There's an argument that the whole problem with software patents is that they collapse that very difference. After all, the implementation of a software-idea is already protected through copyright (for a very, very long time!). What additional protection, then, do patents give?
Sure, in principle, but the devil is in the details. "Usage based billing" doesn't really describe what is going on here-- that's the industry propaganda term. This decision was primarily about wholesaler's ability to screw over bandwidth resellers, like Teksavvy (who I use). Under the CRTC's decision, Bell was going to cut my bandwidth cap from 250GB/month to *25*. With $2/GB overage fees. Some companies here charge around $5 (I know!!!) per gig after hitting your monthly max. Canada's incumbent telcos have tremendous power and the CRTC, under good ol' Conrad von Finkenstein, has been entrenching their power even more.
I really don't get the technical details of all this, but my understanding is that Stuxnet spread, at least in part, through USB keys and the like. In that way it *was* able to attack systems not connected to the Internet.
"It's not the heat, it's the humidity. It's not the voltage, it's the current. It's not the meat, it's the motion. And it's not the pipe - it's the will." -the Scorched Earth Party
I'd like to simply point out that, at least arguably, *access* to health care is a big part of health care itself. "Health insurance" reform and "health care" reform are not so neatly separable.
I'm not sure if we're talking about the same thing...? Because no, there's no copyright levy on iPods &c. right now. The Copyright Board approved one several years ago, but the Federal Courts struck it down. Right now you pay *tax* on an iPod (GST or HST or whatever depending on which Province you're in) but there's no copyright levy on it. In this bill, an NDP member (it's a private member bill; the NDP itself didn't introduce it) merely proposed to explicitly give the Copyright Board the authority to extend the blank-media levy (which already covers blank CDs) to iPods. As well as expanding the scope of fair dealing, which is badly needed (US fair use is much broader than Canadian fair dealing).
Strictly speaking, this is not a tax, but a levy. The money doesn't go to the government, but to rights collectives. The whole point is that it does make something legal: activities that are covered by a levy are not an infringement of copyright.
The issue wasn't that they can 'hold anything', but that iPods and the such aren't 'media' within the meaning of the Act. They're integrated 'devices'. I'm not absolutely convinced the Court decided the issue correctly, but I think there is valid logic there; they were probably reluctant to expand the authority of the Copyright Board to things like hard drives and consumer electronics when that wasn't really contemplated when the levying powers were established (people were thinking about things like casette tapes and CDs).
Because this isn't really a tax, but a levy. There's a difference (in that tax goes to the government, whereas the entirety of the levy goes to the rights collectives, who then distribute it to their members).
The angle is that it's only legal when you copy on to a medium on which you paid the levy. So, for example, we pay a levy on blank CDs. I can copy music I have (that was itself legitimately obtained) onto a CD -- that's covered by the levy. Putting it on a hard drive or iPod (for which there is no levy -- the Copyright Board authorized one, but the Federal courts ruled they didn't have the authority to do so) is, theoretically, infringing.
She needed *skin grafts*. That's the whole point -- the coffee wasn't just scalding, it was completely unreasonably hot. Why don't you believe she suffered 3rd degree burns...? I think the jury and judge were in a much better situation to decide the facts than you are. It was a very serious burn. At first she only wanted McDonald's to pay her medical costs -- she only sued when they kept on screwing her around. And do you know how the jury calculated the damages? They estimated it was about a days worth of McDonald's coffee revenues. Doesn't seem that outrageous in that context, does it? But the judge lowered it to around $600k anyways.
This case has been misreported so many times. It has been twisted to serve as corporate propaganda for their self-interested "tort reform" bs. It's funny that you refer to drinking Kool-Aid, since you seem to be agreeing with the side who's selling it.
Just to give you more to chew on, it's worth keeping in mind that (in English/Canadian/I'm guessing other Commonwealth common law) judges have a large amount of discretion in awarding costs. Although it is very, very rare, they can even award costs against the *winning* party, if they feel that the whole case was basically an abuse of process.
More routinely, though, costs isn't an all or nothing affair -- you can get costs for individual motions or unreasonable delays caused by the other party. For example, let's say a party wins a trial that takes 5 days. The judge thinks they were really dragging it out -- calling repetitive evidence, or whatever -- and that the matter should have been resolved in 2 days. The judge can award the winning party only 2 days of costs.
In some jurisdictions, costs can also be used to encourage realistic settlement offers. Let's say Party A offers Party B $100,000 to settle. Party B wins, but only gets $70k. The judge can say, "Ok, you get all your costs up to the date of the offer, but it was a good offer that you should have taken, so you'll only get some of your costs from after that date."
There's definitely a risk that costs-awards can make it risky for an individual to seek to vindicate their rights against a corporation -- but the flexibility in the system (MegaCorp can't just say "Here's our bill for the dozen senior partners we had working on this!") mitgates that down side. And as others have pointed out, there are significant advantages to the system.
This cry of "big government bad!" seems particularly ironic considering the entire broadcast industry is *created* by government regulation; it depends on regulation for its very existence. (Just as one obvious example to get you thinking about it, without regulation over-the-air broadcasts would likely be impossible since the whole thing would devolve into a who's-got-a-bigger-tower mess.)
You should take your own advice: go look at Canada's laws. Especially before you spout off on them without knowing what you're talking about. Parroting what your "Canadian friends" say just shows your ignorance. None of the things you indignantly claim you can't say in "some countries" would qualify as hate speech.
But let me guess: your "Canadian friends" are probably social conservative homophobes who resent the fact that Canadian society and government both reject their bigotry, right?
Really. Don't go to an event or start an activity looking only to meet women. First of all, it'll come across as creepy and desperate, and those are two very unattractive qualities. But if you're only looking to meet datable women you'll cut off paths that could lead to a suitable mate prematurely. I am utterly convinced that most people who date were introduced through mutual friends; they were friends of friends or friends of friends of friends. You need to be constantly expanding your social circles in *general*, not narrowly looking only for women.
The cute girl has a boyfriend, or isn't interested? Well, you still want to be her friend (not necessarily a *close*, 1-on-1 friend, but someone who will get invited out to the pub, party, sports, whatever that person does) because women always have friends who are single. The only way to get to those people is, I'll say it again, constantly be expanding your social circles as a whole!
Re:Whiners of all countries, unite!
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Nah, by the time forums came along, it was already too late. Twitter is just another symptom of the September that Never Ended! Now get off my lawn!
I think the critique of Dick's characterization is off the mark; that just wasn't what he was *doing*. Dick wasn't writing a 19th century psychological novel; if you want that, go read someone Russian. But to attack Dick for his lack of characterization would be like doing so to Kafka or Pynchon. They're just not playing that genre.
It's kind of funny that on one side you have very large corporations whose decision-making bodies are totally unaccountable to the public, and on the other you list groups like PETA and Greenpeace. Even if you don't agree with them, they represent the views of actual people and their efforts to make those views heard and noticed. They are far, far more democratic organizations than Halliburton and Enron.
I wish it was pure action excitement -- there was far too little giant-robots-smashing-each other and waaaay too much Shia Leboeuf-being-fucking-Shia Laboeuf. God, I hate that guy.
Hopefully not. Memoirs were traditionally written on paper, which have great interoperability and can be read for centuries. I doubt the same can be said of most digital data.
There's an argument that the whole problem with software patents is that they collapse that very difference. After all, the implementation of a software-idea is already protected through copyright (for a very, very long time!). What additional protection, then, do patents give?
Sure, in principle, but the devil is in the details. "Usage based billing" doesn't really describe what is going on here-- that's the industry propaganda term. This decision was primarily about wholesaler's ability to screw over bandwidth resellers, like Teksavvy (who I use). Under the CRTC's decision, Bell was going to cut my bandwidth cap from 250GB/month to *25*. With $2/GB overage fees. Some companies here charge around $5 (I know!!!) per gig after hitting your monthly max. Canada's incumbent telcos have tremendous power and the CRTC, under good ol' Conrad von Finkenstein, has been entrenching their power even more.
You say "you'd have to be dumb" as if your choice of consumer electronics makes you smart? Really?
I really don't get the technical details of all this, but my understanding is that Stuxnet spread, at least in part, through USB keys and the like. In that way it *was* able to attack systems not connected to the Internet.
Off-topic! Whyioughtta! The Scorched Earth Party was Jeff Vogel's usenet running gag back in the early and mid 90s.
Now get off my lawn!
"It's not the heat, it's the humidity. It's not the voltage, it's the current. It's not the meat, it's the motion. And it's not the pipe - it's the will." -the Scorched Earth Party
I'd like to simply point out that, at least arguably, *access* to health care is a big part of health care itself. "Health insurance" reform and "health care" reform are not so neatly separable.
I'm not sure if we're talking about the same thing...? Because no, there's no copyright levy on iPods &c. right now. The Copyright Board approved one several years ago, but the Federal Courts struck it down. Right now you pay *tax* on an iPod (GST or HST or whatever depending on which Province you're in) but there's no copyright levy on it. In this bill, an NDP member (it's a private member bill; the NDP itself didn't introduce it) merely proposed to explicitly give the Copyright Board the authority to extend the blank-media levy (which already covers blank CDs) to iPods. As well as expanding the scope of fair dealing, which is badly needed (US fair use is much broader than Canadian fair dealing).
Strictly speaking, this is not a tax, but a levy. The money doesn't go to the government, but to rights collectives. The whole point is that it does make something legal: activities that are covered by a levy are not an infringement of copyright.
The issue wasn't that they can 'hold anything', but that iPods and the such aren't 'media' within the meaning of the Act. They're integrated 'devices'. I'm not absolutely convinced the Court decided the issue correctly, but I think there is valid logic there; they were probably reluctant to expand the authority of the Copyright Board to things like hard drives and consumer electronics when that wasn't really contemplated when the levying powers were established (people were thinking about things like casette tapes and CDs).
Because this isn't really a tax, but a levy. There's a difference (in that tax goes to the government, whereas the entirety of the levy goes to the rights collectives, who then distribute it to their members).
The angle is that it's only legal when you copy on to a medium on which you paid the levy. So, for example, we pay a levy on blank CDs. I can copy music I have (that was itself legitimately obtained) onto a CD -- that's covered by the levy. Putting it on a hard drive or iPod (for which there is no levy -- the Copyright Board authorized one, but the Federal courts ruled they didn't have the authority to do so) is, theoretically, infringing.
She needed *skin grafts*. That's the whole point -- the coffee wasn't just scalding, it was completely unreasonably hot. Why don't you believe she suffered 3rd degree burns...? I think the jury and judge were in a much better situation to decide the facts than you are. It was a very serious burn. At first she only wanted McDonald's to pay her medical costs -- she only sued when they kept on screwing her around. And do you know how the jury calculated the damages? They estimated it was about a days worth of McDonald's coffee revenues. Doesn't seem that outrageous in that context, does it? But the judge lowered it to around $600k anyways.
This case has been misreported so many times. It has been twisted to serve as corporate propaganda for their self-interested "tort reform" bs. It's funny that you refer to drinking Kool-Aid, since you seem to be agreeing with the side who's selling it.
Just to give you more to chew on, it's worth keeping in mind that (in English/Canadian/I'm guessing other Commonwealth common law) judges have a large amount of discretion in awarding costs. Although it is very, very rare, they can even award costs against the *winning* party, if they feel that the whole case was basically an abuse of process.
More routinely, though, costs isn't an all or nothing affair -- you can get costs for individual motions or unreasonable delays caused by the other party. For example, let's say a party wins a trial that takes 5 days. The judge thinks they were really dragging it out -- calling repetitive evidence, or whatever -- and that the matter should have been resolved in 2 days. The judge can award the winning party only 2 days of costs.
In some jurisdictions, costs can also be used to encourage realistic settlement offers. Let's say Party A offers Party B $100,000 to settle. Party B wins, but only gets $70k. The judge can say, "Ok, you get all your costs up to the date of the offer, but it was a good offer that you should have taken, so you'll only get some of your costs from after that date."
There's definitely a risk that costs-awards can make it risky for an individual to seek to vindicate their rights against a corporation -- but the flexibility in the system (MegaCorp can't just say "Here's our bill for the dozen senior partners we had working on this!") mitgates that down side. And as others have pointed out, there are significant advantages to the system.
This cry of "big government bad!" seems particularly ironic considering the entire broadcast industry is *created* by government regulation; it depends on regulation for its very existence. (Just as one obvious example to get you thinking about it, without regulation over-the-air broadcasts would likely be impossible since the whole thing would devolve into a who's-got-a-bigger-tower mess.)
You should take your own advice: go look at Canada's laws. Especially before you spout off on them without knowing what you're talking about. Parroting what your "Canadian friends" say just shows your ignorance. None of the things you indignantly claim you can't say in "some countries" would qualify as hate speech.
But let me guess: your "Canadian friends" are probably social conservative homophobes who resent the fact that Canadian society and government both reject their bigotry, right?
Really. Don't go to an event or start an activity looking only to meet women. First of all, it'll come across as creepy and desperate, and those are two very unattractive qualities. But if you're only looking to meet datable women you'll cut off paths that could lead to a suitable mate prematurely. I am utterly convinced that most people who date were introduced through mutual friends; they were friends of friends or friends of friends of friends. You need to be constantly expanding your social circles in *general*, not narrowly looking only for women.
The cute girl has a boyfriend, or isn't interested? Well, you still want to be her friend (not necessarily a *close*, 1-on-1 friend, but someone who will get invited out to the pub, party, sports, whatever that person does) because women always have friends who are single. The only way to get to those people is, I'll say it again, constantly be expanding your social circles as a whole!
Nah, by the time forums came along, it was already too late. Twitter is just another symptom of the September that Never Ended! Now get off my lawn!
I think the critique of Dick's characterization is off the mark; that just wasn't what he was *doing*. Dick wasn't writing a 19th century psychological novel; if you want that, go read someone Russian. But to attack Dick for his lack of characterization would be like doing so to Kafka or Pynchon. They're just not playing that genre.
Free speech, friend. They're not shoving anything down your throat, you're just knee-jerking.
It's kind of funny that on one side you have very large corporations whose decision-making bodies are totally unaccountable to the public, and on the other you list groups like PETA and Greenpeace. Even if you don't agree with them, they represent the views of actual people and their efforts to make those views heard and noticed. They are far, far more democratic organizations than Halliburton and Enron.
I wish it was pure action excitement -- there was far too little giant-robots-smashing-each other and waaaay too much Shia Leboeuf-being-fucking-Shia Laboeuf. God, I hate that guy.
Hopefully not. Memoirs were traditionally written on paper, which have great interoperability and can be read for centuries. I doubt the same can be said of most digital data.
"One is the loneliest number..."
It wasn't (at that time) recognized that unregulated capitalism was perfectly capable of committing suicide.
Well, students of Marxist criticism certainly recognized it.