      I was fully aware of the judge's motivations. However, a case involving free speech where we will have to trust that the judge in charge is "pretty smart" is slightly worrying. No, I did not write "incredibly horrendously worrying". I wrote "slightly worrying". Or, using my original wording: "I firmly disagree that it was a simple case."

    6. Re:What were they thinking. by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Yes, but your argument to support your point failed. You might still have a point, but you need to supply a better different argument to prove your point. We're not getting graded (moderation notwithstanding), so try again. Why is this not a simple case? What elements make it complex?

      Of course, you don't have to do anything. But to claim a thing but not be able to support that thing through reasoning, evidence, or both is pointless.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    7. Re:What were they thinking. by m50d · · Score: 1

      No, but it means your anonymity is at risk where there is immoral practices going on under an NDA. After all, you are technically breaking the law, and your employer technically isn't.

      --
      I am trolling
    8. Re:What were they thinking. by bw5353 · · Score: 1
      It is a good classic question how much information you have to give for different kinds of people to understand or agree.

      You are right, though, that those posts of mine hardly have been wonders of clarity and sharp argumentation.

      Neither is this one. Why break an old habit?

  7. Little Known Fact about this story by The+Amazing+Fish+Boy · · Score: 1, Funny

    The submitter was actually Steve Jobs, but he had to use the codename "linuxwrangler" since Slashdot couldn't post any information from an Apple employee. I mean, how can Slashdot distinguish between what Apple considers a trade secret and what they don't if Apple doesn't tell them before hand?

    1. Re:Little Known Fact about this story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "how can Slashdot distinguish between what Apple considers a trade secret and what they don't if Apple doesn't tell them before hand?"

      Slashdot doesn't need to - it's not the publisher that is being held to account.

      OTOH, the employee(s) who leaked trade secrets are the ones who could distinguish the trade secrets and are the ones being held to account.

  8. In a related story... by moehoward · · Score: 0, Troll


    The same judge ruled that bypassing Firefox's pop-up blocking was not only allowed, but encouraged by the judicial system.

    Slashdot editor's were said to no longer care about linking to pop-up ad sites, but stated that they would make it a policy when linking to dupe stories.

    --
    "If you want to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid." - Epictetus
  9. Appeal by Valiss · · Score: 5, Informative

    From Slashdot:
    No word yet on an appeal.

    From the article:
    He said the trio would appeal the judge's ruling.

    Oi, this is getting bad. I mean, do the submitter read the articles they submit?

    --

    -Valiss
    1. Re:Appeal by Spankophile · · Score: 1

      do the submitter read the articles they submit?

      You should know by now, that they do not.

    2. Re:Appeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The thing about the internet is that linked articles are dynamic!

    3. Re: Appeal by Alwin+Henseler · · Score: 1
      Oi, this is getting bad. I mean, do the submitter read the articles they submit?

      For starters: I suppose so, but many submissions may contain the same stupid mistakes that /. editors/posters are often caught with. Like the editors, submitters are people (who make mistakes) as well.

      /. Editors just pick the stories THEY find interesting out of the grab bag, edit the summary to their likings or maybe add a personal note, and leave accuracy checking to the folks that read and post comments.

      From the summary: "No word yet on an appeal". Maybe that last line was added by the poster (CowboyNeal), and not by the submitter (linuxwrangler)?

      Bottom line: we're all human, we all make mistakes. News at 11.

    4. Re:Appeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I have to wonder is why do publishers have to reveal their trade secrets to make Apple happy?

  10. In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Steve Jobs today said, I SWEAR I didn't mean to submit that news to Think Secret...

  11. Shameless link peddling by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 5, Informative

    This blogger, whom I have become completely addicted to, wrote the best article I've read on the subject. It deals with only one of the several lawsuits filed, but the points he makes are real thought-provokers.

    Sorry for being such a shameless pimp, but I really think people who are interested in this Apple story would be interested in this article.

    (I got the link from MacSlash last weekend.)

    1. Re:Shameless link peddling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The heart of the matter:

      "[If Ciarelli] reported that Apple was dumping toxic chemicals into the groundwater behind their corporate headquarters, that would clearly be an important story, one which the public would have an obvious right to know. It would also clearly be a trade secret. In that case, the public's right to know trumps company's right to protect its trade secrets.

      "But we're not talking about illegal dumping here. We're not talking about blowing the whistle. We're talking about the disclosure of specifications and prices for upcoming products, details that were obtained by convincing Apple employees to break their confidentiality agreements."

    2. Re:Shameless link peddling by russotto · · Score: 1

      The First Amendment is the First Amendment regardless of the content of the speech. If a law means that a contract Party A makes to not reveal something that Party B tells him is binding on Party C, it's violating the First Amendment regardless of whether it's about dumping toxic chemicals or about the next new iPod.

      One California court did find the UTSA unconstitutional (in one of the DVD cases), but the California Supreme Court cleverly reinstated it while letting the defendant off the hook, precluding appeals.

    3. Re:Shameless link peddling by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The First Amendment is the First Amendment regardless of the content of the speech.

      Child pornographers in prison everywhere would beg to differ.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    4. Re:Shameless link peddling by amper · · Score: 1

      I have to say, I found that article to be dead on the mark...

      at least until I got to the bottom and read the praise of Michelle Malkin...a more misguided person, I've never met. Advocates of naked fascism should not be held up as positive examples. ...well, unless of course, you yourself are a facsist...

    5. Re:Shameless link peddling by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      So would all the libelers and slanderers.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    6. Re:Shameless link peddling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They committed the crime by the act of child sex. The pictures provide evidence of the criminal act. There is good reason for child pornographers being in prison in lots of place in the United States. Not all of these cases violate the First Amendment.

    7. Re:Shameless link peddling by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      Yeah, yeah. The point, that there is plenty of speech that is illegal strictly by its content (obscenity, slander, libel, etc.).

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    8. Re:Shameless link peddling by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      So because everything he said is right, but he likes somebody you don't like, he's wrong?

      Tell me more about what it's like to be in the third grade.

    9. Re:Shameless link peddling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the cases are (supposed to be) content neutral. It is just that certain classes of speech are not protected. Most of these unprotected classes do violate First Amendment protections but judges are loathe to protect civil rights too strongly. It is a cowardly bench due to the (mostly) men who put them there. And men (like I) are cowardly by nature.

    10. Re:Shameless link peddling by Maserati · · Score: 1

      "Michelle Malkin -- half a dozen different kinds of pretty, and smarter than a four-dollar hammer -- weighs in, voicing an opinion that differs significantly from mine. She riddles her commentary with the sort of facts that I find such a pain in the rear to look up. She rocks."

      He never even implies that he agrees with her on this, it's just "another take". He praises her for for being smart - she does ask some good questions - and doing research for her blog. Stalin loved his mother and his country. It's not an endorsement.

      In fact, reading Malkin's article, I find it to be one of the least opinionated pieces I have ever read. She raises questions and states facts. Not a hint of philosophy, although adherents of her particular philosophy may have different answers to some of them than others do.

      And what's so bad a bout a little fascism now and then, the Classical democracies also elected the occasional dictator

      I've never heard of her before right now btw, and if she is does advocate fascism, then I don't see a hint of it here. She does appear to be an absolutist neo-con though. She makes an ok point about military tribunals in the Padilla case, but the civvy courts have the right of it: he's a US citizen, if you want to interrogate him then make the case that he's a terorist.

      Rational-but-wrong I like to call 'em. It's a free country, she can have a website and hawk (pun intended) t-shirts and articles if she wants to.

      --
      Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
    11. Re:Shameless link peddling by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      Obscenity is most definitely not content-neutral.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    12. Re:Shameless link peddling by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      He praises her for for being smart

      Also pretty, which is a matter of taste.

      I've never heard of her before right now btw, and if she is does advocate fascism, then I don't see a hint of it here.

      She doesn't. She's big on immigration reform. I think she's making a mountain out of a molehill, but I don't think she's fundamentally wrong about it. I mean, our borders are pretty porous. It would be pretty easy to sneak a suicide bomber into Texas. And there are a lot of people out there who want to. So I think she's kinda got a point.

      But she's not a fascist. The person who said she was is doing what so many others do: confusing conservatives with fascists.

      I started reading Malkin because the guy whose blog that is links to her a lot. She's not always right, but she's usually worth reading.

    13. Re:Shameless link peddling by m50d · · Score: 1

      No, they just didn't defend themselves well enough. Or were wrongfully convicted.

      --
      I am trolling
  12. The source... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    was a random gossip generator!

  13. Does the submitter read the article? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why should he be the only one?

  14. Robert Novak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    should be sweating about now.

  15. Re:Don't judge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Ever since Bill Gates befriended Satan, Steve jobs has been playing catch-up. Today at 1 infinite loop Mr. Jobs stated "Hey, if Bill can be in league with Satan to dominate the world, then I can do it better and more stylishly"

  16. Re:So, does Bob Woodard have to give up Deep Throa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would it kill ya to read before commenting? Seriously, read the ruling. It says the exact opposite of what you said.

  17. not a judgment on Apple's claims! by scbomber · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This ruling is solely concerned with whether the journalists are entitled to be protected from Apple's subpoena of their records. Quoting the ruling:

    "The order of this court does not go beyond the questions necessary to determine this motion seeking a protective order against that single subpoena, and it cannot and should not be read or interpreted more broadly," the judge said. "The court makes no finding as to the ultimate merits of Apple's claims, or any defenses to those claims. Those issues remain for another day."

  18. This spells the end of the magazine by mark-t · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because nobody will want to tell them anything anymore, since they have no guarantee of identity protection.

    1. Re:This spells the end of the magazine by Rii · · Score: 1

      Nobody will tell them anything and sign their name anymore. They'll just always be anonymous now, with some sort of proof they're from apple. Maybe a lock of Steve Job's hair, I dunno. Yes, the magazine may get some bum stories, but it doesn't have to mean no more information.

    2. Re:This spells the end of the magazine by Shinzaburo · · Score: 5, Interesting

      We could only be so lucky. Honestly, I won't mind too much if this hubbub results in ThinkSecret and the rest of the rumor mill going belly-up. Much like the judge mentioned in his ruling, I don't believe the "information" those sites provide actually serves the public interest. If the prognosticating were half-way reliable, perhaps it might have value to those to need to make purchase decisions. But it's not half-way reliable, so there really isn't any value being provided.

      Those sites just take all the sizzle out of Apple's announcements, leaving people unnecessarily disappointed and let down. Good riddance to them.

    3. Re:This spells the end of the magazine by Heisenbug · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why people assume the source's name is known in the first place. This will just spell the end of people giving their name to bloggers when they violate their contracts. Was a wakeup call really needed on that front?

    4. Re:This spells the end of the magazine by RAS+230 · · Score: 1

      It just means people providing information can't relay on the journalists to protect there identity and the good reporters will be more accepting of information provided to them by annon contributers. if a blogger doesn't HAVE your identity, they can't be forced to reval it.

    5. Re:This spells the end of the magazine by mark-t · · Score: 1

      The question then becomes, can the failure for a magazine to keep records of its sources be construed as a shallow attempt to simply not reveal its sources in the first place? Sure, they may not have the info, but they could be put in the very awkward position of trying to _prove_ that they don't have it.

    6. Re:This spells the end of the magazine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      here's a napkin you seem to have some spooge o your chin.

    7. Re:This spells the end of the magazine by myov · · Score: 1

      Well, if your model is basically getting people under NDA's who can't talk to talk, don't be suprized when you run into legal issues.

      It's one thing to research, but NDA's exist for a reason.

      --
      I use Macs to up my productivity, so up yours Microsoft!
    8. Re:This spells the end of the magazine by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      If they didn't know who the source was, they could have just said so. However, they did know, and they're not so stupid that they were going to commit perjury.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    9. Re:This spells the end of the magazine by Shinzaburo · · Score: 1

      Wow. Such intelligent and well thought-out responses. [/sarcasm]

      In response to the information-free comment from AC #2:

      RTFA, moron. The judge explicitly draws a distinction between the lemmings' interest in these sites and the public interest. Your "proof" is based on a fundamental ignorance of what the "public interest" means.

      Who cares about whether Apple's announcements actually get people excited? I do. So do a lot of other people. So does Apple, obviously. Any other bright questions?

      Oh, it seems you have one. Answer: Nobody said Apple has the constitutional right to generate excitement. They do, however, have the right to protect their trade secrets. ThinkSecret, on the other hand, does not have the right to protect sources that disclose said secrets. It's sad that this has to be explained to you.

      You're the perfect reason to loathe SlashDot anonymous cowards.

    10. Re:This spells the end of the magazine by m50d · · Score: 1

      But where are you confident of the line? Are you going to risk being sued by saying anything at all to a magazine? Unless there is a clear and present danger to the public, I don't think you are.

      --
      I am trolling
    11. Re:This spells the end of the magazine by Shinzaburo · · Score: 1

      I understand your concern. Personally, I believe this falls under the rubric of common sense. For example, I imagine that the guidelines as to what Apple employees can and cannot say to the press are probably crystal clear. I find it hard to believe that there would be any uncertainty among Apple employees as to whether it's okay to disclose information about unannounced products.

      Employees have a responsibility not to reveal trade secrets to outsiders. I just don't see the ambiguity here.

    12. Re:This spells the end of the magazine by m50d · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think you misunderstand me. What I mean is, at what point do you become confident what you are saying is in the public interest enough to take it to a newspaper regardless of the NDA. Someone somewhere else raised the suggestion of a company getting its supplies from cheap third-world labour, but making its employees sign an NDA about it. That's the sort of thing I think the public ought to know, but with this ruling, would anyone be confident enough to take it to a paper?

      --
      I am trolling
    13. Re:This spells the end of the magazine by Shinzaburo · · Score: 1

      I can see how that might be a problem. On the other hand, if an employee is at all unclear as to whether the information truly serves the public interest, perhaps s/he should provide the information to the media in an anonymous fashion.

  19. Apple "Wins" Highly Misleading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Saying Apple "wins" in the headline doesn't take into account the numerous reversals these type of cases tend to take.

    While it isn't clear that it will be appealed, if it is, the next decision may be quite different.

    But leave it to SlashDot's unique ability to confuse while trying clear things up...

  20. And yet, on the other hand... by techno-vampire · · Score: 4, Funny

    People who publish trade secrets that might hurt a company are forced to reveal their sources, but people who publish Top Secret documents are protected. (Anybody remember that stupid ruling on The Pentagon Papers?) I guess that proves that businesses are more important than National Security.

    --
    Good, inexpensive web hosting
    1. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by aristotle-dude · · Score: 3, Insightful
      That's because freedom of press is supposed to protect against government abuses. Without a free press, it is difficult to keep the government accountable to the people.

      What you seem to be confused about is that companies, like people have rights which have to be considered.

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    2. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and then why is it that G Liddy went to for not revealig who Deep Throat was/is?

    3. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by techno-vampire · · Score: 1
      What you seem to be confused about is that companies, like people have rights which have to be considered.

      You make a good point, but miss mine. Apple had every right to protect its trade secrets. I see nothing wrong with what they did, and if insiders violated NDAs, they deserve what they get.

      Granted, the Pentagon Papers shouldn't have been classified Top Secret, because they didn't qualify, but that's what they were. Whoever leaked them broke the law in doing so, and the newspaper had no right to posess or read them. By not turning them over to the apropriate authorities, they broke the law, and by publishing them, they broke it again. Instead of being punished, they were commended. My feeling is that they should have been convicted, given the maximum sentance and an instant, complete pardon because it was in the national interest to reveal the abuses involved. The conviction and sentance would act as a reminder to anybody wanting to follow their footsteps that they do so at their own risk.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    4. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That's because freedom of press is supposed to protect against government abuses. Without a free press, it is difficult to keep the government accountable to the people. What you seem to be confused about is that companies, like people have rights which have to be considered.

      There is plenty of reason to be confused about the line between the government and companies in America these days. If you don't understand the danger of what is happening, you're part of the problem.

    5. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 3, Informative

      There is an exemption in the law for information that is in the public interest; as such, the whole conviction/pardon thing would be ignoring the law, not following it.

      In other words, the papers did NOT break the law, since they fell under what is commonly called a "whistleblower" exemption.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    6. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by Derling+Whirvish · · Score: 1
      In other words, the papers did NOT break the law, since they fell under what is commonly called a "whistleblower" exemption.

      No "whistleblower" exemption existed in law in 1971 when the papers were published. That came a decade later.

    7. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by Derling+Whirvish · · Score: 1
      That's because freedom of press is supposed to protect against government abuses. Without a free press, it is difficult to keep the government accountable to the people.

      So we have nothing to protect us against corporate abuses? We aren't allowed to keep corporations accountable via v free and open press? It's funny but I don't recall seeing any qualification on the first amendment stating its intent in my copy of the Constitution.

    8. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by cgranade · · Score: 4, Interesting

      No, they don't. The Constitution does not protect the right of a corporation to do anything. There is no fundamental right to make money, to go into business, or anything similar. Witness false advertising laws, which are wholly consistant with free press and free speech. The myth of corporate "rights" is a recent one, and somewhat devestating. Even if you feel that corporations should have rights, there is no fundamental document stating explicitly which rights they do have. This means that any judge ruling on the topic has to navigate solely through precidence, and may override it at whim. Objectively evaluating the standards by which a corporation should be held is damn near impossible.

      So, in short, no. Corporations do not presently have rights, but have a set of a sort of "virtual rights," which exist only in court precedent, and in convention. There is no formalism for corporate rights.

      As a side note, if you believe that corporate abuse is any less deadly in today's world than government abuse, or even that they aren't in many ways the same thing, I have a nice bridge to sell you.

      --

      #define DRM chmod 000

    9. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by dutky · · Score: 1
      techno-vampire wrote:
      People who publish trade secrets that might hurt a company are forced to reveal their sources, but people who publish Top Secret documents are protected. (Anybody remember that stupid ruling on The Pentagon Papers?) I guess that proves that businesses are more important than National Security.

      The judge addressed this distinction directly in his ruling (quoting from daveschroeder who quoted the ruling above):
      Unlike the whistleblower who discloses a health, safety or welfare hazard affecting all, or the government employee who reveals mismanagement or worse by our public officials, [the enthusiast sites] are doing nothing more than feeding the public's insatiable desire for information.

      The Pentagon Papers were evidence of gross malfeasance on the part of our elected government and the public interest value of their revelation far outweighed the their value as government secrets (no matter how much conservatives in this country would like to believe otherwise). Apples plans for new products have no public interest value (that is, they have no effect on the public well-being) and should get the full protection of the trade secret laws (so long as Apple can show that the information was, in fact, a trade secret as defined by those same laws).

      So long a Apple isn't endangering anybodies' lives or committing any criminal acts, they have a right to keep their internal operations secret until such time as they see fit to reveal them (just as any private citizen has a right to keep their own affairs secret, so long as they are not endangering another person or committing criminal acts). The people who revealed Apple's product plans to ThinkSecret did so in violation of a lawfull agreement they signed with Apple Computer Corp. and Apple should be allowed to discover who the leakers were so that a breach of contract suit can be persued.

    10. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by Kenshin · · Score: 1

      The difference is that the Apple info wasn't leaked in the public interest. It was leaked purely for noseyness.

      Public interest would be if Apple were covering up a wrongdoing of sorts.

      Gov't stuff isn't exempt from this either. I'm sure the army would be none to pleased if you leaked-out info on their top-secret aircraft, since it's not in the public interest to know.

      There's a fundemental difference between a WANT to know and a NEED to know.

      --

      Does it make you happy you're so strange?

    11. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by techno-vampire · · Score: 1
      So long a Apple isn't endangering anybodies' lives or committing any criminal acts, they have a right to keep their internal operations secret until such time as they see fit to reveal them...

      No question there. I'm just objecting to the way that corporate secrets are being treated as more valuable than national security. I agree that the Pentagon Papers should not have been classified, but the fact remains that they were.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    12. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      I have no idea what exemption you refer to, as there is *no* blanket exemption for whistleblowers who are acting in the interest of public safety.

      That said, I was not speaking of the specific exemption you appear to be thinking of, just of the general term for that class of exemption in the public mind.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    13. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was under the impression that corporations count as an individual legally. That is, they have the same rights that you and I have. I don't believe that a human's individual rights apply to this situation though.

    14. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      What corporate abuses, exactly, did Apple commit? You are aware, aren't you, that we're talking about leaked product specifications here?

      Let's pull ourselves back a little closer to reality, huh?

    15. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      Try libeling or slandering Apple.

      See if you can argue the first amendment when they sue you.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    16. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by EvanED · · Score: 1

      Actually, if you read the first amendment, you'll see that it provides that congress can't pass a law "abridging the freedom of speech".

      What "freedom of speech" encompasses is a whole other matter.

      Some things it doesn't encompass:

      - Some "fighting words" (I forget what the latest wording is, but it's something along the lines of words that are intended to or are extremely likely to spark immediate violence)

      - Other speech that creates a clear and present danger -- remember the "'fire' in a croweded theatre" thing? (this standard isn't in play as such, but it's similar)

      - Defamation (libel, slander)

      - False advertising

      - Most publications of classified information

      - Obscenity in the absence of other redeaming qualities

      - Child pornography

      Shall I go on?

      Anyway, I have a suspicion that if this case were about an Apple employee saying that Apple has violated antitrust laws, hired illegal immigrants, or something like that, where the employee is a "whistleblower", the case would have been ruled the other way. As it is, there is no legitimate public interest in wanting to know the next release of Apple hardware/software, while there is a public interest in revealing abuses.

    17. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by dutky · · Score: 1
      techno-vampire wrote:
      So long a Apple isn't endangering anybodies' lives or committing any criminal acts, they have a right to keep their internal operations secret until such time as they see fit to reveal them...
      No question there. I'm just objecting to the way that corporate secrets are being treated as more valuable than national security. I agree that the Pentagon Papers should not have been classified, but the fact remains that they were.

      The problem is that corporate secrets are protected by the same laws that protect the secrets of private individuals, at least those individuals that own their own businesses (sole-proprietorships or partnerships). There are some technical/historical/legal reasons that corporations are considered to have the same rights as individuals (which I won't go into, mainly because I only have a vague understanding of the arguments and history) and so long as that is settled law, the same laws that apply to individuals also apply to corporations.

      Now, you may think (reasonably) that corporations should not enjoy the same protections as natural persons, but that's not how the law currently stands. If you'd like to do something about that, however, you'll have to convince at least one of your elected representatives (assuming that you have elected representatives, wherever you live) to introduce new legislation to change your local laws, get the legislation passed over the strenuous oppostion of existing corporate interests, get it ratified by the executive branch, and hope that it survives judicial review.

      That's all going to be pretty tough to ensure in the good old U.S. of A., since some people (who happen to have lots of money and consequently loud political voices) will oppose any changes to the status quo. Even worse, since most of the legal structure that defines corporations as persons isn't legislative but judicial there is no guarantee that, if you could enact legislation to strip corporations of their full personhood, that the laws would be interpreted the way you intended (or, for that matter, even upheld).

    18. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by DrJAT42 · · Score: 1

      IIRC, the ruling in the case was NOT that the NY Times and the Washington Post were exempt from prosescution for publication of classified materials but merely that the government could not get a restraining order prior to publication.

      Federal prosecutors were free to persue a case _after the fact_.
      In the event, they used their discretion and chose not to pursue
      the case.

    19. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      - Other speech that creates a clear and present danger -- remember the "'fire' in a croweded theatre" thing? (this standard isn't in play as such, but it's similar)

      I think saying "Hurry up and jump, you're holding up the line" on a crowded ledge is illegal in Australia.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    20. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I think you have a basic misunderstanding of the legal system in the USA. A good part of which is based on legal precedent going back to the 17th Century. Does the name British East India Company ring any bells? founded in 1600?

      These laws are formalized in precedents. It might not be what you call "formalized" as in number theory or geometry, but it is formalized.

      I'm not saying I disagree with your point about corporate abuse, I'm just trying to clear up your misunderstanding of the law.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    21. Re:And yet, on the other hand... by goon+america · · Score: 1

      Daniel Ellsberg, the economist who helped work on and ultimately released the Pentagon Papers, expected to spend the rest of his in jail for doing so. He was arrested and tried for 12 felonies including espionage carrying a total possible sentence of up to 115 years. These charges were later thrown out by the judge because of "gross governmental misconduct" after it was revealed that Nixon had ordered the CIA to assasinate him.

      Sources:
      Ellsberg's self-bio
      Wikipedia page

  21. dialing for deuterium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, you shuold laern how to splel delirious.

  22. All the more reason we need anonymous networks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not about MP3s. It's not about warez. It's not about whistleblowers.

    They'll keep chipping away at what we can do.

    We need a network that works like the internet, but has all the features that it does. Maybe someone would like to run an "Apple secrets" website on MetaNTWRK ?

  23. Re:Viva La Revolution by aristotle-dude · · Score: 4, Informative
    I don't think you understand how the commmon law legal system. Laws under common law are not codified but rather interpreted based on the spirit of the law and past decisions by previous judges.

    This helps to ensure that the legal system cannot simply apply the letter of the law and steamroll over everyone. It also helps to prevent people from using laws to shield illegal activity.

    --
    Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
  24. Yeah, its great by Sanity · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    I must say I feel much more secure about freedom of speech now that only those deemed to be speaking in the public interest are permitted to disclose information that a corporation doesn't want them to disclose.
    No doubt that still others will make claims that the very idea of "trade secrets" is wrong, and that the UTSA is unconstitutional. This, of course, completely ignores the basic ideas of property, including intellectual property, and good-faith agreements to not reveal your employer's secrets, not to mention fundamental ideas of ethics, and further ignores the idea that free speech is not, and never has been, absolute, in that it has ramifications.
    Yeah, but this isn't about those that violated an NDA, it is about those who revealed information that they obtained from someone who violated an NDA. What property right justifies the application of restrictions imposed by an agreement on someone that never signed that agreement?
    This is a good day for the fundamental idea of rights being couple with responsibility, and the fundamental concept that actions have consequences.
    This is a terrible day for anyone that thinks freedom of speech should trump corporate interests.
    1. Re:Yeah, its great by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1, Informative

      You don't understand the case or the ruling. Read this article (which I have already pimped elsewhere).

    2. Re:Yeah, its great by daveschroeder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, but this isn't about those that violated an NDA, it is about those who revealed information that they obtained from someone who violated an NDA.

      Yeah. That, and the small issue that they might have broken a law doing so.

      What property right justifies the application of restrictions imposed by an agreement on someone that never signed that agreement?

      The fact that the UTSA says that revealing information that can reasonably be believed to have been obtained as the result of the breach of a binding confidentiality agreement is prohibited. Do you understand that NDAs or any confidentiality agreements would be meaningless if all you had to do was leak them to someone else, who in turn publicly leaks them, all with no repurcussions of any kind nor any recourse for the employer?

    3. Re:Yeah, its great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Journalists have are free to speak but if they publish an interview they conducted with a serial killer wanted for the murder of 15 people and then REFUSE to disclose the identity of the killer then they should expect to go to jail. Why do you think criminal Journalists should be given legal immunity?

    4. Re:Yeah, its great by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Dumbest comment ever.

      "I think it's telling that Apple chose to file suit in California, the very same state that Richard Nixon is buried in."

      "I think it's telling that Apple's complaint was printed on paper, the very same material that Hitler used to wipe his ass!"

      Well, guess what, Sparky ... it's not telling. The law is what it is. It's written down. It's not tainted because some people you don't like decided to use it. And you say absolutely nothing about somebody's case when you draw such an unbelievably flimsy association solely for the purposes of inducing an emotional response.

      Dumbest comment ever.

    5. Re:Yeah, its great by Sanity · · Score: 1
      Yeah. That, and the small issue that they might have broken a law doing so.
      If so, then its a dumb law that could easily be used to suppress legitimate journalism (and has been in the past).
      Do you understand that NDAs or any confidentiality agreements would be meaningless if all you had to do was leak them to someone else, who in turn publicly leaks them, all with no repurcussions of any kind nor any recourse for the employer?
      Do you understand that the person who signs a contract is the one who should be constrained by it, and punished should they break it, and a contract should not be binding upon anyone that hasn't actually agreed to it?

      Please explain what NDA is signed by a journalist that receives information from someone that is violating an NDA by providing it, such that the journalist's freedom of speech should be constrained.

    6. Re:Yeah, its great by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what the NDA situation is at public universities, but in private industry virtually everything bit of information you encounter is covered by an NDA. The free lunch I got today is probably covered by my NDA, as is any number of personal conversations had with friends and family.

      Now obviously this was a high-level leak, and Apple has to follow up on it, but I'm quite skeptical of the "NDAs Ueber Alles" mentality displayed by yourself and the Apple defenders here. The reality is these agreements are very broad and could easily be used to run roughshod over other rights.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    7. Re:Yeah, its great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Journalists have are free to speak but if they publish an interview they conducted with a serial killer wanted for the murder of 15 people and then REFUSE to disclose the identity of the killer then they should expect to go to jail. Why do you think criminal Journalists should be given legal immunity?

      The solution for this is to have another journalist publish the name and address of the first one, thereby telling the victim's families where the lowlife lives.

    8. Re:Yeah, its great by Sanity · · Score: 0
      Dumbest comment ever.
      Again you avoid the issue completely, this time resorting to a personal attack. I will leave it up to the readers and moderators to determine whose is the dumber comment.
      It's not tainted because some people you don't like decided to use it.
      The issue is not the people that used it, it is what they used it for, in that case it was to suppress information that was clearly in the public interest. I'm really sorry that I found a good example of someone using these dumb laws to do something evil.
      And you say absolutely nothing about somebody's case when you draw such an unbelievably flimsy association solely for the purposes of inducing an emotional response.
      Wow, the guy avoiding the actual issue and indulging in name calling is accusing me of trying to induce an emotional response. Pot, kettle, black, etc.
    9. Re:Yeah, its great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Becuase we value a free and unhampered press in our country. This may not be the case in Stalinist Russia or North Korea but these are the founding principles here. Anything else is simply creeping toltaltarianism.

    10. Re:Yeah, its great by ratsnapple+tea · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh, come off it. Revealing the unethical and borderline murderous behavior of tobacco companies serves a clear and immediate public interest. What "public interest" does it serve to protect the guy who leaks confidential information about the next Power Mac revision?

      As the judge wrote, an interested public is NOT the same as a public interest.

    11. Re:Yeah, its great by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 1
      They broke a law? Which one? Any evidence?

      If someone tells you something that they shouldn't have told you (because they would be violating their NDA), but fails to tell you that they are violating their NDA, does that make you a criminal for reporting it?

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    12. Re:Yeah, its great by Sanity · · Score: 0
      What "public interest" does it serve to protect the guy who leaks confidential information about the next Power Mac revision?
      It serves a public interest to protect journalists against getting dragged into court so that a judge can determine whether their speech is good enough to deserve first amendment protection.
    13. Re:Yeah, its great by jkabbe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Freedom of the press should not extend to:
      1) actively soliciting people to break their non-disclosure contracts
      2) publishing information which you actually know to be protected by a non-disclosure contract covering the person who gave you the information

      There is no property right at stake here. The first place you start is tortious interference with a contractual duty. Then you get into trade secrets and it gets a bit more complicated.

      This is a terrible day for anyone who thinks that being a "journalist" should give you a free ride to break any contract or trade secret laws you want in the name of "freedom".

    14. Re:Yeah, its great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Journalists have are free to speak but if they publish an interview they conducted with a serial killer wanted for the murder of 15 people and then REFUSE to disclose the identity of the killer then they should expect to go to jail

      So revealing trade secrets is on par with serial murder? Oh right, I forgot. Corporate profits deserve the same degree of protection as human life. How could I forget.

    15. Re:Yeah, its great by jkabbe · · Score: 1

      Let me explain something. Tortious interference is when YOU, the third party, actively try to get someone to break their contract. If THEY come to you and volunteer information it's not tortious interference. You may still be breaking trade secret laws if you know (or should have known) that the information was confidential. However, it would not be tortious interference. You make it out to be the tools of the devil when in fact it is a very important part of contract law.

      The difference with Wigand may be that he was covering up criminal activity by honoring his NDA.

    16. Re:Yeah, its great by Sanity · · Score: 0, Troll
      There is no property right at stake here. The first place you start is tortious interference with a contractual duty. Then you get into trade secrets and it gets a bit more complicated.
      Tortious interference has to be one of the dumbest concepts I have ever heard someone try to justify on /. (and there is plenty of competition). Contracts should bind those that agree to the contracts, not third parties. If you break a contract then that is your responsibility, and yours alone.
      This is a terrible day for anyone who thinks that being a "journalist" should give you a free ride to break any contract or trade secret laws you want in the name of "freedom".
      Yeah, thank God someone is finally protecting those poor multinational corporations from those evil non-professional journalists.
    17. Re:Yeah, its great by Angafirith · · Score: 1

      The difference here is that the information Apple wants to keep secret is not dangerous at all. It's just product information. No one will get lung cancer from this.

      --
      "It is better to risk sparing a guilty person than to condemn an innocent one." - Voltaire
    18. Re:Yeah, its great by BasilBrush · · Score: 0, Troll
      I will leave it up to the readers and moderators to determine whose is the dumber comment.

      That's easy. It's yours.

    19. Re:Yeah, its great by ratsnapple+tea · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If you think it should only require that broad and self-referential notion of "public interest" to relieve journalists of having to reveal their sources when it's obvious they were privy to a crime, then it's hard to imagine any circumstances under which you'd think they should be forced to name their sources. Surely you don't believe there exist no such circumstances?

    20. Re:Yeah, its great by daveschroeder · · Score: 2, Informative

      If someone tells you something that they shouldn't have told you (because they would be violating their NDA), but fails to tell you that they are violating their NDA, does that make you a criminal for reporting it?

      Possibly.

      "[...] the Uniform Trade Secrets Act, versions of which have been adopted by about 45 states, including California, prevents third parties from exposing information knowingly obtained from sources bound by confidentiality agreements.

      Just because you don't have a relationship with the company doesn't necessarily immunize you, if you publish what you reasonably should have known was a trade secret," said [Andrew Beckerman-Rodau, who runs the intellectual property program at Boston's Suffolk University Law School]. "The First Amendment has been asserted more and more against intellectual property rights, but it's not faring well. Most courts haven't accepted it." (source)

      They broke a law? Which one? Any evidence?

      The judge didn't rule on any of that today. But assuming they did get their information from someone under a confidentiality agreement at Apple or a contractor, which, while circumstantial, seems overwhelmingly clear, then yes, they may have broken a law. The judge today said that REGARDLESS of whether any law has been broken - which is yet to be decided - the information at issue in this case does NOT constitute information in a clear public interest, and therefore, the web sites/journalists in question are NOT protected by journalist shield laws.

    21. Re:Yeah, its great by jkabbe · · Score: 1

      Contracts should bind those that agree to the contracts, not third parties

      Why? Contracts are a man-made construct. We can make them apply to whomever we want. I believe tortious interference only applies when the third-party is aware of the contract. As such, it will never surprise anyone.

      There are good arguments for getting rid of tortious interference. The primary one would have to be that it discourages efficient breach. But given your other comments I bet your opinion is based more on some sort of conservative "personal responsibility" voodoo.

    22. Re:Yeah, its great by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Although that comment was even dumber.

    23. Re:Yeah, its great by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      Doesn't matter. It's like receiving stolen goods (actually, the case law seems to work similarly in both circumstances) - if you had reason to believe the goods were stolen, *even if* you had nothing to do with the theft, it's a crime. Similarly, if you had reason to believe the information was received in breach of contract, you are committing the crime of "receiving stolen information".

      The contract is not binding on the journalist; the law is.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    24. Re:Yeah, its great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yours is definitely the dumber.

    25. Re:Yeah, its great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Breach of contract isn't a crime.

    26. Re:Yeah, its great by dr.badass · · Score: 1

      Do you understand that the person who signs a contract is the one who should be constrained by it, and punished should they break it, and a contract should not be binding upon anyone that hasn't actually agreed to it?

      You're confusing contracts with the law. A contract is an agreement that goes above and beyond what the law specifies.

      The source of the information violated his or her contract. These sites violated the law.

      I never signed a contract saying I wouldn't kill people, but that doesn't make it legal for me to do so.

      If so, then its a dumb law that could easily be used to suppress legitimate journalism (and has been in the past).

      There are plenty of legal protections and exceptions for "whistleblowers" -- you may not agree that they go far enough, but this case is absolutely not one that applies. Exposing a company's internal product planning information is not the same as exposing fraudulent accounting practices, or the dumping of toxic waste, or any other illegal activity.

      --
      Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
    27. Re:Yeah, its great by dr.badass · · Score: 1

      What property right justifies the application of restrictions imposed by an agreement on someone that never signed that agreement?

      The right to possess trade secrets. The Uniform Trade Secets Act, which factors heavily into this case, is just an extention of the common law right to hold trade secrets.

      Now, the definition of "trade secret" varies quite a bit, but I can't imagine any jurisdiction where secret internal information regarding unannounced products can not be considered a trade secret.

      --
      Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
    28. Re:Yeah, its great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you feel that way, give me the name of your mom, dad and signficant other so I can publish something nasty on the internet about them. If I publish it on the internet, I must be protected by "first amendment rights," correct?

    29. Re:Yeah, its great by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1
      They broke a law? Which one? Any evidence?

      AFAIK, Think Secret haven't broken any laws, or atleast, they are not being charged with anything. All that has happened is that they must give their sources.

      If someone tells you something that they shouldn't have told you (because they would be violating their NDA), but fails to tell you that they are violating their NDA, does that make you a criminal for reporting it?

      Not sure, but it hardly matters, because once you had be informed that they may have been violating their NDA, then, although you might not have commited a crime, you must cooperate with the investigation. And in this case, that means disclosing his sources.

      Look at it this way. If you had bought something from someone, and had then been told by someone that they were stolen goods, you would then be breaking the law if you refused to tell the police who you bought it from, but not for actually buying the goods.

      IANAL

    30. Re:Yeah, its great by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 2, Funny

      By that reasoning, reporters should have blanket immunity against speeding tickets. Because you never know. They could be speeding in pursuit of a story!

      You're not doing very well tonight with your commenting. Maybe it would be a good idea for you to take a little time off, maybe go have some pie.

      You'll get your groove back, I'm sure of it.

    31. Re:Yeah, its great by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      AFAIK, Think Secret haven't broken any laws, or atleast, they are not being charged with anything.

      No, not correct. Apple alleges that Think Secret is guilty of three things: 1. tortious interference, 2. misappropriation of trade secrets, 3. unlawful disclosure of trade secrets.

      Basically, the law says that you can't induce somebody to break a contract, you can't offer somebody something in exchange for trade secrets, and you can't publish something that you know is a trade secret. Think Secret did all three of these things.

      These facts aren't really in dispute. They're kind of all in black and white. Think Secret's lawyer is arguing that the writer who did that stuff should be excused because he's a reporter. Apple's lawyers are obviously saying that he should not be excused, and that he's liable for damages.

    32. Re:Yeah, its great by idsofmarch · · Score: 1

      Comparing the release of Apple's trade information is very different from the situation dramatized in the "Insider" the public interest is different from public interest. A journalist must be willing to go to court to protect their sources and yes they must be able to prove that their revealing of information must have served the public interest. Think of it this way, I can go and sign an NDA, immediately break it by speaking to a journalist and not expect any kind of consequences for breaking that NDA. This, you must admit, is very problematic.

      --
      Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
    33. Re:Yeah, its great by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I meant that the judge hasn't charged him with anything. But yes, you are right. I don't think there is much chance of Think Secret winning this case. And I have to say, he did have it comming. I don't think he needs to be made to pay for damages though.

    34. Re:Yeah, its great by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      You don't understand the case or the ruling. Read this article (which I have already pimped elsewhere).

      I detect that McGarry sense of humor on the third comment to that article. Am I right?

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    35. Re:Yeah, its great by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Geez, you and Leo are a tag team or something? I just woke up my dog and cats with my laughing.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    36. Re:Yeah, its great by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      What needs to be made clear is the distinction between unlawful and illegal, which you seem to be hinting at.

      Breaking a contract could be considered unlawful, but it doesn't necessarily follow that it is illegal and thus a crime. Also, something might be both unlawful and illegal. In some cases where an action is both, the state (or the people, as they say) might choose not to prosecute for whatever reason, but that still leaves it open for the injured party to seek redress.

      A simple example of this is if someone ran a red light and smashed into you while you were driving your car. The other party might be guilty of numerous infractions (or worse than infractions), but for whatever reason they aren't issued a citation, arrested, or prosecuted. You can still sue them for your personal injury and for damages to your car in a civil court.

      That's just an example. It's not an analogy of the current case.

      Oh, and one more thing, just for your legal education. A judge doesn't bring criminal charges. A prosecutor of some sort does that (a District Attorney, a City Prosecutor, etc.). I don't think you're watching enough TV, or you'd know this. =)

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    37. Re:Yeah, its great by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I'm not so sure that the facts are not in dispute in the legal sense, nor that this is the only defense that Nick's attorney's will offer up. It's an attempt to dismiss the case before it gets to that point (not to mention trying to win the case in the court of public opinion).

      At some point, Nick's defense will have to file a document that lists all his avenues of defense. I can't remember off hand what this is called, but it's something like a lists of affirmative defenses, and once the defenses have been made (i.e., listed in the document) Nick's attorneys are pretty much limited to those defenses (though they need not use them all). For this reason, a good D attorney will list all the possible defenses he can think off, just in case.

      If the facts are not in dispute, it won't go to a jury trial, but each side will have an opportunity to persuade the judge on how the facts should be interpreted. They will also try to "guide" the judge as to which laws apply, which precedents apply, and how they should apply.

      But you do understand Apple's claim and you do have a grasp of the governing law on trade secrets, probably better than my own understanding.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    38. Re:Yeah, its great by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I think you just completed a hat trick! I'll keep reading to see if you manage a quadruple dumb.

      Tortious interference has to be one of the dumbest concepts I have ever heard someone try to justify on /. (and there is plenty of competition).

      See the thing is that it's not just a concept, it's the law. It's not a concept that anyone here need justify. It's something you should take care not to do, if you don't want to get sued.

      Yeah, thank God someone is finally protecting those poor multinational corporations from those evil non-professional journalists.

      The laws would apply just the same if the trade secrets belonged to a single person, and it was a large corporation or an individual that broke an NDA and leaked the information to Nick. It's not likely that Nick would be able to induce a large corporation to break an NDA, though. Who knows, maybe he's really persuasive.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    39. Re:Yeah, its great by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      (blush)

    40. Re:Yeah, its great by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      I'm not so sure that the facts are not in dispute in the legal sense

      I never said nor implied that. I said that the facts aren't really in dispute. The bloggers got caught with their hands in the cookie jar.

      I don't expect this case to ever go to trial. The bloggers will settle, because they don't have a leg to stand on here.

    41. Re:Yeah, its great by m50d · · Score: 1

      Well, I do. If I've committed a crime, I should be able to tell journalists about it in confidence. I think a society in which a right like that exists is better than one where it doesn't. And the right has to be absolute, because otherwise you get a chilling effect that is as good as no right at all. If there is a very strong burden of proof on journalists to show there is a public interest, do I feel comfortable telling one about political corruption?

      --
      I am trolling
  25. Apple's Profit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What if Apple profited from the sale of one of their machines to someone who read that illegal information? along the lines of profiting from the proceeds of crime or something. blah. i'm going to bed

    1. Re:Apple's Profit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And Apple wouldn't have made a sale if the person waited for Apple's official announcement?

  26. Did you get the memo? by swb · · Score: 1

    You know, the one where "corporate business" *is* the new national security?

  27. Re:Don't judge by madpuppy · · Score: 0, Troll

    You better watch yourself, The Apple apologist are gonna' throw burning hot caramel apples at you!

    they are sticky, gooey and crunchy at the same time.

    the apples, not the apologists...

  28. Good! by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The employees stole and disclosed company trade secrets. The broke the law and are criminals, they should be treated as criminals.

    The people that published this material are accessories to a crime and should also be treated as criminals.

    This isn't about free speech, this is about a crime.

    1. Re:Good! by Anita+Coney · · Score: 0

      So profits are more important that free speech?

      Nevermind, I forgot for a second that I live in America!

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    2. Re:Good! by Derling+Whirvish · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The people that published this material are accessories to a crime and should also be treated as criminals.

      Like those here on Slashdot who published copies of DeCSS in violation of the DMCA?

    3. Re:Good! by Luthair · · Score: 1

      Its civil, not criminal. NDAs are an agreement between two entities, in this case Apple and its employees. The blogger is a 3rd party who hasn't signed an NDA with Apple.

      The only real way I can see the blogger responsible is if they entice someone to break the NDA. (ie, $$$) They aren't breaking a contract, an employee is.

      Whether Apple should be able to force someone to reveal where they got the information is pretty grey.

    4. Re:Good! by Dirtside · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The employees stole and disclosed company trade secrets. The broke the law and are criminals, they should be treated as criminals.

      The people that published this material are accessories to a crime and should also be treated as criminals.

      Not quite. The problem is that before the identities of the sources are revealed, there's no way to know whether those sources broke the law in acquiring the information. "But the only way the information could have gotten out is if someone at Apple deliberately leaked it!" is your obvious response, but it's not true. Information can leak from a company due to incompetence as well as malice, and if it does, you're SOL as far as trade secrets are concerned.

      So in other words, let's say that the judge forces the bloggers to reveal their sources... and the sources turn out not to be Apple employees, and committed no crime in acquiring the information. Whoops! If there were any evidence that a crime had been committed, then the judge would be (both legally and morally) justified in forcing the reveal. But since no crime has been reported, he can't rightfully force the reveal.

      The judge made a bad call.

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    5. Re:Good! by (H)elix1 · · Score: 1

      The employees stole and disclosed company trade secrets. The broke the law and are criminals, they should be treated as criminals.

      The people that published this material are accessories to a crime and should also be treated as criminals.


      Violating a NDA is breach of contract, which opens you up for civil suites but not criminal. If this is a breach of contract, I don't think they are an accessory to a crime. Not to say some clever legal maneuvering (like forcing them to reveal their sources or face contempt charges, or just suing them) won't make the bloggers suffer.

      (keeping in mind IANAL, but that probably makes us even)

    6. Re:Good! by Sanity · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Like those here on Slashdot who published copies of DeCSS in violation of the DMCA?
      No, you don't understand. You see, Apple can do no wrong, and thus we must agree with this decision. DeCSS is a completely different issue because Apple isn't involved in that.
    7. Re:Good! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I posed your home phone number in this comment, that would be free speech under your definition.

    8. Re:Good! by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Free speech is between the people and the government, all over the World there are cases where an individual takes someone to court and is able to make them stop saying or printing something, or win damages.

      People do it, companies do it. Don't confuse that with a governmental issue, blaming America is just flamebait reactionary.

    9. Re:Good! by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

      "The Economic Espionage Act of 1996 makes it a federal crime to obtain trade secrets--that is, any data of economic value which a company takes "reasonable measures" to protect--via theft or fraud."

      http://www.usdoj.gov/criminal/cybercrime/eea.html

    10. Re:Good! by dwightk · · Score: 1

      wait, how would "malice" be non-"deliberate..."

      --
      Like anyone can even know that
    11. Re:Good! by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't. However I said nothing of the sort, so what are you talking about?

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    12. Re:Good! by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      The problem is that before the identities of the sources are revealed, there's no way to know whether those sources broke the law in acquiring the information.

      That's not correct, in two ways.

      First, Apple claims that the only reasonable explanation for how the particular information that ended up on the Web got there is that some employee broke confidentiality. That's point 1.

      Point 2 is that Apple claims that the bloggers in question actively solicited Apple employees to break confidentiality, which is against the law in California.

      Point #2 really isn't in dispute. It's basically open-and-shut. The bloggers promised X in return for secrets, and they got secrets. So the bloggers definitely, no question, broke the law.

      Information can leak from a company due to incompetence as well as malice, and if it does, you're SOL as far as trade secrets are concerned.

      But that would have to be an affirmative defense. In order for the defense to claim that, they would have to provide details explaining how the information got out ... which is exactly what Apple wants.

      let's say that the judge forces the bloggers to reveal their sources... and the sources turn out not to be Apple employees, and committed no crime in acquiring the information

      Hang on there. The bloggers already committed a crime. They broke the Uniform Trade Secrets Act. That means they're not eligible for coverage under the shield law, which means the judge has no legal justification for not granting the subpoena.

      Remember, when there's a civil (and possibly even criminal) investigation in progress, there has to be a compelling reason not to issue a subpoena. This is the opposite of a warrant; you have to have a compelling reason to issue a warrant, but you have to have a compelling reason not to issue a subpoena.

      The judge made a bad call.

      Nope. The judge did exactly the right thing, both legally and in terms of common sense.

    13. Re:Good! by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you should read the trade secret law before you tell us the way you see it.

    14. Re:Good! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, now explain where the theft or fraud occured.

    15. Re:Good! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a pretty poor analogy. The DMCA is mostly harmful, as laws go. But most other laws, including those enacted to protect trade secrets, are helpful to the functioning of society at large. It isn't hypocritical to rail against harmful laws while simultaneously cheering the enforcement of good ones.

    16. Re:Good! by mstone · · Score: 1

      If the people who gave the information to ThinkSecret didn't break any NDA, then Apple would have no case against them.

      BUT, the judge can't decide whether the people in question broke an NDA until it knows who they are, now can he?

      This decision deals with a subpoena.. a document the courts use to gather information the judge needs in order to make a good decision. It doesn't say that a crime was committed, that ThinkSecret broke some kind of law, that ThinkSecret owes Apple some kind of damages, or anything of the kind. It just says ThinkSecret has information the judge needs.

      We can recast this whole thing in terms of the judge wanting to give ThinkSecret as much benefit of the doubt as he can. Let's imagine he wants to say, "ThinkSecret didn't do anything wrong".. he can't just wave his hands and do that, though. He has to cite some kind of evidence.

      As it stands, the only resonable way the judge can get that information is to ask ThinkSecret for the name of the source.

      Bottom line, the judge can't declare ThinkSecret not guilty until he gets the information about the source.

    17. Re:Good! by dwightk · · Score: 1

      I'm embarrassed... I just read it wrong :-)

      --
      Like anyone can even know that
    18. Re:Good! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neither point is applicable. If they were, the judge would have ruled on the points. He didn't. Furthermore, I don't think you understand the legal definition of solicitation.

      And, if you are going to keep arguing, please stop conflating issues from two separate cases.

    19. Re:Good! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, you last sentence is telling. Think Secret has an affirmative defense against revealing the source (although Think Secret has already declared it did no original reporting on the points in this case, so this is all hypothetical) -- that any alleged source may not be subject to NDA (or have acquired its information from non-NDA source(s)). In that case, there is no compelling reason to force the revelation. And once having done it the press is irrevocably harmed by having been forced to reveal a source which the state had no compelling reason to reveal (in other words, the source had a legitimate expectation of privacy). To sum up, the reason needs to come first, not after. The conviction needs to come before the individual is claimed guilty. The oath or affirmation by the state agent needs to precede the search. We have a Bill of Rights to protect against bad decisions such as the one by this judge.

    20. Re:Good! by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

      I'm an American. I reserve the right to flame my country for any reason. I consider someone un-American who refuses to criticize even our most obvious faults.

      A love of one's country isn't based on blind faith. And when profits comes before speech, I see our country turning in the wrong direction. If you feel the heat from my words as being a flame. That's your problem, not mine.

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    21. Re:Good! by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Profits have ALWAYS come before speech and personal freedoms, here, there, anywhere. Hell the maps during the Age of Exploration were written in code to keep someone else from reading them.

      Now, Apple or Microsoft or IBM or Ford have as much right to protect thier company secrets as I have at keeping Joe Hacker out of my personal documents at home on my computer.

      And yea, everyone has the right to sound like a jackass.

    22. Re:Good! by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

      Even if an employee ACCIDENTALLY leaked info, they are still liable.

      If I accidentally kill you by driving over you, can I saw 'Oops' and go home?

    23. Re:Good! by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      I like your use of the word 'stole'. Such a wonderfully versatile word.

      It's possible someone violated their NDA. But, the blogging site certainly didn't violate an NDA. They didn't sign anything.

      Information doesn't work like material goods, and your analogies (like the word 'steal') don't work. The police are allowed to use information that was gathered using means that wouldn't be legal for them to use. And similarly bloggers are allowed to publish stuff that may not have been legal for their source to reveal.

      There's a reason journalists cannot forced to reveal sources, and that reason applies here. Really, we would have no real journalism if journalists had to reveal sources. We have little enough of it in this country already. I'd prefer not to add to the problem.

    24. Re:Good! by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      If they were, the judge would have ruled on the points.

      Um. The judge wasn't hearing the case. It was an evidentiary hearing to determine if subpoenas could be lawfully issued as part of the discovery process in advance of the trial. The judge doesn't rule on the merits of a case at an evidentiary hearing.

      Furthermore, I don't think you understand the legal definition of solicitation.

      The technical legal term that applies here is "inducement," not solicitation. I said solicitation because I was trying to avoid jargon.

      And, if you are going to keep arguing, please stop conflating issues from two separate cases.

      There are three cases, and they share many issues in common.

    25. Re:Good! by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      What do NDAs have to do with the DMCA; a very controversial piece of law. Are you saying that NDAs are as bad as the DMCA, that they have major abuse potential, that all NDAs should be abolished?

    26. Re:Good! by Okita · · Score: 1

      You can't seriously believe that. I think there definitely is a pro-Apple bias around here, but this really isn't an example of that. If we can all agree that both this incident and publishing DeCSS were ILLEGAL, that's fine, we're on the same page. Whether or not one was wrong and the other wasn't is largely a matter of perspective.

    27. Re:Good! by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      That's crap. Judges issue subpoenas for evidence to figure out whether or not a crime has been committed. That's like saying it's illegally to investigate someone who is not guilty. How would you ever find out whether or not a crime has been committed? I think this is just a case of you don't know what you're talking about.

    28. Re:Good! by Quattro+Vezina · · Score: 1

      Trade Secret laws are Immoral, unconstitutional violations of free speech. The employees did the right thing and broke an Immoral law.

      They are heroes.

      --
      I support the Center for Consumer Freedom
    29. Re:Good! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, journalists CAN be forced to reveal their sources...

    30. Re:Good! by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      That's interesting. I wasn't aware of that. Under what circumstances?

  29. The Rule of Law by Viking+Coder · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Saying that no one has the right to publish information that could have been provided only by someone breaking the law

    It's about time Robert Novak was thrown in jail for outing Valerie Plame!

    Oh - we're just talking about Apple insiders? Who gives a fuck?

    --
    Education is the silver bullet.
    1. Re:The Rule of Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know you're being cute and progressive and all, but Robert Novak broke no laws. The rules about outing CIA agents has a specific exemption for journalists.

      Not to mention the fact that Novak called the CIA and they confirmed she worked for them. Not exactly common for someone working undercover.

    2. Re:The Rule of Law by Barto · · Score: 1

      Saying that no one has the right to publish information that could have been provided only by someone breaking the law

      Unless it is in the public interest. Novak's outing of a CIA agent has a far greater arguement for being in the public interest than revealing the CPU speeds of the next iMac (or whatever).

    3. Re:The Rule of Law by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      Saying that no one has the right to publish information that could have been provided only by someone breaking the law

      Re-read the words "someone breaking the law."

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
    4. Re:The Rule of Law by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      How on earth was it in the public's interest to out a CIA agent?

      Use small words, because apparently I'm a moron.

      If you want to say that outing Plame was merely the means to some greater end (an end which justifies those means), then say that - because what you've said makes no sense.

      I personally see the ends as being political retribution - not something that I value.

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
    5. Re:The Rule of Law by CosmicV · · Score: 1

      Plame.... yawn..

      Soon as I hear the Plame name, you can count on some frothing crazed biased liberal to jump out of the woodwork.

      Conversely, when the name Clinton is uttered, its generally by some rabid frothing right wing bias conservative.

      Cognitive filters on high -- all future words coming out of the mouth of these people are biased and are not to be taken seriously. Next post please.

    6. Re:The Rule of Law by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      Wow. Funny. Liberals normally get attacked for being weak on national defense.

      Some conservative asshole with an axe to grind outs a CIA agent, and now I'm a "frothing crazed biased liberal."

      What topics do you take seriously? Apple insiders?

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
  30. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  31. Zeig Heil apple! by the_Bionic_lemming · · Score: 0, Troll

    I don't understand how apple is harmed by, let's say, the reveiling of a sub 500.00 low powered apple?

    These "secrets" that apple is suing online bloggers for are really nothing worth being "secret" about.

    Cripes, Apple, Lighten up - Get in the mainstream by being more open and receptive to the online community instead of turning to litigation over the equivalent of a mountain from a molehill.

    --
    _ _ _ Go for the eyes Boo! GO FOR THE EYES!
    1. Re:Zeig Heil apple! by m_dob · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm being stupid, but if a competitor (e.g. Dell) was planning to launch a mini computer like apple's, they could bring the launch forward to steal Apple's thunder (and thus press, publicity).

      The same goes for something like the Shuffle. If Sony had released their new player before the reception to shuffle would have been a lot cooler.

    2. Re:Zeig Heil apple! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe you mean, "Sieg, Heil."

    3. Re:Zeig Heil apple! by michaeldot · · Score: 1

      If you watched the last keynote (which not many non-fanboy Slashdotters would have, given the predominantly Windows/Linux skills set here), you could also seen another impact: Jobs was visibly dejected by the "previews." He had no surprises to spring, just filling in the details. ALL the info on the new products had already been revealed - names, specs, even prices. The cheap Mac was already being assessed before it was even announced. For a company as desperate as Apple to get some attention for its pitiful 1.8% marketshare, I can imagine these leaks caused some disheartening sentiment.

    4. Re:Zeig Heil apple! by servognome · · Score: 1

      I don't understand how apple is harmed by, let's say, the reveiling of a sub 500.00 low powered apple?
      Leaked information can cause false expectations. There are many products that companies look at that have very little chance of actually coming to market. Unnofficial announcements create the expectation of the product. If Apple doesn't deliver, even if internally they knew it only had a 25% chance to come to market, they are penalized in public opinion and sometimes stock price
      Information that turns out to not be 100% true can harm initial product sales also. Look at the new iPod mini, they were reported to be coming with a color screen. The color screen seemed so impressive that it overshadowed most everything else. When Apple did announce many people's first reaction was, "oh no color screen." The disappointment of not having a color screen overshadowed the great advance of battery life and incremental hard drive improvement. Sales have been lost because people are holding out for the color screen.

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    5. Re:Zeig Heil apple! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me propose a couple more scenarios of how this could have hurt Apple.

      1)
      Suppose they wanted to sell for $550 with 512 MB installed... but now because of the hype they had to make it less than $500. At the last moment they were forced to change the configuration to 256 MB to this outside imposed price target.

      2)
      Suppose they wanted to give the hard working engineers some extra stock options for their huge efforts. Just as they were about to set the stock price, the news was leaked and the stock went up making the options less valuable.

    6. Re:Zeig Heil apple! by eclectro · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't understand how apple is harmed by, let's say, the reveiling of a sub 500.00 low powered apple?

      I think there is more to it than that. I honestly don't think that in this instance any thunder was stolen and any harm was done.

      What I think Apple is trying to do is weed out their "mole" before next time when it may really matter. if a secret is let loose far enough in advance it could give competitors a chance to piece together a competing product for release at the same time. This could have serious implications for a company.

      Besides that, by taking care of the insider now, it puts all of the other company employees/contractors on notice that they need to decide where their loyalties are while working for Apple.

      Apple certainly thinks that taking all this negative publicity now is an investment that will pay off in the future. Probably akin to lancing a boil.

      It certainly could be risky for Apple though, as they do employ people arguably from a 'free thinking' part of the country, and the next mac rumor might show up in a plain brown envelope that is completely untraceable, just to 'prove' Apple wrong on this lawsuit.

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    7. Re:Zeig Heil apple! by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
      Seriously, what the fuck is wrong with you?

      Zeig heil was the salute Nazis used, you know Nazis the genocidal monsters who tore through Europe and slaughtered millions. Comparing Apple to the Nazis is truly and hopelessly wrong and you should be ashamed.

      And you, like many others have entirely missed the point: Apple isn't pissed because of the release of the Mac Mini, they're pissed because of the release of information regarding Asteroid a product that is forthcoming, but not yet.

      Jackass.

      --
      Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
    8. Re:Zeig Heil apple! by Spy+Handler · · Score: 1
      Although you have a point, I'm afraid you automatically lose the argument because you brought up Nazis. And then some (genocidal monsters etc.)

      Sieg Heil = Yay, Victory

    9. Re:Zeig Heil apple! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand how apple is harmed by, let's say, the reveiling of a sub 500.00 low powered apple?

      I think there is more to it than that.


      There is more to it than that. I am amazed at how many people constantly belittle the impact of what's being leaked. Apple did not sue because of rumors of a sub 500 Mac. Apple did not sue because of the rumors of a color screened iPod mini. Apple sued over sources leaking info on Apple's next projects down to their little details. In the rumors of a product code named Asteroid, the information actually was copied verbatim. This may give competitors a leg up in their own product or give them an idea of what product they should be interested in designing.

      iPod was a success partly because it was a surprise and no other competitors can respond in a timely manner, allowing Apple to establish itself in the hard-drive-based digital-player market.

  32. Giambi by brjndr · · Score: 1

    Jason Giambi's grand jury testimony was leaked to the SF Chronicle. That's how we all new he admitted to using steroids. Those transcripts are sealed, but someone broke the law and released them. Shouldn't that person be found and punished too?

    1. Re:Giambi by sfgoth · · Score: 1

      Yes, they should. And all laws should be enforced equally, and we should end world hunger. What's your point?

  33. Leaking a press release early is not Espionage. by guidryp · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Espionage is when Huawei steals Cisco source and uses it in its own routers.

    Leaking a press release early is just more press. It is a farce and I would boycott apple if I was actually in the habit of buying their products in the first place.

    1. Re:Leaking a press release early is not Espionage. by Vile+Slime · · Score: 0

      No,

      It is not a "early" press release.

      It is theft of Apple's property.

      Someone at Apple signed a binding agreement to hold everything they know secret.

      Those people chose to ignore their binding agreement.

      Now those same people are going to be in a world of hurt because what they did is illegal.

      Legally, you must either keep you mouth shut or suffer the consequences.

      My guess is that there is someone in the Silicon Valley right now crapping his pants waiting for the hammer to fall.

      --
      ---- Go ahead, mod me down, I'll just post it again and you lose your mod points.
    2. Re:Leaking a press release early is not Espionage. by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

      Not if a competitor used this info.

      AKA, Huawei leaks his info to rumor sites and then uses those sites as sources.

  34. Yes, he's already held in contempt of court. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, it does. Robert Novak is being held in contempt of court for not revealing his sources, and very well might go to jail for it.

    story here

    It's funny/sad how many people have the mistaken belief that "journalists", however one wants to define them, have some sort of legal immunity.

    1. Re:Yes, he's already held in contempt of court. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Yes, it does. Robert Novak is being held in contempt of court for not revealing his sources, and very well might go to jail for it.

      story here
      RYOFL (Read Your Own Fucking Link), Mr. AC. Robert Novak is conspicuously not being asked to name his sources, much less being held in contempt for refusing to do so. But two other reporters are.
    2. Re:Yes, he's already held in contempt of court. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually it appears that Robert Novak has already revealed his sources. That's why he isn't being threatened with contempt.

  35. you forgot to mention something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    :I work for the University's Division of Information Technology (DoIT) in the Platforms and Operating Systems group as the senior Apple systems engineer, supporting Apple products primarily in research and enterprise environments at the University, and running the University's Apple Support web server. In 2001, I was honored to be selected as an Apple Distinguished Educator. I'm an occasional student here at UW as well.:

    You forgot to mention your ties to Apple which may cloud your judgement.

  36. My Best Interest by buckhead_buddy · · Score: 2, Funny

    My two "Mac the Knife" coffee mugs from the rumor column in MacWeek will probably rake in more on eBay after this ruling.

    Gosh, I feel so sorry that the rumor mongers secrets will be revealed when they didn't want them to be, but it's all in my best interest of making money!

    Hmm, where have I heard that argument before. :-)

  37. Not a common law legal system. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's a myth. US law is not based on "common law". It is based on the U.S. Constitution.

    U.S. Constitution protects freedom of speech for all citizens.

    I'm mean C'mon, Dan Rather doesn't have to reveal sources, why should bloggers?

    1. Re:Not a common law legal system. by sl3xd · · Score: 1

      Try cracking a book.

      The concept of a leagal precedent is both wholly supported by the US Constitution (or at least by the Supreme Court, whom has the final say anyway), and is ... suprise, suprise... based on 'common law.'

      --
      -- Sometimes you have to turn the lights off in order to see.
    2. Re:Not a common law legal system. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      What do you mean the Supreme Court has the final say?

      The Supreme Court has no means (budget, manpower) to enforce its decisions.

      Read up on "executive nonacquiescence," for starters.

      Then, contemplate the words:

      We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. --That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.


      While the history of the United States is so often steeped in ruthlessness and blood and capitalism, let's not forget that the experiment was built on the idea that the legitimacy of government -- indeed, the legitimacy of any authority -- flows from the governed and none else.
  38. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by daveschroeder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Your entire post is irrelevant to the topic at hand, but I'll pick just this piece:

    You're wrong in a million ways, but the most important one is this. This particular expression of speech does not in any way present a clear and present danger to life and limb and consequently, it not only "ought" to be protected, it is protected according to the Supreme Court of the United States of America. Threatening someone's profit margin is not the same thing as threatening their safety.

    The speech IS protected. No one is going to throw the proprietors of Think Secret, PowerPage, or AppleInsider in jail over their speech.

    What is NOT protected are their sources, who are breaking currently in force, legally binding confidentiality agreements to reveal the information, and the fact that the web sites, by publishing said information, are also in violation of the Uniform Trade Secrets Act, versions of which have been adopted by 45 states including California.

    This is not about speech. This is not about the right to blog. And if you think it's about the employees' right to "speak" about topics covered under confidentiality agreement, apparently someone forgot to tell them, and you, that they don't have to work there if they have that little respect for good-faith agreements with their own employer.

  39. judge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No. I think I'm sticky, gooey, and crunchy too.

  40. A refreshing victory for corporate synchophants. by delmoi · · Score: 0

    Yay!

    Look, the judge may have a point but celebrating the victory of a corporation over an individual just seems fucked up to me.

    But he also might not have a point. The 'free speech' issue isn't' about wether or not you can go blabbing your companies trade secrets, it's about wether or not someone else, someone who has not signed an NDA or anything else should be able to re-spout them. These people, who are not under contract should be able (I think) to say whatever they want without repercussion even if someone would be harmed by the common knowledge.

    It's all a question of what kind of harm is being done. If someone says "Kill her." they can be charged with conspiracy to commit murder, if someone makes a bomb threat or slanders someone those are lies. But it seems to me that simply telling the truth ought to be protected under the constitution, if you don't sign an NDA.

    Yet, here these people are being forced to A) name their source, or B) Go to jail (or something). They're being punished for telling the truth about something, despite the fact that they signed no NDA and were not under any contract.

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  41. Interesting how the press has dropped the story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now that they're also in trouble over it.

    1. Re:Interesting how the press has dropped the story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now that they're also in trouble over it.

      It'll be more interesting to see how they handle future press about Apple. Unless my site was strictly Mac-oriented, I'd be leery about publishing anything about their products.

      It's hard to generate buzz when all the bees have fled.

  42. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    corporate secrecy is actually damaging both financially and in the individual lives of its verious employees.
    Hear that Microsoft? Release your source code. It is damaging to your company to keep it secret.

  43. It's really amazing by TCaM · · Score: 1

    how many people fail to realize this. If they fail to enforce their NDA agreements I would thing it would set a bad precedent for them in the future when the leak might be something really damaging. It reminds me a lot of the enforce it or lose it aspect with trademarks and such.

  44. Here in Brazil... by dark-br · · Score: 1, Troll

    there are laws that provide journalists with their *right* to play their role in our society,that is, to bring on the truth.

    How there could be a free press with they are obligated to reveal their sources? Who in his right mind would step up to speak against anything if you are going to be prosecuted (or silenced in any other way)?

    Thats plain wrong!

    1. Re:Here in Brazil... by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

      But the people who Apple was taking legal actions against are not journalists. They were people with blogs. That's not the same thing.

      Because they're not journalists, they have to reveal their sources.

      The problem is the reporting of THIS story is making it sound like these bloggers are the same as reporters for an actual news organization.

      --
      Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
    2. Re:Here in Brazil... by moof1138 · · Score: 1

      In the U.S. journalists typically do have their sources protected, which is why don't now who "deep throat," who leaked that Valerie Plame was an agent, and so on.

      This case has the special twist because the "journalists" in this case are essentially businessmen who are profiting from disseminating information that can only be gained by encouraging others to break the law. An extreme but somewhat fitting analogy would be to compare the case to people who create a 'snuff' film and then try to avoid naming the murderer in the film by claiming that they are journalists.

      --

      Hyperbole is the worst thing ever.
    3. Re:Here in Brazil... by slothman32 · · Score: 1

      So who detertmines what a journalist is? Is it someone who presents facts? Someone who has millions of people watching or paying? Some who is at the actual scene of the crime/whatever? What about a parent who has a website to report info about their children? They seem to be, oddly enough, reporters, to me at least.
      Why should only them get to keep info they have secret anyways? And why should I have to tell? If the "right to see your accuser" is applied to "non-journalists" then why not journalists as well?
      Why does a blog not count as a press system? Is it because it is "op-ed?" What about things like "Ask Abby" which are also opinion from but from the askee.

      --
      Why don't you guys have friends or journals?
    4. Re:Here in Brazil... by LMariachi · · Score: 1

      RTFA. The blogger/journalist distinction has nothing to do with the decision, which would have been the same either way. What was at issue was whether journalistic protections apply when the reporting is not serving the public interest.

    5. Re:Here in Brazil... by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1
      RTFA

      It has even been quoted in one of the first few comments.

      This isn't a case of whistle-blowing--where Apple has done something that the public should know about. I suspect you'd get the same results in Brazil.

      Besides, AFAIK, he isn't being procecuted or silenced. He's been asked to reveal his sources, because there is good reason to believe they are breaking the law by revealing the info to him.

  45. Fuck Giambi - throw all NY Yankees in Gitmo! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Including Steinbrenner!

    Sox RULE!!!

  46. Constitution vs. Judge by ispel · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Constitution: Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; ...

    vs.

    Judge: Kleinberg ... ruled that no one has the right to publish trade secrets that only could have been provided by someone breaking the law.

    How can a law that overrides the freedom of speech be constitutional? If a whistle blower discloses embarrassing/incriminating "trade secrets" will the press / people be denied their constitutional freedom of speech to disclose the information?

    1. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Congress made no law abridging free speech.

      2) The judicial branch intruprets the consititution, and found this to be outside the intent.

      3) Breaking the law is not something that should be protected, especially not for personal gain.

    2. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by aiken_d · · Score: 4, Insightful

      By your argument it should be legal to yell the proverbial "fire" in a crowded theater, or to lie to potential investors about a company's finances.

      Heck, by your argument trade secret law is unconstitutional, and "top secret" information should be legally publishable willy-nilly.

      You've confused two issues here. First, freedom of speech has never covered the publication of stolen (or secret) documents; it is the freedom to say what you think and to communicate freely. That does not mean you're free to consipire to kill people; it means that you can express unpopular opinions (or at least it used to; today that's not so clear).

      Second, you're touching on public interest, ala Watergate. The judge also wrote a cogent bit about that and how there's a difference between public interest in corruption in govenment and, as he put it, an "interested public" that's just hungry for details about whether the next iCrap will be pink or purple.

      Cheers
      -b

      --
      If I wanted a sig I would have filled in that stupid box.
    3. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple: the freedom of speech doesn't doesn't give you a free pass to say anything you want. Notable exceptions include slander and libel, deliberately inciting violence, and revealing national secrets.

      But that's not relevent here. The bloggers are not on trial for disclosing Apple's trade secrets. They are being required to provide information relating to a criminal trial. This has nothing to do with free speech.

    4. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by ispel · · Score: 1

      Quote: By your argument it should be legal to yell the proverbial "fire" in a crowded theater, or to lie to potential investors about a company's finances.

      Sorry, I wasn't particularly clear. I wasn't arguing against Trade Secret laws or the "yelling in a crowded theater" adage. I think the person who had direct and legitimate access to Trade Secrets (or social engineered or haxored or stole or whatever) and disclosed them should go to jail per the law, and not profit from their crime. I think the guy who yells fire in a theater should go to jail, per the common sense.

      However, (for instance in this case), once the criminal discloses the trade secret to journalists/press members/bloggers/anyone it's no longer secret. The criminal is still in violation of Trade Secret laws and should be prosecuted, but the now-informed journalists/press memebers/bloggers/anyone can't have their rights impugned (as long as they were not conspirators, and you can't assume that they are -- innocent until proven guilty).

      On the public interest public interest argument, I can't stretch the danger of the action of "yelling in a crowed theater" to the perceived harm done by disclosing Apple's new, as you say, "iCrap". If it were up to me, I'd disclose every single trade secret gadget and doodad (with Copyright, Trademark and Patent protection of course) to prevent one Watergate from going undisclosed.

    5. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should of highlighted the first part of the First Amendment:

      CONGRESS shall pass no law...

      That is where the courts start with cases of this nature. This is not a case of the checks and balances of the People and its Government. That is the primary purpose of the 1st Amendment.

      Next, the courts ask what is the "Public Purpose." For the press, the courts give enormous amounts of leeway.

      But, as the ruling discussed at great length, there is little-to-no Public Purpose to these sites, and their existence massively outweighs the cost to Apple.

      As a Constitutional scholar, I tend to be on the side of the little guy since that's what our Founders wanted. But this case is a disgraceful attempt to use the Constitution is false ways.

      Apple is going to win this case, and win it clean. Constitutionally speaking, Think Secret, et al, don't have a leg to stand on.

    6. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How can a law that overrides the freedom of speech be constitutional? If a whistle blower discloses embarrassing/incriminating "trade secrets" will the press / people be denied their constitutional freedom of speech to disclose the information?

      How 'bout this one?

      Amendment IV

      The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

      This law not only applies to government, but would it not also apply to private customers, investigators, etc. by way of the 9th and 10th amdendments?

      People don't have the right to break into your home or office to retrieve information to share with the public. They can, however, acquire such information that you have shared with businesses and signed away your right to privacy. This is how data is compiled to profile you by data mining companies.

      Apple did not sign any agreement relenquishing privacy. Instead, they probably made the employee who leaked sign an NDA expressly forbidding him from sharing information with the public.

      So how does this decision by the judge and Apple's pursuit of someone who violated their contractual agreement infringe on my rights?

    7. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by russotto · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Heck, by your argument trade secret law is unconstitutional, and "top secret" information should be legally publishable willy-nilly. You've confused two issues here. First, freedom of speech has never covered the publication of stolen (or secret) documents; it is the freedom to say what you think and to communicate freely. That does not mean you're free to consipire to kill people; it means that you can express unpopular opinions (or at least it used to; today that's not so clear).

      If the top secret information has made it to some random journalist, it's probably too late to keep the secret. And trade secret law IS unconstitutional if it gags those who have not agreed to the confidentiality agreements.

      As for free speech not covering the publication of "stolen (or secret)" documents, you might want to get acquainted with New York Times v. United States, 403 U.S. 713 (1971), better known as the Pentagon Papers case.

    8. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      careful now, by your line of thinking insider trading could become legal

    9. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Your argument is the eqivalent of saying it shouldn't be illegal to buy a stolen laptop that you have good reason to believe is stolen. After all, you haven't done the theft!

    10. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by EvanED · · Score: 1

      This law not only applies to government, but would it not also apply to private customers, investigators, etc. by way of the 9th and 10th amdendments?

      No. Consider that that law didn't even apply to state or local governments until after the 14th amendment was passed following the civil war. See, for instance, Barron v. Baltimore, 32 U.S. 243 (1933)

    11. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by EvanED · · Score: 1

      BTW, the current case, near as I can tell, has nothing to do with abridgement of freedom of speech. Apparently ThinkSecrets isn't being charged with any crime, nor are they being sued for any tort; the actions undertaken are "merely" to compel ThinkSecrets to reveal their sources.

      It's easy to argue that being able to keep sources secret is extremely important for freedom of speech to have its meaning in many cases, but I think it's also important to recognize that there is still a large difference between what is going on here and and abridgement of ThinkSecrets to be able to publish the information they are given.

    12. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by aiken_d · · Score: 1
      If the top secret information has made it to some random journalist, it's probably too late to keep the secret. And trade secret law IS unconstitutional if it gags those who have not agreed to the confidentiality agreements.

      What you're saying is that the law only applies to first actors. If someone steals something, it's illegal, but if you resell stolen property it's all cool. I can see an argument there, but I can't say that I'm entirely sympathetic. The way I see it, someone who makes their living as a fence for stolen goods is a criminal. To the extent that you support trade secret law and confidentiality agreements, can you really argue that it should be legal to repeatedly, professionally, and commercially receive and publish information provided by someone who is violatiing those legally binding agreements... and have some kind of constitutional right not to identify the thief, so your commercial endeavor can continue without interruption?

      If you really, truly support that position... please elaborate on how either 1) you believe fencing stolen goods should be legal, or 2) you believe that stolen documents or trade secrets should be less protected than stolen goods. If you're going for 2), please follow up by explaining why I should be prosecuted for identity theft if I happen to come into posession of your SSN and address and order a couple of thousand dollars worth of goods.

      Cheers
      -b

      --
      If I wanted a sig I would have filled in that stupid box.
    13. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Heads up! There are two separate cases. In one, the defendants are unknown, and Apple is attempting to learn their identities by subpoenaing people involved with two websites to compel them to reveal their sources.

      In the other, the Think Secret case, Apple is suing the Website operator. You might think that this is a bad thing, but try reading this before making up your mind.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    14. Re:Constitution vs. Judge by russotto · · Score: 1

      What I'm saying is that the _nondisclosure agreement_ only applies to first actors, and that applying such agreements by law to third parties violates the First Amendment.

      The rest of your claims rest on the idea that trade secrets are property exactly analagous to tangible property, and they aren't. So I guess that puts me under 2).

      If you come into possession of -- or even purchase -- my address and SSN (the former is rather easy to find, the latter only moderately harder -- and there are people who will sell it to you), you've committed no crime. If you order a few thousand dollars worth of goods by representing yourself as being associated with that address and SSN, you've committed a form of fraud; has nothing to do with ownership of the information.

  47. either way by fred+fleenblat · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've been using Apple's products since the Apple II+ way back in 1980. 25 years of Apple hardware, software, programming, and sharing the goodness of the Apple way with friends and family. I've always had a warm fuzzy feeling for the company, their employees, and their products.

    Over the last couple of weeks, though, the feeling started to fade. It's completely gone now.

    Apple is just another company.

    You'd think after the cancer scare Jobs would have mellowed out.

    1. Re:either way by michaeldot · · Score: 1
      You'd think after the cancer scare Jobs would have mellowed out.

      Or maybe the rumor sites could have cut the guy some slack in his first public appearance since the operation, BY NOT SPRINGING EVERY ONE OF HIS SURPRISES prior to his ego-boosting "Stevenote" event.

      He was noticeably dejected at the leaks. He had nothing left to surprise people with, it was all known and discussed beforehand.

      The "warm fuzzy feeling" works both ways, you know.

    2. Re:either way by radish · · Score: 1

      He was noticeably dejected at the leaks. He had nothing left to surprise people with, it was all known and discussed beforehand. /me plays world's smallest violin.

      This is business. If all that can make him happy is announcing his latest way of seperating sheep-like consumers from their cash so he can buy another yacht, then his life is pretty fricking empty.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    3. Re:either way by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      So go and buy something else then. It's not a religion. No one will miss you.

    4. Re:either way by Justin205 · · Score: 1

      Maybe he enjoys what he does? Did you consider that?

      Just because it's a job, doesn't mean you can't enjoy it. And if you don't, you're probably in the wrong job anyway.

      --
      "Your effort to remain what you are is what limits you."
    5. Re:either way by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      For some reason your post reminds me of this.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    6. Re:either way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then it wasn't much of a feeling in the first place. Just because Apple seeks to defend itself doesn't mean that it's "just another company".

    7. Re:either way by michaeldot · · Score: 1
      If all that can make him happy is announcing his latest way of seperating sheep-like consumers from their cash so he can buy another yacht, then his life is pretty fricking empty.

      No, he's not Michael Dell.

      If you seriously think Jobs only does it for the money, you're missing the point by several million parsecs.

      Many people think Jobs is an a**hole (which is probably true) stroking his ego at being able to both save his garage started company from oblivion, and to motivate it to out-do the competition.

      Other people (the fanboys) think he's some sort of messiah, offering a "path to the light" away from Microsoft.

      Neither group would claim he's doing it to buy another (your silly emphasis) yacht.

    8. Re:either way by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Dude, that was hysterical! Thanks for sharing.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  48. now we'll find out by kylemonger · · Score: 1

    Bloggers have been calling themselves journalists for a while now. We'll see how seriously these guys take the responsibity, that is, we'll see if any of them be willing to go to jail to protect their sources.

  49. The myth of reporter privilege by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hopefully, this case will help to dispell the myth of reporter privilege that is so often repeated in the media. Attorneys don't have to reveal things their clients tell them, even if it relates to a crime. People don't have to reveal things their spouses tell them either. Even though they like to think they do, reporters have no such privilege, whether they work for a mainstream news company or a blog. If you're called to the stand, you have to answer all the questions asked of you, reporter or not.

  50. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by mark-t · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Actually, all that actually exists is the _allegation_ that the sources broke the law. There is no cold hard evidence to support that fact beyond Apple's inability to imagine that the sources didn't actually work for them and may have obtained the information themselves via another leak where the law _was_ broken.

  51. mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slashdot removed a comment because of pressure from Microsoft, so don't think for a second they wouldn't reveal your IP to the authorities. The request probably wouldn't even go to court; Slashdot would just roll over and give you up. You have been warned.

  52. Dudes in Apple Marketing are feeding blogs. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's called guerilla marketing.

    Apple is chasing it's own tail.

    They look like fools and are embarassment to the land of the free.

  53. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  54. Re:Ack. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I find your comparison apt and would like to subscribe to your newsletter.

    ~~~

  55. Landmark on /. by fmobus · · Score: 1

    I think this is the first case of an "Inverted Dupe" for they duped a old article saying it was wrong.

  56. Linux by Klar · · Score: 1

    It all depends on if the geeks were using Linux of not..

    1. Re:Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They were using OS X.

      Now what?

  57. Re:His name is.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    somebody didn't get the joke.

    It's Anonymous Coward.

  58. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

    You're sure having a better day then Apple!

    What is NOT protected are their sources, who are breaking currently in force, legally binding confidentiality agreements to reveal the information

    Apple sure hasn't been able to figure out the source of this stuff except for a bludgeon-style court proceeding! But presumably, in order to state that as fact, YOU must know who the source(s) is/are? Why don't you just tell Apple, then, and get the whole mess over with?

    Unless, of course, it's you?

    and the fact that the web sites, by publishing said information, are also in violation of the Uniform Trade Secrets Act, versions of which have been adopted by 45 states including California.

    Could you cite the ruling or source for that, please? I sure didn't see that in the opinion the judge gave.

    --
    To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
  59. American Privledge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not a right for reporters only. Freedom of speech is a right for all Americans.

  60. 1st Amendment Against the Law by dotslashdot · · Score: 0, Troll

    This totally sucks. Bye bye 1st amendment. I would write to you, but it's probably against the law. In fact, writing about the loss of the 1st Amendment is probably against the law too, since it invariably is related to National Security and Kevin Bacon.

    1. Re:1st Amendment Against the Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh.. you must be a product of public education. Why is it so difficult to understand that an NDA has been broken here? That someone gave up part of their rights to be privy to that information? This case isn't about people reporting.. it is about criminals giving up confidential information. When it is against the law for you or I to communicate as we do now, there's a big problem.

  61. Use common sense by Lord+Kano · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I had to sign a confidentiality agreement with a former employer. Namely because we had some rich, famous and influential customers. It was company lore that the President of the company ordered a subordinate to violate a federal law because he was having a Senator over to his house for a visit. I'm being intentionally vague here because I'm still bound by the aforementioned agreement.

    The point that I'm making here is that if I was going to give specifics or name names, I'd be smart enough to do it anonymously. If you're going to violate any secrecy agreements that you've signed, be smart enough to get a throw-away email address or use an anonymous remailer.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    1. Re:Use common sense by Spy+Handler · · Score: 1
      If you're going to violate any secrecy agreements that you've signed, be smart enough to get a throw-away email address or use an anonymous remailer.

      And use that throwaway Hotmail account from a cybercafe or a hotel lobby. It's amazing how many supposedly computer knowledgable people think Hotmail is anonymous. Hello? IP address?

      Best of all would be wardriving, or a Hotmail throwaway + Mixmaster remailer chain... but this is beyond most people.

    2. Re:Use common sense by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      And use that throwaway Hotmail account from a cybercafe or a hotel lobby. It's amazing how many supposedly computer knowledgable people think Hotmail is anonymous. Hello? IP address?

      Depends on how hard you're trying to hide.

      If you've got Feds after you, it'll be much harder to stay under the radar.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  62. Check This Guy's Homepage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "In 2001, I was honored to be selected as an Apple Distinguished Educator."

    "Interests: Apple Computers."

    This guy is pretty unbiased, wouldn't you say?

    1. Re:Check This Guy's Homepage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "In 2001, I was honored to be selected as an Apple Distinguished Educator."
      "Interests: Apple Computers."

      This guy is pretty unbiased, wouldn't you say?


      Absolutely. He likes iMacs, iBooks, and iPods equally.

      Kind of like the guy who say "I like both kinds of music -- Country and Western."

    2. Re:Check This Guy's Homepage by CptNerd · · Score: 1
      This guy is pretty unbiased, wouldn't you say?
      About as much as you are.
      --
      By the taping of my glasses, something geeky this way passes
  63. Re:A refreshing victory for corporate synchophants by boardin_1 · · Score: 1

    In the case of Think Secret, Nick is actively soliciting secret information. There is a difference between overhearing someone speaking about a product they are working on and going around asking people to tell you about stuff you are working on.

    If this were just a case of information being overheard I'd be on the side of the bloggers. But this is about asking someone to give you information that they can't, without breaking an NDA, and then hiding behind the journalistic shield laws when you get called out for doing so.

  64. Re:The judge is a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    No, you're a moron. The judge specifically mentioned that while such situations do exist, this is clearly NOT one of them. Did you even take a peek at the article?

  65. Boo Fscking Hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Do you understand that NDAs or any confidentiality agreements would be meaningless if all you had to do was leak them to someone else, who in turn publicly leaks them, all with no repurcussions of any kind nor any recourse for the employer?

    Poor babies. No recourse for the employer. Since there's so much recourse for employees, and consumers, and sweatshop laborers, when corporations get out of control, that sounds pretty unfair.

  66. Ahh, the unnamed source by Clod9 · · Score: 0, Troll
    This is great. Now when a newspaper publishes information from some official who declines to be named, the news people who publish the reports can be forced to name their sources and voila! We'll have just a little more truth.

    What? You say the White House will block any such truth-telling? Whatever makes you say that?

    I am so tired of reading news based on sources that "decline to be named", speak "on condition of anonymity", or any of those phrases. It really means that either the reporter or the source, or both, are cowards, liars, or lawbreakers. If you have something to say, SAY IT! Use your free speech! Otherwise, be quiet!

    1. Re:Ahh, the unnamed source by Wubby · · Score: 1

      I am so tired of reading news based on sources that "decline to be named", speak "on condition of anonymity", or any of those phrases. It really means that either the reporter or the source, or both, are cowards, liars, or lawbreakers. If you have something to say, SAY IT! Use your free speech! Otherwise, be quiet!

      While your post started out hopeful, you lost me on the end part I quoted above.

      Free speech only exists because you are free from being persecuted for excercising it. If those you are speaking against are powerful (boss, police officer, president), then they may abuse their power (fire, imprison, assasinate) to silence you.

      While anonymity may be the refuge of the cowardly, it is also the last shield of the powerless.

      That's why voting is by secret ballot.

      I would have posted as AC if I didn't think the irony would be too corny. ;)

      --
      Sig
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars
  67. Re:A refreshing victory for corporate synchophants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, if someone you know gives me your home phone number with the explicit purpose of posting it online, and I post it online, I'm excused because I'm not the one who got it from you?

    Wouldn't you want to know who gave me that number?

  68. Business plans are NOT speech ... by adzoox · · Score: 2, Insightful

    People are trying to term these trade secrets like they are something that is just common water cooler talk and newspaper articles.

    These are business plans, schematics, insider corporate strategy NOT speech - these items are CAD drawings, supplier contracts ... NOT speech .... so no speech was abridged ... and besides Congress didn't make a law. A judge ruled and enforced the law.

    --
    Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
    1. Re:Business plans are NOT speech ... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      These are business plans, schematics, insider corporate strategy NOT speech - these items are CAD drawings, supplier contracts ... NOT speech ....

      You realize that in making that assertation, you are hair's breadth away from claiming that source code is NOT speech, right? Do you really understand the implications of not treating source code as speech?

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    2. Re:Business plans are NOT speech ... by ispel · · Score: 1

      Quote: These are business plans, schematics, insider corporate strategy NOT speech - these items are CAD drawings, supplier contracts ... NOT speech .... so no speech was abridged ... and besides Congress didn't make a law. A judge ruled and enforced the law.

      Crap. I don't know about other engineers, but, as a programmer, my work is definitely speech.

      "Insider corporate strategy" is not in the public's interest. That's what leads to the exploding Pinto cover up, cigarette manufactures researching and suppressing information while doing on-going marketing to kids. Even a flopped product, like Apple's trade secret upcoming "iCrap", is harmful to the public because it causes higher prices and wasted resources. Sunshine won't necessarily prevent a company from releasing a bad product, and occasionally Trade Secrets might even be beneficial to a particular person or company with no little or no ill effect on society, however, in many cases trade secrets cause harm. More harm, in my opinion, than the perceived benefits from companies execs (there's more than one way to market a product other than "Surprise!") or bad (evil) schemes where trade secrets are essential.

    3. Re:Business plans are NOT speech ... by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I love the GPL and all that, but surely you're not so brainwashed as to think that source code cannot be both speech and a trade secret?

      Would you also argue that a hula hoop is cannot be both circular and a toy? (You know, for kids.)

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    4. Re:Business plans are NOT speech ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need a refresher in boolean logic.
      BOTH != NOT.

    5. Re:Business plans are NOT speech ... by adzoox · · Score: 1

      If you write the code yourself FOR YOUR own company - it is your speech. If you write that code on some other company's time for THEIR benefit - it is their PROPERTY and NOT speech.

      --
      Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
    6. Re:Business plans are NOT speech ... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Baloney. Work for hire does not make the results non-speech. If I hire a poet to write me a poem, that poem is still speech.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    7. Re:Business plans are NOT speech ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it is his; NOT yours

    8. Re:Business plans are NOT speech ... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Actually, if I hire the poet, as in work for hire, the poem is MINE not his. Regardless, the original poster did not make that distinction, he did not say "NOT YOUR speech" he said "NOT speech" period.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    9. Re:Business plans are NOT speech ... by adzoox · · Score: 1

      And as the original poster I will say again...

      Business plans are NOT speech - they are property. They are physical documentation and schematics. Just because they contain words and can be printed or could be considered artistically meritted does NOT mean they are speech.

      And by the way, even if you pay the poet -- it is still NOT yours! Ask any songwriter.

      --
      Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
    10. Re:Business plans are NOT speech ... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Business plans are NOT speech - they are property. They are physical documentation and schematics. Just because they contain words and can be printed or could be considered artistically meritted does NOT mean they are speech

      Glad you cleared up your opinion. You are wrong though. Speech is anything meant to communicate ideas and information from one human to another. That's the standard used to define source code as speech while compiled machine code is not. Similarly, schematics and business plans are clearly intended to communicate ideas and information between people. Thus they are speech.

      And by the way, even if you pay the poet -- it is still NOT yours! Ask any songwriter.

      Glad you cleared that up. But not in the way you think you have. You've just demonstrated a complete lack of understanding of copyright, which reinforces that your other statements on the general topic are also false, or at the very least based on your own guesses rather actual practice and statute. Don't believe me? Go google on the specific phrase I've repeatedly used in this thread, "work for hire." You will find yourself well contradicted by the results.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    11. Re:Business plans are NOT speech ... by adzoox · · Score: 1

      You can be confrontational if you wish by essentially calling a very successful patent and copyright consultant an idiot.

      " ...from one human to another"

      Incorrect - business plans are not from one human to another - they are from one company to another and publicly diseminated.

      Again, it is NOT opinion, just because something is on paper or used to communicate an idea or concept does NOT make it speech. It is a physical tangible object.

      If all written material is speech and able to be used freely, I'll just ask your neighbor to peek at your credit card or social security info, get him to post it to my BLOG and therefore get it published. It's my right to publish it after all.

      --
      Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
    12. Re:Business plans are NOT speech ... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Incorrect - business plans are not from one human to another - they are from one company to another and publicly diseminated.

      Get real, companies are groups of people. If the people aren't the ones on the sending and receiving ends of the information then what is? And just who are schematics for? Left that one out because even you couldn't waive your hands fast enough, eh?

      First you make a bogus appeal to a higher power by saying, "ask any songwriter" and now you make another one with, "calling a very successful patent and copyright consultant an idiot."

      As neither songwriter, nor even a middling IP consultant you need to stop trying to put your false words in their mouths.

      If all written material is speech and able to be used freely.

      I see, you've lost the argument so you are now trying to change your point. There is nothing that I have said in this entire thread equating "speech" with "able to be used freely," and guess what? Until this red herring post, you hadn't said anything either - see that point I made a few messages back where I said:

      he did not say "NOT YOUR speech" he said "NOT speech" period.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  69. Biased headline? by michaeldot · · Score: 1

    So these news/rumor sites that take tens of thousands of dollars a month in advertising revenue are just blogs now are they?

    Gee, I wonder which side the comments will favor with this introduction!

    1. Re:Biased headline? by g-doo · · Score: 1

      Technically, Slashdot is a blog too.

  70. Don't break your word. by H01M35 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Maybe, and please understand, I'm as much of an Apple fanboy as the next guy, but I'm disappointed that Apple's winning this.

    I'm even more disappointed that they're pursuing it. I am in favor of the freedom of the press. I can't possibly know all the details, including what sort of agreement Nick DePlume has with whoever his source is.

    Seems like somebody told him some stuff and he published it on the web. It must have pretty good stuff. But if Nick told the Apple mole, who I'll call Gerald, that he wouldn't reveal Gerald's name to anyone, then he shouldn't. Don't break your word. Should you break the law to keep your word? People have to answer that question themselves based on their values and character, but I'd say yes. Even if it means jail.

    Now, in order to play both sides of the fence here, the Mole at Apple, or one of their associated companies - whether it's a manufacturer, or some dude at an Ad Agency - has signed an NDA, then he should be living by it. Again, don't break your word.

    But I have a hard time with this fishing expedition. And that being said, I didn't visit thinksecret much before, but the publicity that is being generated keeps me checking the place out. I'm not sure if that was Apple's intention, but there you go.

    You want me to get to the point? Here it is:

    Stamp out leaks internally. Don't sue fans.

    Having said that, I'm still going to recommend to everybody in sight that they wait until Tiger (which has been announced) comes out, then buy the 12" iBook with the airport card and max out the ram. Or a Mini. Depending. Unless you want to run Linux on it. In which case buy it whenever.

    The other thing I was wondering about - TFA calls it a criminal act, releasing that sort of info. Is it a criminal matter or a civil one?

    -Holmes.

    1. Re:Don't break your word. by michaeldot · · Score: 1
      Stamp out leaks internally. Don't sue fans.

      They sued "fans" (ie, news/rumor sites that publish to get page hits to sell advertising banner space) to get the information so they can stamp out the leaks internally.

      The "fans" had refused to give them the information to needed to do this.

    2. Re:Don't break your word. by AfterSchoolSpecial · · Score: 1

      "TFA calls it a criminal act, releasing that sort of info. Is it a criminal matter or a civil one?"

      Well, if you go by the definition of a "crime," then all acts that break the law are by definition "criminal." However, it is a violation of the California Civil Code (I believe that was the basis of the suit, if not federal civil law), so the penalties for violation are civil in nature (i.e. primarily monetary punishments).

  71. replace the name by microsoft by dvhh · · Score: 1

    And there will be booing all the way (remember the microsoft guy who where layed off because hhe sent picture of apple computer on the microsoft campusin fact he wasn't working for microsoft anyway, but whatever).
    Apple is somehow protected by some funny sheild

    1. Re:replace the name by microsoft by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. The majority view on that case was that the guy was dumb in thinking that he'd get away with it, and Microsoft was exercising its rights quite reasonably by firing him.

    2. Re:replace the name by microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Double bullshit. Apple fanatics are the equivalent of Bush Republicans: whatever Dear Leader says, no matter how ill-conceived or untruthful, they'll just happily line up in formation and believe.

      Yes, if this were Microsoft, they'd be flogged ten ways to Tuesday, and rightfully so. Thankfully, the appeals court isn't going to be staffed with the sort of hometown hacks that issued this ruling.

    3. Re:replace the name by microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He wasn't an employee, but a temporary ona n assignment, they ended his assignment. No termination involved.

  72. Re:A refreshing victory for corporate synchophants by dr.badass · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Look, the judge may have a point but celebrating the victory of a corporation over an individual just seems fucked up to me.

    You seem to be under the mistaken impression that an individual is incapable of breaking the law, or is at least "less able" to break the law than a corporation.

    Also, Think Secret (I'm not sure about the others) is operated by The dePlume Organization, a limited-liabilty corporation.

    The 'free speech' issue isn't' about wether or not you can go blabbing your companies trade secrets, it's about wether or not someone else, someone who has not signed an NDA or anything else should be able to re-spout them.

    The law says that you cannot do this. The judge is doing his job by enforcing the law. Your gripe is with the law, not with the case.

    These people, who are not under contract should be able (I think) to say whatever they want without repercussion even if someone would be harmed by the common knowledge.

    To do that would mean throwing out libel and slander laws, as well. Freedom of speech (or freedom of the press, which is more accurate in these cases) is not an absolute right.

    But it seems to me that simply telling the truth ought to be protected under the constitution, if you don't sign an NDA.

    I would not describe the printing of illegally obtained information for a profit to be "simply telling the truth".

    Yet, here these people are being forced to A) name their source, or B) Go to jail (or something). They're being punished for telling the truth about something, despite the fact that they signed no NDA and were not under any contract.

    Apple was not, and is not, seeking damages against these sites. They were seeking information, and now the court has ordered them to give up that information. If they do not, they can appeal, or be held in contempt of court. I sincerely doubt that they will choose not to appeal this, but I doubt even more that they will choose to ignore the court's order should it not be overturned.

    --
    Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
  73. Oh, really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Saying that no one has the right to publish information that could have been provided only by someone breaking the law, judge James Kleinberg ruled...

    Go figure. When's the last time you saw a reporter prosecuted, jailed, or, heck, just plain ol' censured (much less, censored) for revealing classified information?

    I call hooey on the double-standard between corporate secrets and state secrets.

    1. Re:Oh, really? by EvanED · · Score: 1

      Uh, the lastest conviction I'm positive about is last November, though I don't know what he published.

      Dude went to jail for contempt for refusing to releveal sources. Vowed to appeal, I don't know how that turned out.

      Other posts up in the thread say that two reporters are going to prison for contempt for the Novak CIA agent revelation fiasco. (Novak apparently named names.)

    2. Re:Oh, really? by Trurl's+Machine · · Score: 2, Informative

      Go figure. When's the last time you saw a reporter prosecuted, jailed, or, heck, just plain ol' censured (much less, censored) for revealing classified information?

      Oh, please. Just because you were not interested in such cases prior to the Apple vs bloggers trial, it doesn't mean such cases did not exist! Check this link. If you don't bother to click on it, here's a brief quote: "Three times this summer, judges have held journalists in contempt of court for refusing to name their anonymous sources (...) Since 1984, a total of 14 journalists have been jailed ? some for only a few hours ? for refusing to comply with court orders demanding that they reveal sources or other information, according to the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press."

      I'm looking on this case from across the pond. In Europe, we tend to have specialized law codes for, ummm, basically anything. We have the Press Code, Labor Code, Family Code etc., while you in the USA rather put anything into just civil law of the "someone versus someone" scheme. Anyway, European press codes both guarantee certain privileges to journalists and guarantee that journalists have to obey certain rules of professional ethics. In Europe it's simple: if you break your professional ethics - you're out of protection, buddy. In general, journalist ethics means that you can't break the law just for sake of getting a scoop - you can be protected by the code if you did it in genuine public interest. From European point of view, this ruling was not a surprise, actually the judge said just what we have wrtitten in our law regarding the freedom of press.

  74. Re:A refreshing victory for corporate synchophants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wouldn't you want to know who gave me that number?

    Not really. I wrote 867-5309 on the wall for a reason.

  75. Oh noes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have made the mistake of using the word "steal" in reference to source code. Prepare to be bombarded by rabid Slashbots spouting out nice sound-bites like "THEFT != COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT". Unless of course the source code in question is GPL'd, in which case those fucking thieves are going to burn in hell.

  76. interested public vs the public interest by cemaco · · Score: 1

    Can you think of any rational explanation where that info was leaked without someone violating an NDA?

    Yes, I do believe Apple has the right to decide when it will publish information on an upcoming product.
    No, I don't believe that a reporter should be punished for publishing the information. After all, they did not sign an NDA.

    Yes, I do believe the judge was correct in ordering them to reveal their source. I can say this because I don't consider that order a punishment to those who reported the info (in this particular case). I do think there is a need to prevent what is essentially corporate espionage, when it does not serve the public interest. As was said an "interested public is not the same as the public interest".

    1. Re:interested public vs the public interest by mark-t · · Score: 1
      No... someone probably _did_ violate an NDA. There's no actual _proof_ of that, but it certainly is the most probable explanation.

      However, what is utterly impossible to sustain is the premise that it should be most probable that the magazine's sources were the ones to violate the NDA, when in fact they may have just been another chain down the line. If the reporter shouldn't be punished for publishing the information, why should other innocent sources by revealing their identities?

      As someone else has observed elsewhere, all this will mean is that all contributions will be from anonymous sources from here on in.

    2. Re:interested public vs the public interest by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 0

      No... someone probably _did_ violate an NDA. There's no actual _proof_ of that, but it certainly is the most probable explanation.

      I was right. You are a bit dim. Have you ever heard of something called "deductive reasoning"?

      Let me show you an example. Five people have a secret. Let's call then A, b, c, d, and 5. Suddenly, the whole world knows the secret. Using deductive reasoning, we can prove that either A, b, c, d, or 5 (or some combination thereof) have revealed the secret. If we ask everyone where they heard it, and they name person F, then one, all or some of the original group must have told person F. (Correlation does not always equal causation, but that does not mean it never does.)

      Maybe that's too much of a leap for you, and you require a video tape of someone wearing a trenchcoat to hand someone else a briefcase full of documents. Or maybe we should be dusting all the doorknobs at O'Grady's Power Page for Apple employee fingerprints.

      At any rate, you need to avoid working in the field of detection.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    3. Re:interested public vs the public interest by mark-t · · Score: 1
      Or, to go with your example, some of the original group may have told a completely unnamed person, who may have then disclosed it to person F.

      I'm not excusing the original violation of the NDA, but what bothers me about this is that in what is effectively a witchunt to find the actual guilty party, people who may have in fact been entirely innocent of any crime are suddenly forced to have reasonable expectations of privacy and confidentiality taken from them. That's why I don't approve of the decision.

      Of course, it doesn't really matter how I feel about it now anyways, since the judges decision has already been made, we just have to wait and see how it plays out.

    4. Re:interested public vs the public interest by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      If you replace stolen trade secret with stolen car stereo, you'll see where your argument falls apart. In that case, why should any of the middle men have any expectation of privacy and confidentiality.

      Or let's not replace one stolen item with another. Let's use the witness example. Probably more apropos in this particular case, since Apple is not suing the two websites, nor explicitly accusing them of complicity in a crime. If either website knows the identity of a witness to a crime, then they can be compelled to give that information, so that the witness may be questioned.

      At any rate, you framed your objection much better here. There's hope for you yet. Either that, or I'm much less cranky after some much needed sleep, and there's some hope for me.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  77. A refreshing victory for common sense-Amen. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It just shows what slashdot was like before most of the "smart" people left for sites like "Fark". Their replacements leave something to be desired.

    1. Re:A refreshing victory for common sense-Amen. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      most of the "smart" people left for sites like "Fark".

      I sure hope that was sarcasm.

  78. Oh my god! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You just made the mistake of using the word "stole" in reference to trade secrets, which are of course intangible objects. Therefore, it is impossible to "steal" them. Unless of course the intangible objects are GPL'd software. In that case, the fucking thieves will burn in hell!
    [/Slashbot]

  79. You are so adorable. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Form your own opinion? That is sooooooo cute!

  80. FUCK YOUR WHORE OF A MOTHER by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Are you saying a traffic violation is as important as murder, or just that you have trouble distinguishing the two?

    Define "important". Should we neglect those who violate traffic laws and only focus on those who murder? No. Both are important. A traffic violation might result in manslaughter. If your question is a hypothetical where if we were only able to enforce one and not the other, then obviously murder would be the one chosen. However, we don't live in that world. All laws are enforced, as they should be. The small crimes (and traffic regulations aren't part of the criminal code, btw) are given court time no differently than murder trials.

    1. Re:FUCK YOUR WHORE OF A MOTHER by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Your interest in my mother has been noted, but you aren't her type.

    2. Re:FUCK YOUR WHORE OF A MOTHER by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I've checked and no one ever died as a result of the parking tickets I've received for an expired meter. If only...

      If you think violent crime is equivalent to non-violent crime you have a rationality issue. I suggest you seek schooling, and quick.

    3. Re:FUCK YOUR WHORE OF A MOTHER by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      did you even read his post, or did you just assume that because it was a reply it would say exactly the oposite of what was being replied to?

      It is important to uphold all laws. The upholding of traffic laws does not stop the upholding of violent crime laws.
      If there is a law that should not be a law, then you have the right to complain about it and to lobby your representative to get it changed.
      If your representative doesn't want to do that, you can vote for a different one.

      But you still have to obey the law, whether it be traffic law or murder.

  81. Do we then assume...? by AlexPGP · · Score: 1

    ... that hereinafter, any published "new" information about future products of interest is nothing more than bought-and-paid-for hucksterism from the PR departments of the hawkers of said products?

    Cheers...

  82. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by prockcore · · Score: 1


    What is NOT protected are their sources, who are breaking currently in force, legally binding confidentiality agreements to reveal the information


    Oh you know this for a fact, do you? For all we know, the "leaker" doesn't even work for Apple. Apple may force everyone at Apple to sign an NDA, but Apple doesn't manufacture anything. For all we know, the leaker works in Taiwan and never signed an NDA.

    I find it interesting that so many Apple fanatics are so gung ho to violate someone's privacy because he *might* have violated an NDA.

    You might be making drugs in your basement, I'm going to have the police check, just to be sure.

  83. a different view for "real" property? by slew · · Score: 1

    I wonder how responses would differ if there was real property involved... Let's say I obtained (e.g., purchases, or obtained through barter) real property (say a computer), that was later determined to be stolen. Do the police have the right to...

    A. Take it from me and return it to the original owner?
    B. Force me to say who I obtained it from?

    Now replace this with intangible property (say some GPL'd source code). Let's say that I obtained a BSD license for some source code that was later determined to be stolen. Since I obtained the source code under certain rights (e.g., BSD license), do the police (or other authorities), have the right to

    A. Take away the BSD license I obtained for it and replace it with the GPL license granted by the original owner?
    B. Force me to say who I obtained it from?

    Not sure the answer is different in either of these cases.

    Of course if the intangible property is a trade secret, well, hmm, I'm not so sure it should be any different there either... You can argue that trade secrets aren't even property, but if they are (and the law is currently on that position), is there any other interpretation?

  84. LOL @ Boston by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your team is a shell of its former self. Get ready for another 80+ years of disappointment. The same could be said of your football franchise. Boston is once again a town of losers who can't properly pronounce any word with the letter 'R' in it. Let me speak in words you can understand: "Boston is a town of losahs!"

  85. There is no myth!!! by barfy · · Score: 1

    Here is all of *real* information regarding reporter privilege. Reporter Privilege site

    1. Re:There is no myth!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny thing from their introduction is that it seems that the journalists are investigating crimes. However, Apple has not committed a crime in this case. Thinksecret obtained trade secrets through an illicit source.

  86. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

    I believe I said this somewhere else, but.

    *Even if* the sources TS got their information from got it without breaking an NDA, would you argue that there is pretty much no way the first step of the information was in breach of NDA? That there is no *legitimate* way for that information to have exited Apple?

    If so, the law pretty clearly implies that *anyone* receiving that information is tainted. Whether or not the person they received it from was under NDA, if the information itself was received in breach of confidentiality agreement, then anyone receiving that information and having any reason to believe (as I think most people do) that the only way for it to exist was for there to have been a breach of NDA *somewhere* would be in violation.

    --

    ---
    Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
    (I read with sigs off.)
  87. Re:A refreshing victory for corporate synchophants by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    Look, the judge may have a point but celebrating the victory of a corporation over an individual just seems fucked up to me.

    Not when the individual was the wrongdoer.

    But he also might not have a point. The 'free speech' issue isn't' about wether or not you can go blabbing your companies trade secrets, it's about wether or not someone else, someone who has not signed an NDA or anything else should be able to re-spout them.

    No, it's not about that at all. There is nothing in this to puniush the blogs for publishing the information, nor to stop them doing it again. It's purely that they have evidence that they must hand over to the court.

    Yet, here these people are being forced to A) name their source, or B) Go to jail (or something).

    Yes, that's it.

    They're being punished for telling the truth about something, despite the fact that they signed no NDA and were not under any contract.

    No, they have a duty to do something. Only if they choose to commit contempt of court would they be punished. And that would be for contempt of court.

  88. Compelled testimony is an offense to freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We should all be terrified by this decision, not because of the precedent it will set, but because of what it tells us about the withered state of our freedom.

    Just as I reserve the right not to testify to incriminate myself, I reserve the right not to testify to incriminate another.

    I will not be made the tool of a fascist regime. When the regime compelled this individual to testify - to incriminate - it put the free agency of that individual under extreme duress, to the point that, if this individual has family or other dependents, his agency may be all but driven out.

    It has suppressed his agency and made him a tool of the executive arm of a fascist regime.

    He has become an instrument of propaganda. Rather than do its own dirty work, the regime compells its subjects to turn upon one another, and thereby confuse and divert the focus of revolutionary sentiment.

    But this man should do what he must to see to the wellbeing of his family - that he can continue to provide for them.

    A puppet can not bear guilt. Though in this life the obscence and perverse domination of its physical person weigh heavy upon its conscience.

    1. Re:Compelled testimony is an offense to freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
      Just as I reserve the right not to testify to incriminate myself, I reserve the right not to testify to incriminate another.

      No. What you think you reserve and what is codified in law are two different things. In fact you have to testify even if it incriminates someone other than yourself or you could be held in contempt of court. There are a handful exceptions to this, such as you can't be forced to testify against your spouse. But for the most part your wrong, you don't have that right, you never did, so STFU cus your entire post is crap.

    2. Re:Compelled testimony is an offense to freedom by EvanED · · Score: 1
      Just as I reserve the right not to testify to incriminate myself, I reserve the right not to testify to incriminate another.

      False, false, false, false, and WOW is that false.

      Actually, the Constitution gurantees that you can be COMPELLED to testify. Amendment 6:

      In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right...to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor...
    3. Re:Compelled testimony is an offense to freedom by Gorbag · · Score: 1
      In fact, compelled testimony is a defense of freedom. Allow me to quote the relevant portions of the Bill of Rights, since you seem to be somewhat ignorant of it. From the Fifth Amendment:
      No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime ... nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself
      note that's "himself" not "himself or others"; from the Sixth Amendment:
      In all criminal prosecutions, ... to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor
      So, you can argue you think you have "the right not to testify to incriminate another," but you have an uphill battle getting such a "right" recognized; no such right is recognized in The Bill of Rights, and in fact, you may be compelled to testify on behalf of an accused (and in the process incriminate another, e.g., if you saw someone other than the accused commit a crime).
      --
      -- I speak only for myself
  89. Will this ruling open doors? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't have a strong opinion about this particular case except where it may impact other cases. I mean specifically that there are many cases where confedential and/or classified information is leaked from the government. While its refreshing for a citizen to get occasional peeks behind the scenes its seems like a dangerous activity in general. When this happens the news agency claims freedom of press to hide the identity of the person who is leaking classified/secret documents. I wonder if this ruling will impact how these other cases are handled?

  90. Old news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  91. EFF Asking California Appellate Court to Intervene by jbn-o · · Score: 1

    No word yet on an appeal.

    Time for an update: EFF says they'll appeal.

  92. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Oh you know this for a fact, do you? For all we know, the "leaker" doesn't even work for Apple. "

    well with the ruling they can now find out :D

  93. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For all we know, the leaker works in Taiwan and never signed an NDA.

    Yes, but in that case apple probably had a contract with the manufacturer stating non-disclosure, in which case that company is in breech of contract. In fact, if apple doesn't have something like that it should fire its entire legal team.

  94. Re:The judge is a moron by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

    From the article:

    "Kleinberg, however, ruled that NO ONE has the right to publish trade secrets that only could have been provided by someone breaking the law."

    Also from the article:

    "For example, journalists CANNOT refuse to disclose information when it relates to a crime."

    --
    If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
  95. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by mark-t · · Score: 1
    Well sure, but then wouldn't that make the magazine itself even more liable than its sources?

    I won't dispute the fact that the most probable explanation for how they got the story was that somewhere along the way Apples NDA was violated, but it certainly wasn't violated by the magazine, and it may not have even been violated by any of the magazine's sources, yet the magazine's sources identities have now been ordered by a court to be revealed, just as if they _were_ criminals.

    My point is that requiring to know these people's identites is tantamount to presuming that they are guilty until proven innocent (especially given the entirely plausible explanation that the magazine's sources never worked for apple and they heard it from someone else just the way the magazine did). That's what I object to.

  96. Blogs != Journalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Once upon a time, blogs were just personal web diaries. Now they're a new form of journalism?

    Not.

    There's a world of difference between an individual sharing corporate secrets and a bona-fide news organization (and their lawyers) vetting a news story.

    It's just part of the on-going control of the Wild West of the Web. It's all good.

    1. Re:Blogs != Journalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give it up, Dan.

  97. Don't break your word-Break your Mac instead. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Stamp out leaks internally. Don't sue fans."*

    <small rant>

    Ah yes the "blame the victum" defense, aka "If she hadn't wore that, I wouldn't have raped her"

    So what perfect "anti-leak" method do you suggest that everyone can live with?

    Oh wait, there isn't any method (draconian or otherwise) that can prevent someone from "leaking" to the outside. (just ask the MPAA about their screeners)

    So what does that leave? How about punishing those who do leak information?

    Oh wait. ThinkSecret and others are hiding behind the law, keeping that information from Apple.

    Bummer, guess we'll never find out that way. Guess corporations will now just have to increase the monitoring they already do, and make their employees jump through even more hoops to conduct business. And people thought they hated their jobs before...

    And for some icing on your cake. they get to pass the cost onto the public. And all because a few didn't give a damn about anyone else but themselves. Gee, who knew that actions have consequences? Apparently the judge, and the first poster to this story.

    Hope you all like the new world your creating. Because I've moved to a small offshore island, and I'm watching through binoculars the US "rationalize" itself to death.

    <small rant>

    *BTW "Fans" just like "friends", don't do certain things to others. When will you all tire of writing a blank check for all the "Fans" actions?

  98. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Slack3r78 · · Score: 5, Informative
    I've seen this argument made by yourself and several other posters, and I'm sorry, but you're wrong.

    From the Judge's opinion, posted on the EFF's site:

    The posting by Mr. O'Grady contained an exact copy of a detailed drawing of "Asteroid" created by Apple. The drawing was taken from a confidential set of slides clearly labeled "Apple Need-to-Knox Confidential." In addition, technical specifications were copied verbatim from the confidential slide set and posted on the online site. These postings by Mr. O'Grady were spread over three days, November 19, 22 and 23, 2004. The Court is convinced by Apple's presentation, including the materials produced in camera that this action has passed the necessary thresholds for discovery to proceed.


    In short, Apple had strong enough evidence that this information wasn't just accidently leaked to convince the court that trade secret laws had been violated and for the subpeonas to go forward.

  99. Whistleblowers? by Draconix · · Score: 1

    Um... this isn't about whistleblowers. Leaking what the next Big Thing from Apple will be isn't whistleblowing, it's just violation of NDA, and leaking of trade secrets.

    Now, if Apple were to, say, use Mexican immigrants for slave labor to assemble their machines, or a high-up was embezzling funds, and an employee leaked that information, that would be whistle-blowing, as it would be a wrongdoing that the public should know about.

    --
    By reading this you acknowledge that you have read it.
  100. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Compelled speech is not free speech. So your claimed non-violation of the First Amendment is in fact a violation of the First Amendment. In addition, forcing journalists to reveal their sources infringes on a free press by chilling who speaks to reporters.

    You really need to go to law school, Dave. You have one on campus and you can even get yourself a discount for being a bureaucrat. And I don't think they will discriminate against you for working for DoIT.

  101. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by dr.badass · · Score: 1

    You might as well have said that anyone who doesn't agree with megacorporate "ethics" is thusly unethical.

    I think what he was saying is basically that anyone that doesn't agree with the court in this case is likely to have problems with much larger things than what this case was actually about.

    If you subscribe to certain notions about intellectual property[1], then, yes, you probably think the judge is an idiot. That doesn't mean his legal opinion is wrong.

    [1] or trade secrets, or corporations, or blogging, etc, etc.

    I think that there's been a tremendous amount of rhetoric surrounding this case that has nothing to do with the case itself.

    This particular expression of speech ... is protected according to the Supreme Court of the United States of America.

    Libel is not protected. Slander is not protected. Incitement is not protected. Shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theater is not protected. Printing trade secrets is not protected. Free speech is not an absolute right.

    --
    Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
  102. Everything breaks the law now days by blanks · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "no one has the right to publish information that could have been provided only by someone breaking the law"

    Naturally these days everything and anything breaks the law, and it comes down to who haves the most money.

  103. Re:Offtopic...? by lukewarmfusion · · Score: 1

    "How can you think that the U.S. Government has any business forcing a third party--who has broken no laws, I might add--to start pointing fingers for Apple's benefit?"

    The government is simply upholding a contract between two parties. They use such concepts as subpoenas, witnesses, and evidence to perform their role in our justice system. What's the problem here?

  104. you are all freaking me out horribly by justins · · Score: 2

    Am I the only one who reads the reactions of the fanboy multitudes to this and thinks about running out to buy a gun and join the Libertarian party or something?

    --
    Now before I get modded down, I be to remind whoever might read this that what I am saying is FACT. - bogaboga
  105. Apple, just another corporation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Face it.

    Just for your information, here is a "fun" comparison of Apple vs Microsoft.

    Apple's employees are not allowed to blog about their activities in the company (except for 1 person - Safari developer). Almost all Microsoft employees blog about their activities at work/what they're working on,... and are encouraged to do so.

    Microsoft has never sued anyone for posting screenshots/videos of their leaked software or suing someone because he leaked information about their new product. There are websites (winsupersite) with leaked screenshots/information/leaked information about Lonhorn. Thurrott is spreading info he got from MS's employees which wasn't supposed to be public.
    Apple: ThinkDifferent.com, AppleInsider, PowerPage.

    Apple forced the author of Y'z Dock (win32 application that acts as OS X's Dock) to cease development and put it off his site. I don't know if legal actions were used.
    Microsoft hasn't sued or sad anything negative about Mono, Wine, Cedega, ReactOS etc,... which as we all know, are all aplications (some OS's) that walk on thin ice with MS. The only thing I remember MS saying about Mono was "we don't support it."

    FreeBSD's founder was asked to wim down his FreeBSD public appearances, speeches, interviews, coding, blogs, you name it, after he joined Apple. Apple wanted him "contained" just like any other employee.

    Apple is opening their stores in Britain with prices third party shops can't match.

    Think about it what you want, but Apple _IS_ the new Microsoft. No other company is as closed as Apple. Everything they do works only on their hardware or is very tied with it. Bill Gates said this best when asked about the iTunes store - I think it went something like this: "Apple did, what they always do, they open a way for new possibilities but they always tie it with their products".

    The difference between Microsoft and Apple is that MS comes after you with an AK. Apple comes with a polished magnum.

    1. Re:Apple, just another corporation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft has never sued anyone for posting screenshots/videos
      Ah, so microsoft didn't fire that guy who publicated the pictures of a delivery of G5s microsoft received?

    2. Re:Apple, just another corporation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One sentence undoes your entire argument:

      "Apple is not a convicted monopoly."

      You can argue all you want about what Apple *might* do if they were in Microsof's position, but they're not and speculation about what a company might do in any given situation is pointless. Like it or not, once you have most of the market share and have been convicted of a monopoly, the rules change as to what you can and can't do.

      And, if I had as much time on my hands as you seem to, I'm sure I could make a list that winds up in favor of Apple when comparing "good" deeds vs. "sketchy" deeds.

      I'm pretty bored with the whole, "is this company good or evil, or should I like this company or that company" argument anyway. I like Apple because they make products that I love. I disagree with some of their tactics but this sure as hell isn't one of them. Either way, neither company is good or evil. It's business.

  106. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by EatingPie · · Score: 1

    Just an FYI. Apple is VERY Careful about NDAs. A friend of mine did mock-ups for a product (now released), and they were NDA central before the prototype ever entered the building.

    While I certainly don't KNOW if Apple employees / contractors all sign an NDA, there is certainly EVIDENCE that they do.

    And when you sign an NDA, you give away some of your free speech rights -- willingly.

    -Pie

  107. Re:The judge is a moron by Vile+Slime · · Score: 0

    As,

    The other person stated, "You are the moron!"

    The person who gave away the trade secret broke the law.

    The interest of the citizenary here is that contracts that are dutifully signed by willing parties must be upheld by all those parties.

    Hiding behind the cloak of "journalism" is not ever an excuse for breaking the law.

    --
    ---- Go ahead, mod me down, I'll just post it again and you lose your mod points.
  108. Apple down $2300 this month by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK. I'm putting off the purchase of a PowerMac this month and probably skipping the new iPod next. I'm counseling my clients to do the same. Apple, loss so far is $2300. Maybe the RIAA model seems like a good one (suing the people most interested in your product) but it seems like a losing proposition to me.

  109. The easiest way to get rid of guns is to... by usurper_ii · · Score: 1

    The easiest way to get rid of guns in America is to make speeding a felony.

    Saying that no one has the right to "publish information that could have been provided only by someone breaking the law," is like saying the First Amendment could be done away with by passing a law stating that it is illegal to publish information.

    Think about it.

    Usurper_ii

    1. Re:The easiest way to get rid of guns is to... by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      "Saying that no one has the right to publish information that could have been provided only by someone breaking the law."

      And exactly how many ludicrous laws do we have now, and how many will we have in the future?

      I agree, the judge made a serious error. This leaves a hole big enough to drive a presidential administration through.

      ~X~

      --
      ~X~
    2. Re:The easiest way to get rid of guns is to... by argent · · Score: 1

      Yeh, regardless of the merits of the case that's a horrible precedent. There's all kinds of stories that involve breaking the law, starting with reporters tagging along with protesters involved in civil disobedience.

  110. Re:The judge is a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Among other statements, the judge ruled that "an interested public is not the same as the public interest," meaning that today's ruling for Apple was based on the fact that no public interest is served in this particular situation by protecting the journalists' sources. There were other specific references to the relative weight of the public interest, but frankly, you're not worth my time to look them up and cite them.

  111. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Civil cases have no presumption of innocence.

  112. "If this were Microsoft..." by Draconix · · Score: 1

    ...I, as someone who absolutely despises Microsoft Corp., would completely support them on this issue. Please stop whining about how people are supporting this because it's Apple. We're not, we're supporting it because we actually paid attention to what's going on here.

    Journalistic sources are _only_ protected if they're blowing the whistle on wrongful things of public interest. In other words, if a plastics company is secretly dumping toxic waste in the Mississippi River, and an employee leaks this information to the press, they're protected. However, this is a case of someone releasing trade secrets to the public--including Apple's competitors--before the information was ready to be released.

    --
    By reading this you acknowledge that you have read it.
  113. I can't help but wonder "If it have been CNN..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Back in 1995 Steve Young of CNN told me "CNN protects its sources." I was on the phone with him discussing having CNN send a camera crew to interview me the next day.

    I had just told him there was no way he could put me on the air. Intel was at that time reeling from the consequences from the fiasco that was the math flaw in the Pentium processor.

    What I had in my possession made that math flaw look like a minor hang nail.

    I had trade secret documents from Intel, legally released to me under non-disclosure agreement (since expired, so now the tale can be told).

    The contents of those documents revealed flaws in Intel 486 processors that basically rendered them "Unsafe at any speed".

    Countless users were suffering crashes, data loss, God alone only knew what forms and totals of lost productivity, revenue, opportunities were being wracked up daily due to the serious flaws. And even Microsoft was being unfairly painted with creating even less reliable software than they genuinely deserved to be excoriated for (the infamous BSOD's weren't always their fault...)

    Steve was trying to convince me that "the public good" out weighed my honoring Intel's non-disclosure agreement.

    He told me that I could mail the documents to him and that "CNN protects its sources."

    Here it is 10 years later and I wonder, how many folks would agree with Steve and how many will support my decision to not hold Intel accountable for their abuses of the public trust.

    The simple math flaw had reportly cost Intel $600 million for a few million chips shipped. The cost of a recall for the far more serious flaws in the 100's of millions of 486 processors shipped could very well have bankrupted Intel, many 486 chips were soldered to their boards.

    Or at the very least have damaged their reputation so badly they would have had a very hard time regaining the public's trust.

    I just wanted to say, the Judge today served up a nice fat juicy sound bite for the press to report. But he's wrong. The right of large corporations to protect their trade secrets is not absolute.

    I also can't help but wonder what the Judge in today's case would have had to say to CNN if I had been at risk in breaking my non-disclosure agreement with Intel?

    Apple has their problems, and if enough customers are persistent enough they generally own up to them and take responsibility for making things right. And today's ruling didn't cover the kinds of information being disclosed that I had from Intel.

    But if Apple rides success with their iPod's upwards and loses the ability to take responsibility, I hope today's ruling doesn't come back to bite us in the ass.

    Yeah I know, sounds great coming from the guy that covered Intel's ass when he had the chance.

    But for a moment, just a moment there, I was tempted to mail those documents.

    What motivated me to silence wasn't a fear of CNN being forced to turn me over. No, it was the advice I got from the local Intel distributor: if anything about the 486 showed up on CNN, Intel would act like I had released it to CNN, whether Intel could prove it or not.

    Turns out, the company I worked for had already gone to Intel and covered their asses... (and Intel paid them off very nicely too)

    After today's ruling, I wouldn't even be tempted.

    Bravo Judge, on this day that will live on in infamy for the actions of a few in Spain this date 3/11/4, you have indeed struck a blow to protect truth, justice and the American way.

  114. From the Same state that... by exabrial · · Score: 1

    ...the Pledge of Allegence unconstitutional! Buy up lan in Nevada, when the next quake hits and California breaks off into it's own country of raging liberals, you'll have beach front property!

    1. Re:From the Same state that... by Monkey+Junkie · · Score: 1

      blah blah blah...

  115. A Premature Press Release can be VERY damaging by 0x1234 · · Score: 1
    Leaking a press release early is just more press.
    Not so, I'm afraid.

    A classic example, from the early days of the personal computer industry was the demise of the very successful Osborne Computer Company, because of a premature announcment of the Osborne Executive. It killed the company because customer's stopped buying their older Osborne 1 in anticipation of the newer computer (which wasnt ready to ship). Their cash flow stopped and the company went belly up as a direct result.

    The same thing happened to a company that I worked for and one of our most profitable product lines was killed. The delay of our follow-on product allowed our competition to take the market.

    In both of these cases the damage was self inflicted by executives who couldn't keep quite. BUT the lesson by many, is considered a CLASSIC business mistake.

    If someone did want to damage your company, this tactic, at the right time could well do the job.

    1. Re:A Premature Press Release can be VERY damaging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So then why not sell the older software product with a free upgrade to the new product when its done?

  116. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by mark-t · · Score: 1
    But absolutely *NO* strong evidence that the magazine's sources were actually the violators. If the magazine itself should not be held directly accountable for breaking Apple's NDA (which they didn't sign) then why should people whose identies may have just as easily remained anonymous?

    What if the sources had actually been anonymous? This ruling sets a nasty precedent.

  117. Re:The judge is a moron by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

    What is it about the definitions of "cannot" and "no one" which are so hard for you to understand?

    "Cannot" means never. "No one" means no single person. Is that so hard to understand?!

    --
    If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
  118. Re:The judge is a moron by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

    So, lets say Petrochemical Inc. was poisoning our water supply with a specific chemical. People are dying. That chemical is a trade secret. Are you SERIOUSLY saying it should be illegal for the journalist to publish the name of the chemical, merely because some employee of Petrochemical Inc. got it by illegal means?!

    Because IF you believe that, then you believe that profit is more important than free speech. Heck, it's worse than that. You believe that profit is more important than human life!

    --
    If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
  119. BAD HEADLINE - APPLE DID NOT "WIN" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's a BAD HEADLINE for this story. Apple didn't WIN AGAINST BLOGGERS. The judge denied the protective order that the EFF filed in an attempt to stop the subpeona. OF COURSE they're going to appeal the case, and let's hope that the appeals courts are more sympathetic to the cause.

    It's a REAL SHAME that APPLE now SUCKS.

    I used to LOVE APPLE but they went and broke my heart. I will NEVER buy anything from those cold-hearted corporate bastards in cupertino, again. GOOD RIDDANCE.

    BOYCOTT APPLE.

  120. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

    So would you rather the magazine be held accountable?

    Here's the chain: Apple subpoena's the magazine (why do you call it a magazine?)

    Oh, who is this? No one they know! So they subpoena HIM.

    Oh, his brother works at a temp agency?

    Subpoena HIM!

    Oh, his temp agency has someone who works at Apple!

    Subpoena HIM!

    Oh! This person works in the kitchen!

    So finally they have a lead to follow.

    Do you rather Apple sue the magazines, then sue the person, then sue the temp agency?

  121. Trade Secrets and You! by tono · · Score: 5, Informative

    As others have already pointed out, there's plenty of evidence that the 3 webpublishers knew well in advance the information they were given by their sources was protected under an NDA. That's not what I'm going to talk about, or freedom of the press. I'm all for it, my wife is a newspaper reporter for chrissakes. No I'm going to talk about the concept of trade secrets and how it applies to our capitalist economy.

    Trade secrets are inventions,(new products) and revisions to existing products, if there are more things that might fall under the definition, they don't really matter in this case so don't flame me for omitting a few. If a company invents something(ipod) or revises a currently shipping company product(new g5 powerbook, new powermacs, etc) they are allowed to issue NDAs to their employees to keep their traps shut about them with good reason. If company x finds out about the new products before Apple in this case is ready to release it, and company x copies product and releases at the same time before patents have been issued, then Apple is screwed and loses revenue because of it.

    As you may or may not know, under capitalism companies generally invent and innovate new products so that they themselves can gain the revenue from their research. With no trade secrets or NDAs there is no longer an incentive to do research as a company and capitalism fails.

    With that out of the way, the judge was right to back Apple, if he hadn't many other companies would be severely put in a pickle fiscally by employees leaking detailed specs to other companies. Our economy would be in shambles, and you would all be out of jobs. Granted there is a bit of a slippery slope implied there but thats the fundamental logic behind the case.

    The fact that people are upset about Apple getting a big boost in this stage of the case is absolutely astonishing to me. Freedom woohoo and all but there are limits to every freedom, press, speech, right to arms, every single one of them. The websites in question and the sources should be punished, for different reasons, the sources for breech of contract and the websites for publishing information they knew to be acquired in an illegal manner.

    --
    cheese logs keep my wang warm at night.
  122. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1
    Oh you know this for a fact, do you? For all we know, the "leaker" doesn't even work for Apple. Apple may force everyone at Apple to sign an NDA, but Apple doesn't manufacture anything. For all we know, the leaker works in Taiwan and never signed an NDA.

    Well, obviously, this is the whole point in having the court, isn't it? To find out these things. It's not as if there isn't sufficeint evidence to presume that someone has broken an NDA, is it?

  123. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

    Those NDA's were set up so you couldn't sell the info to another company. Publishing it for everyone is a little diffrent and should be treated as such.

    Though firint employees who do this kind of thing is AGAIN not something the government should be getting involved with!

    How the hell is the American government saying it should get involved in stuff like this and the RIAA trials and not getting involved with American companies using child labour.

    America seems perilously close to an ultra conservative free for all state while still making terrible decisions about responsability... I think we may be witnessing the birth of a new unfeasable and monstorous political system... I dub thee CareWhenIt'sInOurInterestship.

  124. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by mark-t · · Score: 1
    My point is that leaves a nasty precedent for sources that _are_ anonymous in the future.

    Any journalist that claims their sources were anonymous could instead be accused of protecting the identity of his sources, and if the identity of the source was required for a criminal investigation, the journalist would go to jail, all because he accepted an anonymous tip.

    If, however, the journalist refuses to accept anonymous sources, then he doesn't get any more stories because after this ruling, nobody will ever want to give out their identity for a tip-off again.

  125. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by ad0gg · · Score: 1

    Do you have proof it came from someone under an NDA? Otherwise apple is just taking a shot in the dark WITHOUT any real evidense.

    --

    Have you ever been to a turkish prison?

  126. Apple, don't go the legal route! by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

    Offer money for information leading to the source of the leaks. Make it a very susbstantial sum. Put a explicit price tag on Steve Jobs' ego. I bet you'd get the information you wanted if you offered a few million. :-)

  127. The Moral of the Story... by catdevnull · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Don't betray your company's trust and NDAs. If they pay you they have the right to request that you obey the rules. It's fair. Don't like it? Quit and program for RMS.

    However, this ruling does put "journalism" on the spot, now doesn't it? Now that the former mighty flood gates of information have been undermined by the little faucets all over the net, news and media sources are rethinking their game. Those of you mourning this day thinking, "alas, that unsinkable bastion of journalistic integrity known as source anonymity" should forget about this and be more worried that Comedy Central's Daily Show rules the roost. Dan Rather was the last Samurai. Welcome to corporate media: cue the hot chicks and violence. I'm thinking the "The Running Man" is probably coming soon. Down with The Man, man.

    Man...what the hell is that smoke coming from that party next door doing to me...those brownies were good, too...I'm hungry, dude....

    --

    I might know what I'm talkin' about, but then again, this is Slashdot...
  128. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by SA+Stevens · · Score: 1

    If so, the law pretty clearly implies that *anyone* receiving that information is tainted.

    'Tainted' in exactly what way? Can Apple hire goons to weld them into a big steel shipping container to prevent them from telling Apple's not-a-secret-anymore to anybody they choose?

    Sorry. Apple needs to police their ranks better. It's as simple as that, no matter how many judges they can afford.

  129. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

    That's the price to pay. If this is TRULY worth printing, it's also truly worth going to jail for.

    MLK went to jail
    Gandhi went to jail

    So if the law is wrong, or the ruling is wrong, all he has to do to protest is go to jail, even if it takes months.

  130. actually, utter stupidity by idlake · · Score: 1

    You would have a point if this were actually valuable trade secret information, but in this case, this whole "secrecy" thing is just a marketing and branding gimmick. What this ruling means is that a company can declare complete nonsense to be a "trade secret" and then compel the public and the courts to go out of its way to do intrusive investigations on the company's behalf.

    Before something as extraordinary happens as curtailing anonymous speech, a company should have to meet a stringent test that the information that was disclosed was actually valuable, that the company took meticulous care to protect that information, and that the company was significantly damaged by the disclosure.

    None of that has happened in this case. In fact, the information wasn't valuable at all, there is no indication that Apple took particular care to protect it other than generic employee agreements, and, if anything, Apple's sales have probably been helped by the publicity.

    We can't change the judge's decision, but we can keep in mind how Apple has behaved towards its biggest fans next time we think about buying one of their products.

  131. Re:Offtopic...? by SA+Stevens · · Score: 1

    The government is simply upholding a contract between two parties.

    So, the governent is 'upholding a contract' between Apple Computer and some mysterious person who may be six or seven layers down a rumor mill. By roping up and dragging into court as many layers as they can drill through.

    Sorry. The government isn't a contract-for-hire Witchhunt.

  132. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ummm, that's what Apple is trying to do, is determine WHERE the leak came from. Obviously it came from SOMEWHERE. If it turns out, through this court action, they find an NDA was broken, then they can take appropriate action. The fact that IP was published is proof there was a leak and they're going to the next logical step. If someone publishes nude picture of children on the internet, you bet the website/ISP would be brought into court to discover who supplied them... the parents would NOT have to do their own investigation or have any potential suspects in mind.

  133. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by SA+Stevens · · Score: 1

    To find out these things. It's not as if there isn't sufficeint evidence to presume that someone has broken an NDA, is it?

    Indeed. And there's evidence that somebody in your county has been producing methamphetamines. Surely you won't mind the police having a walk through your cellar and that of all your neighbors, will you?

  134. Short answer... by spiritraveller · · Score: 1

    No.

    This is a California state court ruling. It carries no weight in a Federal court.

    1. Re:Short answer... by UniverseIsADoughnut · · Score: 1

      That doesn't make it invalid. Especially since the case is a california case.

      Furthermore if it's appealed it will just end up getting appealed in a federal court which will rule the same way.

      The ruling was exactly correct and this ruling will stand.

    2. Re:Short answer... by spiritraveller · · Score: 1

      That doesn't make it invalid. Especially since the case is a california case.

      I didn't say it was invalid.

      Furthermore if it's appealed it will just end up getting appealed in a federal court which will rule the same way.

      The decision is based on California law. Federal law does not protect reporters from revealing sources. California law does.

      This is not going to go to a Federal court, because there is no Federal issue at stake. Federal courts do not pass on issues of state law.

      The only place to appeal this is to a higher court in California.

  135. Yes! by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

    If it's a bad law, BREAK IT.

    That also means you pay the consequences. Then break it again. Get everyone else to break the law. Over and over and over again until the law is changed.

    It's called living according to your own standard, especially in the face of a bad law.

    What 'bad law' exists here, in Apple's case?

  136. Re:A refreshing victory for corporate synchophants by jp10558 · · Score: 1

    I do have to ask how he's doing that. I think it makes a big difference. I mean, if I put out an ad, or on a website - send me info on stuff - that's very different than seeking out, contacting and encouraging employees under an NDA to break their contract and the law. I think the former ought to be ok, while the latter should be inciting a crime, or conspiracy to commit or whatever the civil term is.

    --
    Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
  137. Re:A refreshing victory for corporate synchophants by jp10558 · · Score: 1

    I would not describe the printing of illegally obtained information for a profit to be "simply telling the truth".

    But is someone telling you information illegial? I mean, breaking into a place, either physically or electronically to get info makes the info definately illegially obtained.

    However, someone telling you something at a general e-mail address is entirely different.

    --
    Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
  138. Geez! Where's the proof? by nicholas. · · Score: 1

    The idea that dePlume solicited employees and entices them to break NDA is what really pisses me off. I mean sure, it may be completely true. He may have gone up to engineers in a cloak and fedora as they were leaving the Apple campus and offered them insane amounts of money to give him the goodies. Or he may have gotten an anonymous email from some random Hotmail account. The point is that we don't know. The only way we can know is by forcing him to reveal his sources. Unless there is some specific evidence of him enticing people to break their NDAs I don't see how this judgment can stand.

  139. Yelling 'Fire!' in a crowded theater? by oblivion95 · · Score: 1

    > By your argument it should be legal to yell the proverbial "fire" in a crowded theater... Arg! This is the worst anti-free speech argument there is, and I hear it all the time. The fact is, you have an INVIOLABLE right to yell Fire in a crowded theater, for the very simple and obvious reason that there might in fact be a fire. If there's not a fire, then you can be punished afterwards. But there is no PRIOR RESTRAINT against yelling Fire, and certainly no outright prohibition. If you see a fire, or if you even suspect that there might be a fire, please let us know.

    1. Re:Yelling 'Fire!' in a crowded theater? by Nasarius · · Score: 1
      Arg! This is the worst anti-free speech argument there is, and I hear it all the time.

      Probably because it was used as an example in the landmark case of Schenck v. United States.

      The fact is, you have an INVIOLABLE right to yell Fire in a crowded theater, for the very simple and obvious reason that there might in fact be a fire.

      Okay, now you're just being obtuse. Try not taking everything so literally, and understanding context. Or just look at the original:
      "The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theatre and causing a panic."

      --
      LOAD "SIG",8,1
  140. Come on Apple apologists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come defend your perfect and sinless god, you spineless twats. Apple can do no wrong, after all.

    1. Re:Come on Apple apologists by Hitchcock_Blonde · · Score: 0

      Well, they didn't do wrong here.

      --
      Karma Schmarma
  141. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

    But absolutely *NO* strong evidence that the magazine's sources were actually the violators.

    Doesn't matter. In California, it's illegal to publish information that a reasonable person would know is confidential. The big label on the document saying "APPLE CONFIDENTIAL" would have been a clue.

    Secondly, I'm skeptical of your conclusion that the "ruling sets a nasty precedent," seeing as how your comment didn't have anything to do with the ruling.

  142. Re:I can't help but wonder "If it have been CNN... by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

    The judge is right. Since when is knowing if the next iPod mini will have a colour screen any of the public's business? AFAIK, the majority of what Think Secret reports are not to do with Apple knowingly shipping faulty goods or anything of such nature. Your very long, well written post entirly misses the point.

  143. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by znu · · Score: 1

    All the journalist has to do in that case to avoid being held in contempt is go in, and testify under oath that the source was anonymous. If the government wants to try him for perjury, they can give it a shot, but they'll have to prove it.

    --
    This space unintentionally left unblank.
  144. Re:The judge is a moron by idsofmarch · · Score: 1

    I think he did allow for such things, including acknowledging whistleblower laws, et. al. He noted that there is a difference between something in the public interest versus the interest of the public. That right there is a nice bright line between schematics and mere rumors.

    --
    Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
  145. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple had strong enough evidence that this information wasn't just accidently leaked to convince the court that trade secret laws had been violated

    Correction. The judge reviewed the initial case documents and what Apple presented during oral arguments on the one issue of the revealing source(s) subpoena and concluded (without ruling on the facts of the case) that it looks like criminal law has been broken and that it looks like the info provided by the subpoena will assist the case in moving forward. The judge did not say that trade secrets laws had been violated. He only said he thought they probably had and that inhibiting PowerPage's publishing business was okay to see if his ISP's confidential info might help Apple to prove its civil case.

  146. Re:Offtopic...? by Maserati · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "...who has broken no laws, I might add"

    mmmm.... Well, Think Secret is somewhat of an accessory-after-the-fact. If an NDA was violated - and Apple did show that the leaked information was both very detailed and clearly marked confidential - then a crime has been committed. If a crime has been committed then the (alleged) victim has a right to pursue the criminal through the courts. Even a New York Times or Washington Post reporter would have been required to turn over their source if this fact pattern had applied.

    Some people are offended at any restriction on the individual's right to say absolutely anything they want to [1]. That's fine. I just want to hear them make the case for a mandate of a totally transparent society, it's usually pretty funny. An absolute freedom of speach means a total lack of privacy. My usual argument is the classic 'give me your Social Security number', and follow any good defence of a refusal with 'if someone stole your info, should he be allowed to tell me ?'

    Yes, that was a strawman - and they always need a brain - but it's locally scoped. And I wanted an excuse to make a point. And a reuctio ad absurdum, not that ther's anything wrong with that one.

    Another argumaent in favor of this ruling is the fact that an NDA is a contract. 'If you promise not to tell anyone,w e'll tell you something' plus a signature make a contract. Courts exist to enforce contracts. If the court didn't demand the production of the offender then the public should have be outraged.

    Most people complaining are ignoring a LOT of details, the others can't support the implications of their whole position.

    [1] Any free society desperately needs this vocal minority, however annoyon gthey sometimes are.

    --
    Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
  147. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is Apple entitled to know these publisher's trade secrets?

  148. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by MoneyT · · Score: 1

    So if you sign a contract for a loan repayment and then fail to make payments, it's the bank's fault for not policing their borrowers better? There's only so much policing you can do before you're locking people in cages for the entire time they work for you.

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  149. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

    The term "trade secret" has a specific legal meaning. Look it up.

  150. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by MoneyT · · Score: 1

    Nice strawman, ignoring of course that if your analogy were to be applicable, you would be publishing pictures of this persons meth lab to the net, and thus the government would have reason to believe that you are connected to this person.

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  151. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by MoneyT · · Score: 1

    You really need to read up on law and case history to realize that it is routine to compel journalists to reveal their sources. In fact, it's routine to compel anyone to reveal their sources. It hasn't had a chilling effect yet. Why? Because we have whistle blower laws in place, and in this case, it was decided those laws don't apply.

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  152. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by mark-t · · Score: 1
    I don't think anyone would question whether or not the source was actually anonymous, only that the journalist's willingness to accept anonymous information sources in the first place could be construed as an attempt by him to conceal the identities of his sources. That if he weren't trying to ensure that the identities of his sources remained hidden, he would insist on verifying the identity of his sources and refuse to accept anonymous sources.

    But as I said, after this precedent, it's unlikely anyone would ever want to submit a non-anonymous tip.

  153. Re:A refreshing victory for corporate synchophants by dr.badass · · Score: 1

    But is someone telling you information illegial? I mean, breaking into a place, either physically or electronically to get info makes the info definately illegially obtained.

    However, someone telling you something at a general e-mail address is entirely different.


    Let's distinguish the two parties here -- the NDA-violator and the website operator.

    The former breaches his contract to provide the information to the later, the later, knowing, or having reason to know of the breach of contract, reproduces the information on his website.

    What might not be clear is that this breach of contract is effectively the same thing as theft under the UTSA. (This doesn't mean it is equal to theft, it just means that it applies equally when dealing with trade secrets, which are defined in part by a company's attempts at keeping it secret, including such contracts.)

    The other unclear part is that the website operator knows, or has reason to know, that the information was obtained through a breach of contract. In this case the burden of proof is pretty light, as the sites were openly soliciting insider information, and openly claiming that they had it. It's only reasonable for them to assume that they would get such information, and the sites themselves haven't claimed ignorance in defence, so it's a non-issue.

    So, what I meant by "the printing of illegally obtained information" was that the sites were at fault for printing the information, not for illegally obtaining it. I recognize that it wasn't entirely clear.

    For what it's worth, the sites *may have* obtained the information illegally, by inducement, or bribery. As far as I know they have not been accused of doing so, but it may be that evidence of such just hasn't been revealed yet, especially considering that the source of the leaks has yet to be identified.

    That's just speculation though. I don't believe it's the case, but I think many people would feel differently about it if it were, all else being the same.

    --
    Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
  154. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I did. It's in the ruling. So, I ask my question again, Why is Apple entitled to know these publisher's trade secrets?

  155. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Slack3r78 · · Score: 1

    If you'd actually read the judge's opinion, you would realize that this ruling *FOLLOWS* precedent set both by California courts and the US Supreme Courts far more than it sets it.

    As the Judge stated, the evidence was strong enough to suggest that the subpeona should go forward, and met the criteria set by a court in an earlier case for compelling journalists to identify their sources.

    But that may have taken more than 30 seconds of reading and a knee jerk reaction, right?

  156. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you Dave's other account? I dare you to support your statement that "it is routine to compel journalists to reveal their sources." I want to follow your advice so I expect you to cite your sources.

  157. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theater is not protected.

    Can you cite case law where this actually happened and was ruled illegal?

  158. totally irrelevant by johnny_sas · · Score: 1

    That case would have been for the public good: a flawed and defective product was release into the public market place, screwing anyone that bought the thing.

    This case revolved around information on an *unreleased* product; did you get that? *UNRELEASED* NO ONE IN THE PUBLIC WAS AFFECTED.

    What you state is to be compared more closely with a car with a known, reproducable defect, that the company wants to keep under wraps, ie. not serving the public good.

    There's a HUGE difference; get a clue.

  159. I am going out on limb... by Enrique1218 · · Score: 1

    but I think we should accept the judges ruling here. There is a significant difference between Apple-rumor sites protecting Apple employees who leak information and a news organization protecting a government leak. The difference is that ThinkSecret and PowerPage protect them to protect their business wheareas that hypothetical news organization is protecting something more- our rights. A government's secret activities are of greater consequence to public then product lineup of the next Macworld. In the end, we are going know all about them and be wow just the same. Let's be honest, their business is to published Apple trade secrets. If Apple sees this as a serious problem, the company has the right to seek protection in the law.

    However, there is always a chance that Steve Jobs would use Mac OSX's pretty interface to send subliminal messages in a effort to take over the world. In that case, we should all donate our bodies to protect these brave bloggers. But, since he hasn't use his mysterious power of reality distortion to that end, we should all put down those aluminum hats.

    --
    You don't have to be smart to use a Mac, you just have to be smart enough to buy one
  160. Oh my... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How will the Apple fanboys on /. reconcile this with their belief system? ...as if a million Safari browsers cried out in horror...

  161. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 0

    What kind of retarded argument is that?

  162. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    My point is that requiring to know these people's identites is tantamount to presuming that they are guilty until proven innocent (especially given the entirely plausible explanation that the magazine's sources never worked for apple and they heard it from someone else just the way the magazine did). That's what I object to.

    That's just your incorrect interpretation of the law. Revealing the identity of the source is in no way tantamount to presuming they are guilty. It is what it is, a revealing of an identity. If the person identified never worked for Apple, then presumably they also have a source for the information, and they will be asked to reveal it. Why is that so hard to understand?

    And as I asked you elsewhere, how does this make the magazine "even more liable"? Do you know what the word means? Maybe you should check it out?

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  163. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    That's not a precedent. That's the way the law already works.

    The exception, and the protection for journalists and their confidential sources, are the shield and whistle blower laws. These laws are in place because it is beneficial for the public to know when there is corruption in government or accounting improprieties at corporation (etc.). The person blowing the whistle on the wrongful behavior deserves to be protected.

    In this case, there was no whistle blowing. No information about illegal business practices was revealed. What was revealed were trade secrets.

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  164. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And what journalist would publish a story based entirely on an anonymous source?!?

  165. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 2, Informative

    Just so we are clear on what you are talking about. . . .

    Do you have any idea how serious perjury is? The punishment of perjury is SEVERE, much worse than just refusing to testify and being held in contempt of court.

    So what are the chances of not getting caught? Well, you're basically putting your life into the hands of someone you know does not respect agreements or signed contracts.

    Oh, and there's no statute of limitations on Perjury. If the truth comes out in ten or twenty years, you can still be prosecuted in court as a criminal. And you're doing this to protect someone in a civil trial? So they won't lose their job?

    The main reason not to engage in perjury is because it's wrong to bear false witness. But there are a lot of very serious reasons why it's not smart.

    But don't take my word for it. Ask any lawyer about Perjury, the risks involved, the penalties, etc.

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  166. Hmmm. by Aldric · · Score: 1
    Guess that means sources will have to stay annonymous from now on. Don't know why they didn't in the first place, I certainly would have done. A journalist can't reveal what he/she doesn't know after all.

    As for Apple... see that category you are in? It's the same one Microsoft is in. I will never ever EVER buy a single one of your products for the rest of my life. No one actually needs you - the combination of AMD64 and Linux more than beats anything you put out. After Linux has killed Windows, OS X is next.

    1. Re:Hmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not likely with the geek mentality of linux

    2. Re:Hmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, OK.

      As an Apple fan, and as someone who understands the value of NDAs for protecting innovative ideas until they can be fully developed and marketed, I'm sorry you can't comprehend that Apple is in the right in this case. And I'm sorry that this case is making you turn your back entirely on Apple's product line. You're hurting no one but yourself there.

      But again speaking as an Apple fan, you should know that I'll be perfectly happy to move to Linux, if/when it beats out OS X as you describe. Since Linux doesn't have anywhere near OS X's hardware support, ease of use, or polishedness right now, I don't see Apple vanishing anytime soon. And Apple's products keep getting better -- if it's products weren't so innovative and ahead of everyone else's offerings, rumor-mongering sites like ThinkSecret wouldn't exist. But if/when a system that meets my needs better than OS X is available, I'll switch to it, like any other half-intelligent person. Apple fans like Apple because it makes superior products, not because we're logo-blinded morons.

  167. Re:A refreshing victory for corporate synchophants by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    Thank you for putting that all so succinctly and without rancor, and reminding some of us (again) of the facts and the law.

    I understand where Delmoi, the GP, is coming from. I don't think it's uncommon for us to feel sympathy for the underdog, for a David taking on a Goliath.

    I also think Delmoi deserves credit for stating his views plainly, and not trying to couch it in legal arguments that he doesn't really understand, like so many are doing (repeatedly!).

    Delmoi, if you read this, I salute you for your refreshing straight-forwardness and honesty. I disagree with you, but I don't think you're an idiot. You're giving us the truth of your gut feeling without resorting to half-assed sophistry.

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  168. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by dr.badass · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Can you cite case law where this actually happened and was ruled illegal?

    No, and I suspect it never has actually happened as such. The phrase itself comes from a Supreme Court ruling (Schenck v. US, 1919) concerning the publication of Socialist propaganda during World War I.

    If I remember correctly, many parts of the ruling have been overturned or supersceded, but the particular principle, that free speech is not absolute, still stands.

    In fact, I'd say that speech is more protected now than it was at that ruling, when sedition laws were in full effect. Printing anti-government propaganda is a national pasttime these days, but back then, it'd get you thrown in jail.

    You have the right to speak your mind, your beliefs, your opinions, your lies, your truths, your propaganda, you even have the right to tell people to rape and kill and steal and overthrow the government. You do not have the right to willfully endanger the lives of others by causing false panic or inciting immediate criminal behavior.

    I am not a lawyer, but I play one on Slashdot.

    --
    Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
  169. free publicity and top level disclosures by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If a high level executive (HLE) leaks a story to the press to get the PR rolling that is good business; and then when someone else in the chain of command does the same thing without top level or top marketing management approval, this person is fired and or sued.

    Apple must have bad in house politics if their people are leaking stories without the upper management's approval. And presently it must surely be getting worse.

    OR

    Maybe the sources in this case were asked by the HLE's to do this to get the free press rolling for it because no one cares when the HLE leaks a story; the free press is getting savy to being manipulated by the HLE's and using a low level leak is more easily swallowed by the press and then the real icing on the cake is when the HLE's decide to prosecute just to get ball rolling because the leak was not getting enough attention. And he mercilessly sacrifices the employee he asked to do his bidding.

    This all about the free press and its manipulation by private interests to get publicity and media attention without paying for it.

    Asteroids have been around for a long time as space rocks and as a game.

    And about capitalism, I thought that it was about the best product with the best price which wins the market share not the first one on the market even though that does give it an advantage. And that the consumer benefits from competition in that this proccess assures that companies must strive to have the best product not just the first to market even though that does have its advantages but will not sustain a shoddy product for very long.

    Don't be evil; just hire a poor person to do it for you.

  170. Bad judge by gr8_phk · · Score: 1
    First, there is no law prohibiting people from disclosing company information (except securities laws concerning releases during certain times) so they have not committed a crime. What they probably did is violate terms of some non-disclosure agreement. That's more like breaking a contract, but it's not a "crime". You can't really say someone violated their NDA until you know who leaked the information and produce the signed NDA. This judge is probably trying to reinforce the smackdown on the press after the CIA identity leak - which probably was a crime. This is not the same thing.

    That's not to say I condone violating your NDA.

  171. Another humble opinion from a simple reader by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    Your comment was definitely dumber. On the dumb scale it gets an 8.6, but that's only because of the Russian judges hurting your overall score.

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  172. You're wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The fact that people look at the sites is proof there is a public interest in this information.

    As to apple's sizzle, who cares? Who said Apple has the constituional right to "sizzle"?

    You're the perfect reason to hate apple fanbois.

  173. Are you for real? by lmlloyd · · Score: 1

    I know that it is hard for a lot of people to think clearly about his particular story, because they are so busy thinking differently, but does the entire significance of this ruling escape everyone? This ruling basically says, that unless there is some public good being protected, that a news venue can be compelled to reveal their sources, simply because a company wants them to. Now, perhaps on first glance people are too tied up in this particular example to grasp the ramifications of something like this, so let me point something out.

    Every business deal ever done has been covered by some sort of confidentiality agreement. This isn't something that just effects geeks and Apple fan sites. People Magazine, Variety, Hollywood Reporter, Ain't it Cool, E! and imdb all cover an industry that pretty much by its very definition will never generate any news that actually constitutes a threat to the public good, and all of those outlets rely heavily on confidential sources that are all guaranteed to be breaking a confidentiality agreement, as there is no industry on earth more secretive and sensitive to leaks than the entertainment industry. Yet by this ruling, they might as well all shut their doors today, because if this ruling stands, any time they want, Time Warner, or Sony, or any other media company can subpoena their sources to find out who leaked the information. You can bet, that as soon as that starts happening, the amount of entertainment news coming out will drop to a trickle.

    Now, I'm not saying that would be necessarily be a bad thing for the world, but it would certainly put a large segment of the media out of business. Could everyone please get over their "Apple is great, so anything they do must be great" mentality for a few minutes to think about the floodgates of problems a ruling like this can cause. No, I'm not talking about anything related to the legitimacy of blogs as journalism, I'm talking about the future of any business journalism in an era where the burden is on the reporter and editor to demonstrate some public good before deciding whether or not to publish a story.

    The argument, and some case law has now been made that simple curiosity is not a high-enough standard to justify the publication of internal information a company does not want released, without the disclosure of sources. That means that *(theoretically) The Wall Street Journal now needs to decide if there is a demonstrable public good to be served in reporting a story based on confidential sources about a company. Of course, by this ruling, serving the public good now carries some meaning beyond just informing the public. There is now some requirement to inform the public of something 'important.'

    Is that really how we want our press to be run? A system where by default companies are assumed to have the right to do everything secretly, unless someone can demonstrate a compelling reason that their plans should be public?

    *Mind you, I say theoretically, because functionally I think this really does come down to an issue of the legitimacy of blogs, since I notice that while Apple has sued fan sites several times for outing their future plans, they have yet to sue Ziff Davis, or The Wall Street Journal for doing the same.

  174. Free lunch covered by NDA by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    I'm dying to know: What did you have for lunch today?

    e. The reality is these agreements are very broad and could easily be used to run roughshod over other rights.

    So, what do you suggest, that all NDA contracts be considered null and void?

    I'll agree that there is potential for abuse (does the NDA cover thoughts you have? while at home?), but there's no abuse of NDA contracts by Apple in this particular case.

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    1. Re:Free lunch covered by NDA by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      I had beer for lunch.

      daveschroeder seems to believe in the utter sanctimony of NDAs, and I'm simply suggesting that these things must be considered on a case-by-case basis. With an EDU address, my guess is that dave believes these agreements are more special than they actually are.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    2. Re:Free lunch covered by NDA by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      d I'm simply suggesting that these things must be considered on a case-by-case basis

      You win this time, Nutscrape. [evil laugh] but I'll be back! [disappears in a puff of smoke. or maybe a particularly thick fart cloud]

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  175. Re:I can't help but wonder "If it have been CNN... by macjim · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you had read the judge's words (or a judge then saying the same) you would have been encouraged to believe that CNN would not release your name. "Unlike the whistleblower who discloses a health, safety or welfare hazard affecting all, or the government employee who reveals mismanagement or worse by our public officials, (the enthusiast sites) are doing nothing more than feeding the public's insatiable desire for information," Judge Kleinberg wrote. Given that Intel's dodgy chips affected the user's welfare, your name would have been protected. Of course, that would not stop Intel from finding you through other investigations - as you suggest they would have.

  176. And the bad part is...? by jpellino · · Score: 1

    So people have less reason to tear up the legally binding NDA they freely agreed to.
    So a few rumor sites become obsolete. So did buggy whips.
    These guys are really just in competition with each other to see who can spill the beans seventy-THREE hours before Steve takes the stage.
    Whoo-hoo.
    Speculate all you want, but once contracts are breached or laws are violated, you have to deal with the consequences.

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
  177. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

    So if you sign a contract for a loan repayment and then fail to make payments, it's the bank's fault for not policing their borrowers better?

    Ironically, yes, it is. If a bank fails to do due diligence on a borrower, they're required to absorb the cost of a bankruptcy on the part of the borrower.

    --

    ---
    Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
    (I read with sigs off.)
  178. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

    "Tainted" in the legal sense. Having received that information makes you subject to action under UTSA, specifically the part that says "acquisition of a trade secret of another by a person who knows or has reason to know that the trade secret was acquired by improper means; or (ii) disclosure or use of a trade secret of another without express or implied consent by a person who (A) used improper means to acquire knowledge of the trade secret; or (B) at the time of disclosure or use knew or had reason to know that his knowledge of the trade secret was (I) derived from or through a person who has utilized improper means to acquire it; (II) acquired under circumstances giving rise to a duty to maintain its secrecy or limit its use; or (III) derived from or through a person who owed a duty to the person seeking relief to maintain its secrecy or limit its use; or (C) before a material change of his position, knew or had reason to know that it was a trade secret and that knowledge of it had been acquired by accident or mistake."

    Apple can, in fact, seek injunction and relief against those in breach of UTSA. Yes, they could seek economic damages against Think Secret, legally, in the amount of both their economic loss and TS's economic gain from the breach. That they're only seeking information reflects pretty well on Apple, what with the fact that I doubt they'd lose a request to receive all advertising revenue TS took in during the period surrounding the information at question's initial posting.

    Sorry, but the law remains the law, and you remain wrong.

    --

    ---
    Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
    (I read with sigs off.)
  179. This ruling is the DMCA of information in general by sacrilicious · · Score: 1

    This ruling does to general information what the DMCA did to technical circumvention/enabling information.

    --
    - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
  180. Re:I can't help but wonder "If it have been CNN... by themusicgod1 · · Score: 1

    Since when is knowing if the next iPod mini will have a colour screen any of the public's business? Since when is knowing if the next iPod mini will have a colour screen not the public's business?

    --
    GENERATION 26: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
  181. You obviously don't care about personal privacy. by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    Would you mind posting your Social Security number, your date of birth, place of birth, passport number, any credit card numbers (including exp.dates and security codes) and your banking pin here on slashdot? Maybe "GPL" them? (or BSD License. I'm easy.)

    If you don't feel comfortable divulging your personal information, would you mind if someone else did?

    Of course you don't mind! If you objected, you'd be violating my right to free speech.

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  182. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by defile · · Score: 1

    Do you have any idea how serious perjury is? The punishment of perjury is SEVERE, much worse than just refusing to testify and being held in contempt of court.

    How can you stick someone with perjury if they don't actually admit that they lied?

    Lets say that the journalist is compelled to testify. "I'm sorry, I can't tell you anything about the source. I just don't remember. I do not recall. I don't remember. I would answer if I knew. Sorry. It might come back to me some day. Gosh, I'm such a dumbass."

    Exactly how is a court supposed to prove that he really doesn't remember right now? Last I checked, it's technically impossible to see what's going on in someone's mind. If I can commit perjury just because I honestly don't remember something, I'm never going anywhere near a courtroom.

  183. Re:I can't help but wonder "If it have been CNN... by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    So, basically you're saying that I shouldn't have trusted my 486 and that the value of Pi isn't 3? No wonder my rocket ships all crash!

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  184. Shoubd be "Sarcastically Insightful" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Word is out. Apple is against freedom.

    War on brainwashed fundamentalist MacFanBoys!

  185. Well done Apple... by PhotoBoy · · Score: 0, Troll

    ... looks like I won't be buying any more of your products. I might be one person but if there are enough who feel like I do then Apple will have to start taking note.

    1. Re:Well done Apple... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lol, Apple zealots strike again by modding someone's valid opinion as trolling. Another good reason never to buy apple one might say?

  186. US Supreme Court Precedent by zieroh · · Score: 1
    Nonetheless, a precedent set by the US Supreme Court is effectively law. This particular precedent (most likely a mistake by a clerk, btw) was made over a hundred years ago, and has been slowly eroding the rights of actual human beings in favor of corporations the whole time.

    This article is a pretty thorough description of how the mistake was made, and what the circumstances around it were.

    A shorter description from another source (for those who just can't bring themselves to read TFA):

    Then came a legal event that would not be understood for decades (and remains baffling even today), an event that would change the course of American history. In Santa Clara County vs. Southern Pacific Railroad, a dispute over a railbed route, the US Supreme Court deemed that a private corporation was a "natural person" under the US Constitution and therefore entitled to protection under the Bill of Rights. Suddenly, corporations enjoyed all the rights and sovereignty previously enjoyed only by the people, including the right to free speech.

    This 1886 decision ostensibly gave corporations the same powers as private citizens. But considering their vast financial resources, corporations thereafter actually had far more power than any private citizen. They could defend and exploit their rights and freedoms more vigorously than any individual and therefore they were more free. In a single legal stroke, the whole intent of the American Constitution -- that all citizens have one vote, and exercise an equal voice in public debates -- had been undermined. Sixty years after it was inked, Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas concluded of Santa Clara that it "could not be supported by history, logic or reason." One of the great legal blunders of the nineteenth century changed the whole idea of democratic government.
    --
    People who say "sheeple" have about as much sophistication as an AOL user, and in fact are probably actually AOL users.
  187. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by SeanAhern · · Score: 1

    a confidential set of slides clearly labeled "Apple Need-to-Knox Confidential."

    Containing Apple's secret gelatin recipe!

  188. civil vs criminal by Stu+Charlton · · Score: 1

    Are you for real? Now we are determining which crimes are more important? Breaking the law is breaking the law. Period. End of story.

    Considering this is a civil case, this isn't quite true. It's rare to be jailed for civil cases. It's all about getting hurt in the pocket book -- fines, liens, etc.

    Then in the criminal system there are misdemeanors vs. felonies.... punishments vary.

    --
    -Stu
    1. Re:civil vs criminal by Rydia · · Score: 1

      But he statement is still true. Just because fines and such vary doesn't mean that some classes of laws are less "important" than others, merely more eggregious or harmful to the parties/public.

  189. If It Means No More Think Secret? by EXTomar · · Score: 1

    If it means no more dubious "magizines" like [i]Think Secret[/i] and their ilk then bust out the crystal and caviar!

    Too many people fail to realize that this case was about people breaking NDAs and shielding them. [i]Think Secret[/i] isn't doing the world any favors. They are air Apple's clean laundry (as opposed to their dirty ones). I'm pretty sure that any other reputable journalistic publication would have scrapped any story that was based on the stealing of information like this.

    Simply put, unless it had something to do with Apple using child slave labor or something equally henious against the public good, why does anyone involved think they can ignore Apple's carefully crafted NDA?

  190. um by Stu+Charlton · · Score: 1

    Personally, I think that if a precedent is truly being set that any publication can be forced to reveal any source who broke an NDA, provided that the material doesn't address a threat to the public welfare, then pretty much the entire tech reporting industry might as well pack up and find new jobs, because companies are quite capable of putting out their own carefully controlled press releases without all the expense of 'reporters' having to copy them down and parrot them back on websites and in magazines.

    That was quite the run-on sentence.

    This isn't a legal precedent. It's pretty much in line with legal history. What makes it a pseudo-precedent is the whole red herring of "are bloggers journalists?" and "aren't journalists protected?". If the New York Times published this , there WOULD be a similar action by Apple. The media and blogosphere has been spinning this as some sort of precedent... It's just the first case of a new medium, pushing the boundaries, being challenged by old laws.

    And BTW, *most* of the tech press already is just regurgitations of press releases combined with some opinion / analysis columns. They really don't rely on leaked information. Infoworld, News.com, InformationWeek, eWeek, etc. have started to quote bloggers and rumour sites, but generally their stuff is based on conversations with spokespeople, analysts, & regurgitated PR.

    Sure, this is why rumour sites are so interesting -- it feels like investigative journalism. However, investigative journalism has always had risk associated with it, especially by those who do the talking. You have to be DAMN SURE that what your leaking is in the public interest, because employers have a legal right to sue them in civil court for breach of contract. The journalists have to prove the story was in the public interest to withhold their names.

    We have whistleblower laws to protect these people, and they were deemed by the judge to be inapplicable in this case. Even those laws tend to be of limited value -- because even with those laws, while you can't be sued for breach of contract, your career is effectively over -- no one will want to hire you because you've broken your word in the past.

    Again -- leaking secret information -- not a good idea, in almost any circumstance. The law and even society at large is against you at every turn. People here probably don't agree with that, but it's a long, long road to come up with an alternative system....

    --
    -Stu
  191. Keeping The Apple Devotees Happy by cannuck · · Score: 0

    I may be missing something here. Apple releases information on "new" products or "new " services to the executives of MUGs all the time (Macintosh Users Groups) around the world. And yes all these cultists sign non-disclosures. So at any given moment there are tens of thousands of people who know Apple's "secrets". It's all part of the continued BRANDING of Apple's cultist- devotees - to build up a demand (for repackaged 4 year old technology - that looks "Nice"). But at the same time it is alleged Jobs (as explained in the book about Jobs and Apple) screwed his partner Wozniak - so is this all about Jobs wanting to screw anyone who gets in his way? Just to be a fly on the wall.

  192. this isn't new by Stu+Charlton · · Score: 1

    does the entire significance of this ruling escape everyone? This ruling basically says, that unless there is some public good being protected, that a news venue can be compelled to reveal their sources, simply because a company wants them to.

    This isn't about "Apple is great". Apple is using the law to squeeze out something many Apple fans, including myself, enjoy -- rumours and leaks. They're using it against individuals that don't have a lot of money. That's rarely something that one enjoys seeing.

    Yet Apple isn't doing anything evil here: speech isn't getting squelched. We can talk about Asteroid and other leaked products freely. They're protecting their interests by finding out who breached contract so they can penalize them. A contract was broken, and consequences ensue.

    What this whole affair seems to be doing is educating the techie masses on what has been the case for years. No one has a right to leak information protected under contract law. Journalists can be coerced through threat of contempt to give up their sources.

    Whistleblower laws exist to only protect cases that are in the public interest. Otherwise, the law and society will be against you at every turn. Even if you successfully get protected by whistleblower laws, you'll probably leave your job, because it's going to be a hostile environment there. Unfortunately it will be very hard to find another job -- people won't hire you after speaking up.

    Yeah, it sucks. It would be a long and hard road to change this, if enough people wanted to. Somehow I don't think "enough" will want to -- there have been much graver cases involving criminal actions and death that didn't stir up the public's interest to ensure whistleblowers could live a decent life afterwards.

    --
    -Stu
    1. Re:this isn't new by lmlloyd · · Score: 1

      This is completely about "Apple is great." If Lucasfilm took Ain't it Cool News to court over leaking information about the new Star Wars film, in an effort to find out who leaked the information, it would be a public relations nightmare! Star Wars fans would be incensed at the idea that people could be fired for giving them tidbits about their favorite movie. However, if you cross the cult of Apple, everyone is suddenly more than willing to side with their hero Jobs over anyone who pisses him off. I actually find it more than a little disturbing how self-loathing Apple fans are, that time and time again they will side with their proxy family at Apple over their own self-interest. This is hardly the first time Apple has used friendly Sillicon Valley courts to squash avid Mac fans for being too avid.

      This whole "wistleblower" thing is the biggest crock. Apple is a public company, who's marketing material and product roll-out plans are not covered by any traditional interpretation of a trade secret. We aren't talking about someone who leaked procedures for a new method of physical vapor deposition to optimize production of 300mm wafers here, we are talking about someone who leaked internal marketing information. Apple would be extremely hard pressed to show any real damage from this leak, and will be even more hard pressed to defend this information as a trade secret. As such, it is irresponsible for the judge to compel the ISP to provide the email logs to Apple. Traditional legal procedure would demand that Apple demonstrate an actual harm from the leak, or that they prove this was a sensitive trade secret, as well as proving that there was no way this information could possibly have been obtained by anyone who was not under a contractual obligation to keep the information confidential. Instead of practicing due diligence, they decided to short-cut the whole process by saying that the information might be a trade secret, might have done damage, and might have come from someone under contractual obligation, but they really needed to know who leaked it before they could determine that!

      There is no doubt that anytime you disclose an individual's private communications, you are doing harm to the individual, companies have no such protection. A company has no legally protected right to confidentiality of its documents and papers. As such, they must rely on contractual agreements to protect their secrecy. That means that in a case like this the individuals legally protected right to privacy must be weighed against the company's right to enforce their contract. I think it is a very bad trade off when we decide that even without any concrete proof of contractual violation, nor any proof of damage to the company, the company's right to protect its contract summarily overrides the individual's right to privacy.

      You say this isn't anything new, and in today's pro-corporate America you have a bit of a point, but previous bad decisions don't magically turn new bad decisions into good ones.

    2. Re:this isn't new by Stu+Charlton · · Score: 1

      Instead of practicing due diligence, they decided to short-cut the whole process by saying that the information might be a trade secret, might have done damage, and might have come from someone under contractual obligation, but they really needed to know who leaked it before they could determine that!

      There is no "might" about the trade secret. It was deemed to be information that could not have been revealed except through breaking an NDA or through corporate espionage.

      Contracts would be useless if we could ignore them just because we felt like it. That's the point of this case -- the contract should be enforced and remedies can be saught by default, and only in extenuating circumstances should it be overlooked (such as if the public good was served by breaking the contract).

      That means that in a case like this the individuals legally protected right to privacy must be weighed against the company's right to enforce their contract. I think it is a very bad trade off when we decide that even without any concrete proof of contractual violation, nor any proof of damage to the company, the company's right to protect its contract summarily overrides the individual's right to privacy.

      Unfortunately, people don't have as clearly spelled out right to privacy. They haven't fought for one, or at least their representatives haven't. Companies, however, HAVE faught for this -- trade secret law.

      Which is why we're back where we are. Enough people have to speak up about "right to privacy" for it to mean anything. There are positive developments here (the telemarketer no-call list) but otherwise it's a rare confluence of events that stokes the public enough to put a stake in the ground.

      Until then, this kind of thing should be expected.

      --
      -Stu
    3. Re:this isn't new by lmlloyd · · Score: 1

      Well, of course it varies from state to state, and I'm not sure about California (as the judge himself also noted) but a trade secret is not just any old piece of information a company wishes wouldn't get out. In fact, a trade secert is typically required to be a formula, method, or device, not marketing material or slides. I have worked with a lot of various sensitive corporate information back when I use to produce corporate training material, and there is a huge difference between the steps needed to show that you treat information as confidential, and the diligence required to get the protection of trade secrets laws. You can't just have all your employees sign a blanket NDA, and then claim that every piece of information related to your business is a trade secret.

  193. You, Know I can't recall by moogyboog · · Score: 1

    where i found that information. It worked for Bush Senior, Reagan, Oliver North and too many to list. For all we know they found it on the interent somewhere and that site might not even exist anymore, so how are you going to find that source? Especially if they can't recall?

  194. Re:The judge is a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BS. Publishing the chemical is a public interest as it saves lives. Publishing what graphic card the next iteration of iMac will use is not a public interest. It seems you have difficulties understanding this. The judge did not strike down the right to print such whistleblowing stories. In this particular case, there is no balance between the public's right to know and the breaking of the law. Thus, the source can't be protected.

  195. Good luck with the sources, Apple by inkswamp · · Score: 1
    A lot of these rumors sites have a simple system in place where you can send them messages through an anonymous form on their site and identify yourself each time with a single keyword. That way, they can establish who tends submits legit info (cross-referenced with the keyword the submitter uses) without ever knowing who the source is. If any of the sites named in Apple's suit uses such a system, then Apple is S.O.L.

    BTW, I think the idea that you can't spread information that is under NDA is outrageously unconstitutional. If a rumor site isn't under such a NDA, then they are bound by nobody legally and like anyone else (journalists or otherwise), they have a right to keep their sources to themselves. I think Apple is going to lose this case. They need to go after the people giving out the info who are under NDA, not the secondhand sites who get the info.

    --
    --Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
    1. Re:Good luck with the sources, Apple by chrisbw · · Score: 1
      BTW, I think the idea that you can't spread information that is under NDA is outrageously unconstitutional. If a rumor site isn't under such a NDA, then they are bound by nobody legally and like anyone else (journalists or otherwise), they have a right to keep their sources to themselves. I think Apple is going to lose this case. They need to go after the people giving out the info who are under NDA, not the secondhand sites who get the info.

      Keep your eye on the ball, that is what they ARE doing. They aren't going after ThinkSecret for damages, they're trying to find out who was breaking their NDA so they can go after them.

      --
      Chris -- http://www.bitter.net/
    2. Re:Good luck with the sources, Apple by inkswamp · · Score: 1
      Keep your eye on the ball, that is what they ARE doing.

      Right, I understand that, but they're going after the leakers through ThinkSecret. As far as I'm concerned, if a web site has done nothing illegal, they shouldn't be subjected to a lawsuit, even an investigative one seeking the names of sources. There's simply no way to support that kind of approach (and I'm a self-professed Mac fanatic, so it sort of sucks to have to say that.) Apple needs to figure out a way to attack the leakers without attacking innocent bystanders like ThinkSecret or any other rumor site.

      And no, I don't know how they can do that, but that's their problem, not mine and not ThinkSecret's either.

      --
      --Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
  196. Re:You obviously don't care about personal privacy by Quattro+Vezina · · Score: 1

    Trade secrets have nothing to do with personal privacy.

    Corporations don't have rights. Only people have rights.

    --
    I support the Center for Consumer Freedom
  197. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by MoneyT · · Score: 1

    And if they check him out and he's got a clean record? Then what?

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  198. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by MoneyT · · Score: 1

    Sure:

    1) http://www.gwhatchet.com/news/2005/02/24/UWireDcBu reau/Reporters.Face.Jail.Time.For.Refusing.To.Reve al.Sources-875899.shtml

    2) http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=107315702439 5

    3) http://www.hspa.com/main.asp?SectionID=4&SubSectio nID=19&ArticleID=1810 (pay close attention to the bottom of that one)

    4) http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A257 44-2005Feb15_2.html

    5) http://www.gannett.com/go/newswatch/2001/november/ nw1102-5.htm

    And thats just the first 2 pages of google.

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  199. This is wrong... by NAACPsupporter · · Score: 1

    This is so wrong. Think about it. If my company is producing a product that can be dangerous to the society, and i want to blow a whistle on them, I could in turn be sued for giving up company secrets. I understand that this example is different than what apple is doing. Still, it now muddies up the waters and gives me less confidence to reveal plans my company is doing. What if a cigarrette company figured out that adding zinc to its cigarettes will minimize how much nicotine is detected? I tell a journalist about it, and I can be sued. I hope think secret and all those guys do not reveal its sources.

  200. Prove there was a crime! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple's security can't be all that good, none of these big corportaions have good security, anyone working for any big company knows this, too many people involved and marketing people are the worst at security.
    You know damn well the marketing department knows all about this because they always want to have their fingers in everything.
    The leak could have come from a number of places and sources, so this is just stupid, they have to prove that it is a crime that happened before they can ask for the source.
    Some stupid janator could have thrown away a memo in the normal trash.
    This judge is whacked.

  201. Consider the alternative. by cait56 · · Score: 1

    I agree that this is a well reasoned decision. Both sides were staking out nonsense positions, and the Judge found common sense inbetween.

    Making a distinction between "print" and "web" media would be absurd. It would only mean that all bloggers would have to print ten copies and hand them to be friends to qualify as "print" journalists."

    Even more absurd would be a decision that essentially grant immunity anyone claiming to be a journalistic blogger immunity to take part in any and all violations of confidentiality.

    All SEC rules could be evaded by simply leaking information through an obscure blog that only your co-conspirators knew about. They'd have to prove that you had planned what you were going to disclose their, which would be next to impossible.

    All Non-disclosure Agreements would be useless. Similarly for all privacy restrictions. Could credit agencies just claim to be "journalists" who were "reporting on" your credit to subscribers?

    The key distinction is whether the disclosed information is somehting that the recepient could honestly believe would otherwise have been improperly concealed from the public? Or is this just leaking information that the leaker had no business leaking at all, that it is quite simply theft of intellectual property and/or confidential information?

    We need to defend the ability of journalists to accept leaks of information that is being improperly withheld from the public. But it is time to stop allowing journalists to act as fences for stolen information or blatant end-runs around confidentiality requiremetns.

    Trade secret leaks are actually minor here. The bigger abuse is prosecutors leaking information that they cannot bring. In these cases the disclosure is not in furtherance of public policy, but in fact directly contrary to it.

    The bottom line is that journalistic privilege exists to facilitate release of information that should not have been concealed This is clearly a case where Apple's right to not disclose this information was never in question. The person leaking the information knew it was an improper leak, and the people receiving it knew or should have known.

    I fail to see any benefit in protecting this type of "free speech". If this is protected free speech then there can be no confidentiality and no privacy.

  202. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    You're suggesting the use of the "Reagan loophole", which is slightly different than znu's advice of saying the source was anonymous when in fact it wasn't.

    It's much harder for someone to prove that you do remember a fact, so in this case perjury would be more difficult to prove. However, you would also have had to told your attorney from the outset that you don't remember, and there better not be any records. If your attorney knows that you actually do remember, then he knows you're committing an act of perjury, and he is legally required as an officer of the court to speak up.

    Another weakness in your idea (although I'm not sure how this would play out) is that these people have just claimed they are journalists, as grounds to quash the subpoena. I think you'd be really testing the temper of the judge to claim you're a journalist one day, and then to claim you have a terrible memory for facts and that you keep no notes on the next day.

    When a judge finds a person in contempt of court, the penalty is at the judges discretion. You might be fined a small amount of money each day you refuse to testify or you might be fined a larger amount or you might have to spend time in jail until you are willing to testify. I wonder which way the judge will lean if you've insulted him in this manner?

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  203. Re:You obviously don't care about personal privacy by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    Trade secrets have nothing to do with personal privacy.

    You're saying that there is no linkage whatsoever between privacy and trade secrets. It doesn't matter if the original holder of the trade secret is an individual?

    Corporations don't have rights. Only people have rights.

    I'm afraid you're just plain wrong on that one. Corporations do have rights. That's the way the law is written in the USA. I'm not saying it's right. I'm just saying that's how it is.

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  204. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

    That's what's known as "the cost of doing business".

    Seriously. People default on their loans. Banks know approximately how often this happens, and build it into their rate structures so that they make money anyway. Just like retail builds in a "shrinkage" factor to account for shoplifting, and any smart engineer builds in an "annoying fucking marketing people" factor to account for all the useless shit they will inevitably be asked to add.

    --

    ---
    Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
    (I read with sigs off.)
  205. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by MoneyT · · Score: 1

    Just because you factor it in to your prices doesn't mean you eat it and ignore the criminals. Just because banks factor defaults into their rates doesn't mean they won't go after you when you do default. Likewise, just because stores build shoplifting into their pricing schemes doesn't mean they don't go after shop lifters. Simply put, businesses have the right to protect their property.

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  206. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

    However, when an individual goes bankrupt, the bank (usually) doesn't go after them. This is because they are a) not criminal and b) not worth it for the return.

    --

    ---
    Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
    (I read with sigs off.)
  207. Re:I can't help but wonder "If it have been CNN... by Archimboldo · · Score: 1

    "Since when is knowing if the next iPod mini will have a colour screen not the public's business?" The question is when does the public get that information? Do you allow a reporter to leak NDA information before the company releases its product and so that all its investments could potentially go down the drain when another company steals their ideas or makes unfair use of the info? The judge is right.

  208. Quite a few items unacceptable here. by Alpha_Traveller · · Score: 1

    >Kleinberg, however, ruled that no one has the
    >right to publish trade secrets that only could
    >have been provided by someone breaking the law.

    I believe reasonable doubt comes into play here. There is no reason to believe someone who signed a trade agreement released this information, but then again, that's still for the next part of the trial.

    There is every possibility that someone found out about this by seeing a box left somewhere it shouldn't have been. There is every possiblity that there was a source that never signed that agreement and therefore didnt break a 'law'. And there is also another possibility that if someone signed something, they didn't know what they were signing. It's called contractual fraud. And dat's illegal.

    --
    "Love is like pi - natural, irrational, and very important." (Lisa Hoffman)
  209. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by MoneyT · · Score: 1

    Bankruptcy is different from defaulting on a loan, if you default without declaring bankruptcy I guarantee they will go after you. They'll just use a collection agency or some other method

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  210. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by cavebear42 · · Score: 1

    actually passing along information that you know to be a trade secret makes you as guilty as those who aquired it and their speech is NOT protected. that was stated in the ruling. they will prob also be sued at some point.

    i read the article fully. in fact, i read it close enough to note that the judge made and error in page 12 line 8 in his grammer.

  211. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

    Seriously, I think you have me pegged as thinking that it should be Apple's responsibility to find these leaks without aid. I'm on Apple's side in this; they're in the right. I find it funny that the law works so differently in trade secrets and in bankruptcy, that's all.

    I was talking about bankruptcy. Defaulting on a loan without declaring bankruptcy is just fucking dumb, and anyone who does it should be locked up next to people dumb enough to leak NDA-embargoed information to the press.

    --

    ---
    Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
    (I read with sigs off.)
  212. Re:I can't help but wonder "If it have been CNN... by themusicgod1 · · Score: 1

    How is serving the public making "unfair use of the info?" The marketplace only is efficient if those who partake in it are properly informed; This means if there's a good idea, whether one company's employee's thought of it or another's company did, hiding it from the public actually makes the situation worse for everyone involved.

    NDA's are vile and poisonous and must be resisted at all cost.

    --
    GENERATION 26: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
  213. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by HuguesT · · Score: 1

    Yes, I agreee, however you are talking about unusual people here, and not exactly a small sacrifice.

  214. Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

    You mean because these people are lesser people, they should be held to lower standards?

    If the law is right, they should suffer it's consequences, even if it's only a subpoena. If the law is wrong then there are two consequences: If they broke the law they should STILL suffer it's consequences (for breaking a law) but they should work to get it fixed (which is what greater men have had done through peaceful protest).

    My take, however, is that they did break a law and the law is not wrong.

  215. No, The Bloggers LOST against Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple just wanted to serve the with subpoenas to get the names of the people that committed the criminal act of corporate espionage (which is what releasing trade secrets falls under). The bloggers sued Apple to avoid providing that information.