Violation of copyright "if you try to pass the 'derivative' work off as the work of the other guy"? You are mixing up art forgery and copyright violations. Quite different.
In fact, if you use a photograph as a direct guide for a derivative painting without getting permission from the photograph's copyright holder, the you will be violating copyright. It's simply a matter of whether the copyright holder decides to press the issue. Even Andy Warhol was sued for using Patricia Caulfield's photograph in his prints. And since trademarks are not about image ownership, but rather brand association, it's perfectly fine to use a trademarked image in transformative way and in a different market or industry than the commercial sector that the trademark actually exists in. In Warhol's case, it helped that Campbell's Soup enjoyed his works, but it wasn't the deciding factor.
I understand you're not claiming your description is how IP works, and just how you wished it worked, but you're way off base from the current legal system. You're right that there's a scale, and it's often the whole point of a lawsuit to decide where on the scale your work actually falls. There are guidelines, but it still has to be decided on a case-by-case basis. The reason you can do an interpretation on the Mona Lisa is because it is not protected by copyright (Public Domain!). A cubist interpretation of a current work still under copyright protection, if identifiable as a derivative work (or if you say you derived it from another work), would fall under the regulations of copyright derivatives. Then it's up to the court and jury to decide if you were co-opting too much of the protected work (and it wouldn't help that you were working in the same format -- 2D visual art). Using the same subject matter as depicted in an existing work is not a violation of copyright unless you were using their actual work as the source (at least as far as the other side can successfully demonstrate that to a jury). IANAL, etc.
Exactly. If there is no issue that some bank-rolled special interest group can get behind, then the law has to be about blaming some specific action or product -- not making citizens responsible for their own behavior. The voting masses don't like being told to use common sense.
You forgot to add how the footage accompanying the anchors' stories are many times not actual footage of the event, but rather footage showing elements that are similar to those in the story.
Clearly they should change the name from "dwarf planet" to "pseudo planet." Grammatically correct, pseudo planets would not be, in fact, planets at all, but merely similar to planets. As a bonus, I'm sure everyone could get behind the phrase "Pluto's a pseudo planet." Just try it out - it rolls off the tongue.
Pushing any air necessitates creating an area of lower air density where the air you are pushing used to be. This weak vacuum sucks in air from other directions, pulling air towards the fan which than then be pushed away in the opposite direction.
I would also re-include differentiation to that list.
Not in the explicit sense of formal differentiation, but in the general sense of the slope of the line tangent to a curve, or the rate of change of some value. People should have the basics of velocity and acceleration before starting physics 101, especially since it's easy to go through the entire education system without taking any physics classes. That sort of understanding lays the groundwork for thinking about interrelated systems, and dependent behaviors that are neither directly nor indirectly related to a parent process, but rather derived from it.
Well, local used-books shops might be accurately pricing their books for the local market, which could differ from the nationwide market on the internet. If the local stores were forced to price to the national market, they might not be able to sell those books to their usual customers, and not even the used-book arbitrage traders would want to buy them. This could, in the long run, significantly reduce the thrift bookstore revenues and drive some out of business.
And like GP pointed out, some of the hidden treasures in the book stores act as sales to draw in customers to the store, who might buy other books as well. If the arbitrage trades come in and snatch up the "sale" items, the stores are forced to eat the discount instead of generating more revenue.
There is the potential problem when one service uses a different avenue of communication than the competing services. Such as when one company provides video as bulk data downloads, and another only provides them via video-stream. Or when one company provides navigation information some kind of direct-to-device status update, but others are forced to use standard internet packets. I'm not saying it's wrong (or that it could even be effectively regulated), but it is quite possible to differentiate the same service using distinct data types, which could be charged separately.
Perhaps the publishers should have a deal for the e-books then. Include a free print-out of the e-book. Maybe bind it all together in a tough outer shell and slap an attractive design on the outside. Now there's a perk.
Intent to commit an act that is criminalized (whether you recognize that it is or not makes no difference) can be prosecuted if actual steps were taken to complete that act.
Completing an act that is strictly outlawed by statute is a crime regardless of the intent. The risk is wholly upon the actor if they get too close to the line.
The most promising aspect of open source software, even beyond being free of locked-down monopolies, is the opportunity for anyone with an interest in software to get their hands dirty and experience what it feels like to help develop a project they actually use and care about. Even if the coding experience isn't there, there may be other ways to get involved. Participating in OSS has the potential to be very gratifying, and can entice more people to consider computer programming by leaping over the barrier of "who cares about a stupid program that prints 'hello world'?"
More specifically, because the religious left or right care about information, but don't care whether it's scientifically verifiable or not. The thing is, religion, by it's very nature is conservative. Change contradicts 1,000-year-old scripture.
Some people argue that science fiction, apart from being set in some techno-future, is (or at least should be) about addressing timeless human philosophical conflicts and ethical challenges, such as the issues related to ruling over other people via technological superiority, or the extent to which society/government can/should mold/control human's physical traits, behaviors, thoughts, or very lives. For the most part, these types of Sci-fi stories mainly use fictional technology to remove the tedious technicalities that something can't yet be done, and instead jump right into whether something should be done. In contrast, your run-of-the-mill fantasy is about adventure and heroism. All engaging fiction needs some sort of plot-advancing "adventure," but wonder of exploration is more often tied with fantasy adventure then sci-fi conflict.
I'm a fan of Triglav, which is a Diablo-style RPG with surprising quality and game length. It's coded in JavaScript, but designed for IE6 (wtf?), but appears to work with IE8 (and doesn't appear to work with Firefox). There's a instant-play mode, or a registration mode that lets you save your progress. Check it out.
Here's a perfect example, with the page corners dynamically pinned to your cursor's position: http://www.pageflip.hu/ The demo has been updated as recently as 2010, but it was linked to from another site in 2006, post
Seeing in color is also augmented reality. Chromatic information is superimposed over the vision of both of our eyes. If we close our eyes, no chromatic information is perceived.
I'd like an answer to the same question. I'm sure many people are in the same boat, leaving their computers on because the shutdown/reboot is annoying. I'd save a lot of energy use and battery life if I could be enticed to shut off my laptop. Anyone else have personal experiences with what would cost $200 to have an SSD system partition?
Exactly. Trying to touch-type without tactile awareness of the edge of each key while resting is like trying to two-finger-type with your eyes closed
I think someone in grad school at MIT developed a urinal game device called You'reIn Control. I don't remember much about it.
Violation of copyright "if you try to pass the 'derivative' work off as the work of the other guy"? You are mixing up art forgery and copyright violations. Quite different.
In fact, if you use a photograph as a direct guide for a derivative painting without getting permission from the photograph's copyright holder, the you will be violating copyright. It's simply a matter of whether the copyright holder decides to press the issue. Even Andy Warhol was sued for using Patricia Caulfield's photograph in his prints. And since trademarks are not about image ownership, but rather brand association, it's perfectly fine to use a trademarked image in transformative way and in a different market or industry than the commercial sector that the trademark actually exists in. In Warhol's case, it helped that Campbell's Soup enjoyed his works, but it wasn't the deciding factor.
I understand you're not claiming your description is how IP works, and just how you wished it worked, but you're way off base from the current legal system. You're right that there's a scale, and it's often the whole point of a lawsuit to decide where on the scale your work actually falls. There are guidelines, but it still has to be decided on a case-by-case basis. The reason you can do an interpretation on the Mona Lisa is because it is not protected by copyright (Public Domain!). A cubist interpretation of a current work still under copyright protection, if identifiable as a derivative work (or if you say you derived it from another work), would fall under the regulations of copyright derivatives. Then it's up to the court and jury to decide if you were co-opting too much of the protected work (and it wouldn't help that you were working in the same format -- 2D visual art). Using the same subject matter as depicted in an existing work is not a violation of copyright unless you were using their actual work as the source (at least as far as the other side can successfully demonstrate that to a jury). IANAL, etc.
Now I'm picturing a phone that starts with a robotic "POID"
Exactly. If there is no issue that some bank-rolled special interest group can get behind, then the law has to be about blaming some specific action or product -- not making citizens responsible for their own behavior. The voting masses don't like being told to use common sense.
You forgot to add how the footage accompanying the anchors' stories are many times not actual footage of the event, but rather footage showing elements that are similar to those in the story.
Clearly they should change the name from "dwarf planet" to "pseudo planet." Grammatically correct, pseudo planets would not be, in fact, planets at all, but merely similar to planets. As a bonus, I'm sure everyone could get behind the phrase "Pluto's a pseudo planet." Just try it out - it rolls off the tongue.
Pushing any air necessitates creating an area of lower air density where the air you are pushing used to be. This weak vacuum sucks in air from other directions, pulling air towards the fan which than then be pushed away in the opposite direction.
I would also re-include differentiation to that list.
Not in the explicit sense of formal differentiation, but in the general sense of the slope of the line tangent to a curve, or the rate of change of some value. People should have the basics of velocity and acceleration before starting physics 101, especially since it's easy to go through the entire education system without taking any physics classes. That sort of understanding lays the groundwork for thinking about interrelated systems, and dependent behaviors that are neither directly nor indirectly related to a parent process, but rather derived from it.
I think it's because their attention span is so short that they've forgotten what you were talking about as soon as you respond.
Well, local used-books shops might be accurately pricing their books for the local market, which could differ from the nationwide market on the internet. If the local stores were forced to price to the national market, they might not be able to sell those books to their usual customers, and not even the used-book arbitrage traders would want to buy them. This could, in the long run, significantly reduce the thrift bookstore revenues and drive some out of business.
And like GP pointed out, some of the hidden treasures in the book stores act as sales to draw in customers to the store, who might buy other books as well. If the arbitrage trades come in and snatch up the "sale" items, the stores are forced to eat the discount instead of generating more revenue.
And if those 10% of players, the ones who paid, were the only ones to play the game - paid for or free - would the game be as popular?
There is the potential problem when one service uses a different avenue of communication than the competing services. Such as when one company provides video as bulk data downloads, and another only provides them via video-stream. Or when one company provides navigation information some kind of direct-to-device status update, but others are forced to use standard internet packets. I'm not saying it's wrong (or that it could even be effectively regulated), but it is quite possible to differentiate the same service using distinct data types, which could be charged separately.
Perhaps the publishers should have a deal for the e-books then. Include a free print-out of the e-book. Maybe bind it all together in a tough outer shell and slap an attractive design on the outside. Now there's a perk.
Here's the downside to melted-permafrost agricultural area:
Insects may possibly more-than-negate any increase in crop fertility as their populations explode due to warmer climates.
Intent to commit an act that is criminalized (whether you recognize that it is or not makes no difference) can be prosecuted if actual steps were taken to complete that act.
Completing an act that is strictly outlawed by statute is a crime regardless of the intent. The risk is wholly upon the actor if they get too close to the line.
Obviously, pinch-to-zoom over a 9" area.
The most promising aspect of open source software, even beyond being free of locked-down monopolies, is the opportunity for anyone with an interest in software to get their hands dirty and experience what it feels like to help develop a project they actually use and care about. Even if the coding experience isn't there, there may be other ways to get involved. Participating in OSS has the potential to be very gratifying, and can entice more people to consider computer programming by leaping over the barrier of "who cares about a stupid program that prints 'hello world'?"
More specifically, because the religious left or right care about information, but don't care whether it's scientifically verifiable or not. The thing is, religion, by it's very nature is conservative. Change contradicts 1,000-year-old scripture.
Some people argue that science fiction, apart from being set in some techno-future, is (or at least should be) about addressing timeless human philosophical conflicts and ethical challenges, such as the issues related to ruling over other people via technological superiority, or the extent to which society/government can/should mold/control human's physical traits, behaviors, thoughts, or very lives. For the most part, these types of Sci-fi stories mainly use fictional technology to remove the tedious technicalities that something can't yet be done, and instead jump right into whether something should be done. In contrast, your run-of-the-mill fantasy is about adventure and heroism. All engaging fiction needs some sort of plot-advancing "adventure," but wonder of exploration is more often tied with fantasy adventure then sci-fi conflict.
I'm a fan of Triglav , which is a Diablo-style RPG with surprising quality and game length. It's coded in JavaScript, but designed for IE6 (wtf?), but appears to work with IE8 (and doesn't appear to work with Firefox). There's a instant-play mode, or a registration mode that lets you save your progress. Check it out.
Prior Art? Here's the flash file from May 11, 2005: iparigrafika.hu at archive.org
Here's a perfect example, with the page corners dynamically pinned to your cursor's position: http://www.pageflip.hu/
The demo has been updated as recently as 2010, but it was linked to from another site in 2006, post
Seeing in color is also augmented reality. Chromatic information is superimposed over the vision of both of our eyes. If we close our eyes, no chromatic information is perceived.
I'd like an answer to the same question. I'm sure many people are in the same boat, leaving their computers on because the shutdown/reboot is annoying. I'd save a lot of energy use and battery life if I could be enticed to shut off my laptop. Anyone else have personal experiences with what would cost $200 to have an SSD system partition?