Latvian Police Raid Teacher's Home for Uploading $4.00 Textbook
richlv writes "Latvian police recently raided the home of a history teacher and confiscated his computer. The crime? Scanning a history book and making it available on his website covering various topics on history. The raid was based on a complaint from the publisher (Google Translate to English), which has a near-monopoly on educational materials in Latvia, often linked with shady connections in the Ministry of Education."
Doesn't seem like fair use.. seems like blatant copyright infringement. As I learned in Boy Scouts, if you don't like the law, try to have it changed in an orderly manner, rather than disobey it. Failing that, if you're going to break the law, don't get caught.
price tag is irrelavant
So you're saying the police should come bust down my door and shoot my dog in the face if I walk off with your pencil?
Don't forget: 'intellectual property' is not real property; otherwise it would be covered under property laws and wouldn't need it's own.
And most likely full of spin, error, omission, or propaganda... lol
Why limit it to one? At premium prices, customers demand premium quality. US history books will have all four.
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
textbook publishers use all kinds of BS to keep there monopoly on educational materials in place.
I'm not sure. When in Finland these teachers had the over-the-weekend marathon to create a math textbook and put it into Github, they commented that they might as well release it for free, as the profit they get from books is always so small anyway
Do note that author != publisher... [in the very most cases]