20,000 Worldclass University Lectures Made Illegal, So We Irrevocably Mirrored Them (lbry.io)
An anonymous reader shares an article: Today, the University of California at Berkeley has deleted 20,000 college lectures from its YouTube channel. Berkeley removed the videos because of a lawsuit brought by two students from another university under the Americans with Disabilities Act. We copied all 20,000 and are making them permanently available for free via LBRY. Is this legal? Almost certainly. The vast majority of the lectures are licensed under a Creative Commons license that allows attributed, non-commercial redistribution. The price for this content has been set to free and all LBRY metadata attributes it to UC Berkeley. Additionally, we believe that this content is legal under the First Amendment.
Because snowflakes want everything handed to them. There is about a %0.001 chance that these students offered to add captions and UC Berkeley refused to give them the raw video.
Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
It sure seems that leftist ideology has gone overboard now and then. But it's still better than having people dying in the streets that the rightists want. Everytime I see someone dying in the street I say "Now the rightist philosophies of selfishness have backfired for all to see." Until the rightists learn the value of compassion, their Nazi ideologies spewed by trump tower politicians will continue to harm America. But needing to move the videos to a new server is also pretty bad too.
Does every law need to be written so that it's idiot proof?
Every law should be written by someone other than a virtue signaling idiot who doesnt care about foreseeable problems because they are too busy being a virtue signaling idiot.
"His name was James Damore."