Slashback: Disney Copyright, Alaa Freed, Kelo Repealed
Egyptian blogger Alaa freed from jail. FleaPlus writes "Egyptian blogger, open source advocate, and Slashdot interviewee Alaa Abd El-Fatah has been released from jail. He had been imprisoned for 45 days after being arrested (along with several others) for taking part in a pro-democracy election reform rally, on charges which included "insulting the Egyptian president." In a blog post Alaa describes the conditions he was subjected to in the jail, as well as his worry about the hundreds of other activists who are still in prison."
Executive order defuses Kelo decision. physicsphairy writes "President Bush has issued an executive order whose effect is to undo the previous Kelo decision of the Supreme Court. From the article: 'It is the policy of the United States to protect the rights of Americans to their private property, including by limiting the taking of private property by the Federal Government to situations in which the taking is for public use, with just compensation, and for the purpose of benefiting the general public and not merely for the purpose of advancing the economic interest of private parties to be given ownership or use of the property taken.' The downside is that what was once affirmed consitutionally is now affirmed only in federal law."
Disney's trouble with Pooh bear. bbernard writes "It seems that the same laws that allow the Mouse to continue generating money for Disney have prevented Disney from taking control of Winny the Pooh. The Supreme Court has denied Clare Milne's bid to get the rights back for Pooh and his buddies. Clare is A.A. Milne's granddaughter, and her court battle was funded by Disney, as she was going to reassign the rights to them. Interesting to see a company foiled by the laws they insisted on in the first place, isn't it?"
NASA engineer fired for opposing shuttle launch. quad4b writes to tell us The New York Daily News reports that Charlie Camarda was has been removed from his post at NASA for questioning the safety of this Saturday's launch. From the article: "Camarda's removal heightened the turmoil over NASA Administrator Michael Griffin's decision to take the 'acceptable risk' of launching the Discovery orbiter despite warnings of potentially fatal blastoff debris. Camarda, who flew aboard the troubled flight of Discovery last July, told colleagues in an e-mail that he was fired from his post as chief engineer at Houston's Johnson Space Center and given another NASA engineering job."
Swedish pirates provide RIAA insurance. An anonymous reader writes "A new insurance company in Sweden is offering a new policy to protect you from the RIAA [Swedish]. For a mere 140 SEK ($19 USD) per year, they will pay all your fines and give you a t-shirt if you get convicted for file sharing. Interesting development in Sweden indeed."
Open source Java months away? bl8n8r writes "A Sun Microsystems Inc. executive said Tuesday said the company is "months" away from releasing its trademark Java programming language under an open-source license. Simon Phipps, chief open-source officer for Sun, said the company is ruminating over two major issues: how to keep Java compatible and ensure no particular company uses market forces as muscle for its own implementation, a move that would threaten Java's "write once, run anywhere" mantra."
Net neutrality amendment defeated in committee. DeathPooky writes "While not the end of the road for net neutrality, the latest vote isn't a good sign. From the article: 'The Senate Commerce Committee on Wednesday rejected a network neutrality amendment, handing cable and phone broadband access providers yet another victory over a coalition that has demanded the application of strict nondiscrimination standards against entities that control access to millions of Internet users. The panel voted 11 to 11 to defeat an amendment sponsored by Sens. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) and Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.), who had backing from Google, Yahoo!, eBay, Amazon, Microsoft and other firms that deliver voice, video, and information services and applications.' All 10 Democrats on the committee, as well as Republican co-sponsor Sen. Snowe, voted for the amendment. The other 11 Republicans voted against."
... so that I can personally add the 'unsigned' keyword.
Slashdot is proof that Sturgeon's Law applies to mankind.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Why do you have to feel sorry for Milne? Because she can't freeload off work her grandmother did a century ago?
Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
"Eminent Domain" - LOL - what bullshit. It sounds like a boy band.
What you really mean is "Compulsory Purchase".
Never trust lawyers to name ANYTHING!
How many escape pods are there? "NONE,SIR!" You counted them? "TWICE, SIR!"
Exactly. What did she do for that money?
She had ancestors who created marketable characters. Well, great for her.
You can use that fact to make small talk about yourself, but make your own damn money.
I respond to your sigs
Now, as a precedent, Kelo is undeniably dangerous. I'm not arguing that. I'm saying that in the particular case of New London, it was the right choice to make.
Since New London was foolishly permitted to make that choice, a multitude stand to lose homes, property, and businesses anytime bigger fish feel like greasing palms. Expediency for New London is no excuse for what is going to happen now.
If, after two shuttle disasters, you overrule your safety chief and your chief engineer to proceed with a launch, and you punish someone for giving you advice contrary to what you want, you're incurable. No shock, no external event can overcome the rot.
This incident should put an end to the allegations that engineers with decades of experience were just engaged in CYA when they warned about safety problems. This is a guy who's had his A handed to him for speaking up. A bureaucrat would have gone along: he was willing to lose his job rather than toe the line(*).
Unless the reporting on this was seriously wrong then it is time to scrap NASA and start over.
(*)Sorry, forgot where I was. Make that "loose his job rather than tow the line".
Well nothing will help property values like having a nationwide reputation for government that doesn't respect property rights. You got Pfizer, you'll lose all else. Would you put a business there, knowing that someone with better connections could take your land once you get on your feet?
The Constitution (Article I, Section 1) states that only congress has the power to make laws. The executive branch and the judicial branch have no legislative powers, whatsoever. And Congress does not have the constitutional authority to delegate its legislative power to institutions that are beyond electoral accountability to the American people.
So why is there never a word said about the fourth branch of the federal government: the unconstitutional and entirely illegal regulatory branch?
What are the alphabet agencies -- FDA, EPA, OSHA, and so on -- doing when they pass laws? And, while these laws are called regulations, so as not to upset anyone who might actually read the Constitution, the Webster's dictionary defines regulation as a rule, ordinance or law.
If America is ever to return to its constitutionally limited government, these illegal federal agencies must be abolished. If laws are needed in certain areas they must be passed by Congress. If laws are unpopular, the citizens should be able to vote out the lawmakers that enacted them. This is not possible in the regulatory branch of the government, the majority of whom are not elected nor held accountable to the people.
Usurper_ii
Ron Paul
Not quite. Congress cannot delegate "its legislative power" to an administrative agency (neither, at the risk of parsing your statement too finely, can it delegate "its legislative power" to an agency). That would be too broad a delegation, which the Supreme Court has found unconstitutional. That is, Congress could not say to the Securities & Exchange Commission, for example, "here, you guys go make the laws for a while."
but your main concern is well founded. In finding certain (sweeping) delegations of legislative power to agencies unconstitutional in the 1930s, the Supreme Court made the constitutional question turn on whether an act of delegation is too broad rather than whether it is a delegation of legislative power. [In all fairness to the Supreme Court, though, it is impossible to take a purely "functionalist" perspective of separation of powers. Any "rule" that either requires people (or any legal entity) to do something or forbids them from doing something can be said to be "legislative" in nature. But this can be indistinguishable from an act executive power. For example, to enforce a law forbidding certain accounting practices, an agency may require companies to submit or retain certain documents.]
In making it a matter of how broad a congressional delegation can be -- whether Congress has delegated its "essential legislative function" -- the door was thrown open to very wide delegations of law-making power that are (ostensibly) pursuant to very vague congressional standards (i.e. "intelligible principles" of Hampton v. US). Thus Congress has delegated to (unelected) agency heads the power to do such things as set "just and reasonable" rates that firms in various industries can charge, to "prohibit unfair trade practices", etc.
So I very much appreciate your point: Congress has delegated to unelected, and largely unaccountable, agencies a vast amount of power to make laws, within their regulatory scope or jurisdiction, usually subject only to highly vague "standards". While Congress may not be able to legislate down to the finest details, to me that's rather the point: government that does not encroach personal freedom any more than necessary to accomplish certain, limited purposes does not need to regulate the fine details!
When it comes to the disposition of private property, only the people who own it should get votes. After all, it sounds nice to take someone *else's* private property for your use, but not so nice to take *yours*. Eminent domain often offers prices in excess of fair market value, but sellers have every right to demand arbitrarily more than fair market value. If your family has lived on the same plot of land for 150 years, you have every right to refuse to sell, and you also have every right to ask ten, a hundred, or a thousand times the fair market value before you'd even consider parting with it.
In other words, if the government wants to run a highway, they should have to factor in the *sellers'* prices for the land through each possible route.
This sig intentionally left justified.
New RIAA scheme:
1. Start RIAA insurance company
2. Wait for P2P-using "pirates" to sign up
3. Send each of them a settlement offer for $2k
'Thats they exact same thing a banana wrench monkey.'
wtf does her medical condition have to do with it?
It's still wrong that people have an expectation that they can freeload off their ancestors.
Oh, in that case it really is like "volcano insurance" since there'd be no grounds for the RIAA to sue anyone in Sweden to begin with -- it's $19/year to protect from nothing.
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
No it wasn't.
Displacing people for a private company is wrong no matter how much money it brings into the community. Of course, I doubt they (pfizer) will be paying that much in taxes, so the tax will be generated by taxing the goods the workers purchase. Now, how to you garantee all those purchases happen in new London?
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Nothing in this executive order (or in state and local laws that are being enacted all over the place) would stop eminent domain for needful public works. If your community needs a new freeway, school, or firehouse, eminent domain is still an option (preferably the option of last resort). What is being stopped is the abuse of eminent domain, such as wiping out a residential neighborhood so that a strip mall can be built in its place that'll pay more in taxes.
20 January 2017: the End of an Error.