In Germany there is not only a strong "Persönlichkeitsrecht" (personal rights) but also a volunteer commitment of the big newspapers/magazines/tv stations. It is the so called "Pressekodex" of the German "Presserat" and it's much severer than the law.
Backround to this: The parants own a travel agency in Berlin and think customers will absence if they know about the son's death because they don't know how to react to this in front of his parents.
I don't know which words Germans use to distinguish between desktop/laptop/workstation systems and servers/clusters/phones/*, though.
"Jahr des Linux an die Schreibtisch Rechner" =~ Year of Linux on the desktop computer. Not sure.
The same english words as you use.
Digg it!
In Germany there is not only a strong "Persönlichkeitsrecht" (personal rights) but also a volunteer commitment of the big newspapers/magazines/tv stations. It is the so called "Pressekodex" of the German "Presserat" and it's much severer than the law.
Backround to this: The parants own a travel agency in Berlin and think customers will absence if they know about the son's death because they don't know how to react to this in front of his parents.
BTW: An IMHO good article abaout Free Speech in Germany from the stern magazine in German language you can find here: http://www.stern.de/politik/ausland/:Deutsche-Tabu s-Engholm-Badewanne/555064.html
Babelfish:
http://babelfish.altavista.com/babelfish/trurl_pag econtent?lp=de_en&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.stern.de%2F politik%2Fausland%2F%3ADeutsche-Tabus-Engholm-Bade wanne%2F555064.html
In this case it has nothing to do with Anti-Nazi propaganda law but with personal rights, which are also very strong in Germany.
Nothing more to say here.