Category: Uncategorized

  • Eisner: Honest Abe would agree with us…

    Found two more great law/technology blogs (by way of Jenny at The Shifted Librarian): Larry Staton’s blog at http://www.statonlaw.net/weblog/ and Will Cox’s at http://users.bestweb.net/~cwcjr/radio/. Both are worth visiting. Larry has a good response to Michael Eisner’s OpEd in today’s Financial Times. Here’s my $.02: the Constitution to which Eisner refers is not about eliminating the…

  • Libel or slander? Damages or jail? You be the judge…

    Two former employees of Varian Medical Systems who have posted more than 14,000 messages about the company on 100+ message boards were fined $775,000 for damages to Varian back in November. In addition, the court imposed a permanent injunction on the two, barring specific libelous postings about Varian employees and their personal lives. Attorneys for Varian…

  • Who’s watching you?

    I wrote a column for this month’s ABA Law Practice Management Magazine about spyware and how to fight it. Turns out the fight between spyware and counter-spyware applications is getting uglier; this article at MSNBC details how some spyware apps are deliberately breaking the counter-spyware appliations. You can visit Trapware’s home page for more information…

  • Digital Rights: Would you like

    Digital Rights: Would you like some? If so, then make sure you read Dan Gillmor’s article.  And after you read it, if you are inclined, then take some action.  Waiting for Congress to figure out how how the digital world is supposed to work is like letting Colonel Sanders babysit your chickens….[Ernie the Attorney]

  • Starting a company? Use your head.

    I ran across this article in Inc Magazine about two months ago. I meant to link to it back then, and am just now remembering. The best part of the story behind the rise of Cranium (if you haven’t played the board game, you don’t know what you’re missing) is the backgrounds of the co-founders:…

  • Computer vulnerabilities

    Following up on yesterday’s link to Mike Deem’s comments about rolling bowling balls down mountains, I thought this post from Mike Chandler provides some good fodder for discussion. Mike took a machine, loaded it up first with Windows 2000. He was hacked within a few hours. He reformatted the machine, loaded it up with Red Hat…

  • An Industry on the Fritz

    Doc Searls includes a number of good links to the furor over Fritz Hollings‘ latest bill, the Consumer Broadband and Digital Television Promotion Act. At issue is neither the promotion of broadband access nor the conversion of TV to HDTV. The issue is really whether the entertainment industry can flex enough muscle to regulate the…

  • So he works for Microsoft,

    So he works for Microsoft, but you can’t really argue with this logic: If you ask me, getting a kick out of being successful with a virus on Windows is sort of like claiming fame for rolling a bowling ball down a mountain. It isn’t very hard to get the bowling ball to the top,…

  • How do they pick the

    How do they pick the cities they show on the inflight map? Right now, we’re somewhere high above Canada (36,000 feet, to be exact) in between Goose Bay and Chicoutimi. Absent from the map? Montréal, Toronto and Québec City. Now they’ve gone to the large map – so you can see western Europe and the…

  • London Taxi Cabs are without

    London Taxi Cabs are without a doubt the best in the world. Now if there just weren’t so much traffic, getting around town would be convenient and quick. Any time four adults (including two of us well over 6’) can fit comfortably into a vehicle with a driver, you have to be impressed. Why can’t…