Professor Posts "Illegal Copy" of Guide To Oregon Public Record Laws
An anonymous reader writes "Copyright law has previously been used by some states to try to prevent people from passing around copies of their own government's laws. But in a new level of meta-absurdity, the attorney general of Oregon is claiming copyright over a state-produced guide to using public-records laws. That isn't sitting well with one frequent user of the laws, who has posted a copy of the guide to his website and is daring the AG to respond. The AG, who previously pledged to improve responses to public-records requests, has not responded yet." The challenger here is University of Oregon Professor Bill Harbaugh.
what
That's nothing.
A BSA's henchmen used an unlicensed software for License auditing in Finland.
http://www.samimattila.com/
And if he looked at the current Democratic party, he'd probably demand to be removed from any Dem reference to his name.
The govt is acting like a starved beast when they resort to this sort of unofficial tax to get more money. I doubt the lawmakers ever had a debate over it. They may be happy to look the other way as long as it doesn't cause too much trouble. They're such cowards, always looking for ways to sneak in more revenue generation mechanisms and shift costs to make up for falling revenues from well known taxes, such as the gas tax which is NOT indexed to inflation and is regarded as suicidal to touch. Some leadership. It's why we have all these lousy toll road schemes.
Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
Please learn the background on the health care debate before you make yourself sound silly again. None of the current proposals have the $3800 number, and the reason for the "fine" is a simple, statistical necessity for a working system. (For reference, the "fine" is typically the actuarial value of a benficiary; i.e. - the cost to insure a member of a nominally infinite pool without maintenance costs).
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
I like the Per-Mile Road Toll system, so long as it eliminates the current gasoline tax, and the money is earmarked for only road projects. I also believe it will be necessary as we transition to EVs or pluggable hybrids that don't burn any gasoline. They need to be assessed for their road usage somehow, and the per-mile toll system seems a logical step.
I don't think these systems should be GPS-enabled, but instead tied to the odometer which tracks miles but not location. Perhaps at your annual car inspection you would say, "My odometer claims I drove 20,000 miles," and hand-over around $180 to the state inspector after he verifies the claim. That seems like a good approach to me.
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
Why shouldn't a person be allowed to self-insure? Mandatory health insurance is robbery on the part of government and the health insurance lobby.
>>>U.S. government works are automatically public domain. Shouldn't state government materials be the same way? The latest absurdity to come out of my home state. (The first was yesterday [Congress Mulls Research Into a Vehicle Mileage Tax])
>>>
I like the Per-Mile Road Toll system, so long as it eliminates the current gasoline tax, and the money is earmarked for only road projects. I also believe it will be necessary as we transition to EVs or pluggable hybrids that don't burn any gasoline. They need to be assessed for their road usage somehow, and the per-mile toll system seems a logical step.
I don't think these systems should be GPS-enabled, but instead tied to the odometer which tracks miles but not location. Perhaps at your annual car inspection you would say, "My odometer claims I drove 20,000 miles," and hand-over around $180 to the state inspector after he verifies the claim. That seems like a good approach to me.
Anyway back to topic -
Although all U.S. government works are automatically public domain, State Legislatures have no such law. Apparently Oregon is one of those that does not make laws or documents public domain.
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
"Monica IS a great disco stick licker. Heh heh Heh. Oh yeah this is one fine day to be nude." - Bill Clinton - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1P-GR4uJZw
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall