Comment Re:Your feedback is valuable to us (Score 1) 551
I wish I had modpoints to give you for this.
I wish I had modpoints to give you for this.
The petition system is truly ingenious.
It's a way for the administration to line up 10-, 20-, 30-, 100-thousand people who think the administration is wrong, and then have delivered to them a customized message which tells the signers how wrong they are about things on a very specific topic.
The White House Petitions are designed to serve the administration, not the citizenry.
I'll take "Reasons why I'll never live in a house governed by an HOA", for $1000, Alex?
I'm happy to cede world dominance to another country. I don't feel like my "nationalistic ego" is so damned large that I have to sink the country's economy just to ensure that my country is 'running things' or whatever.
One of the key features keeping the classic alive is also potentially its use in cars. For the longest time, even when I had an iPhone, I maintained an iPod Classic, because its UI was much move navigable one-handed while driving, to drill down to find a particular playlist, or artist, or whatever. You could, by feel alone, figure out what you were doing in many cases, only glancing at the unit to determine when to hit the select button, etc.
It wasn't until I had a car which actually integrated my iPod into its in-dash entertainment system that I finally stopped worrying about that.
Tell that to BetaMax.
It'd be a pain, but the reality is that even if only a subset of people were to do it, it could get *really* cost-prohibitive for them to violate the license.
But we're talking about a scenario where they use your content (pictures, posts, etc.) outside of the terms of license with which you licensed it to them (ad free, etc.)
At that point, they're distributing your copyrighted material without a license to do so. There is no requirement (that I can find, statutorily) to have registered the copyright. The copyright must simply be "valid" to be enforceable (which it is). 17 USC 504 is the relevant statute, and it makes no mention of a registration requirement.
You have the option of going for actual damages (generally, if you can prove that they are more than statutory damages), or you can elect to pursue statutory damages of between $750 and $30,000. If you show that they did so willfully, the upper bound becomes $150,000.
You own the copyright to any content you create.
If they distribute your content in violation of their agreements surrounding that, it's a technical violation of the DMCA, which has -- as we all know -- statutory penalties for such violations.
Ello's consideration is the content you're allowing them to reproduce.
The user's consideration is the site they're allowing you to use.
Not all consideration is cash.
It seems that it shouldn't be hard for a lawyer to craft up a change to the ToS for the site that:
- Grants Ello the right to use/reproduce user content (a normal everyday part of ToS), BUT
that right does not survive a change to either the corporate charter or the ToS without being positively re-affirmed by the end user.
In other words, Ello can use/reproduce your posts, like they need to.
- If they change the charter, users need to re-affirm "yes, you can continue to use my existing content"
- If they change the ToS to remove that language going forward, users need to re-affirm "yes, you can continue to use my existing content"
Combine that with some language about "no change to ToS or corporate charter can be binding without a 90 day review period for users", and you've got something with some teeth.
well, as noted elsewhere in this thread:
- The knockoffs *are* shit quality in this case, flaky as hell, causing FTDI to field calls for issues with hardware that isn't even theirs
- knockoff quality is "indeterminate" and -- worse -- without recourse (there is no way to trace back who did shoddy work and get them to make good on the problems they caused)
Well, as noted, it happens with watchmakers, clothing/accessory companies as well, etc., etc.
No, you fail at QC.
What you're describing is what most reputable manufacturers do - they do destructive tests on random samples of each (lot,shift,day,week,whatever), few from the beginning, few from the middle, few from the end. As noted elsewhere, I've personally seen trays and trays of 486SX/DX chips ripped apart by IBM for testing prior to those lots' "acceptance" for use in IBM branded hardware.
So after they receive the hardware (ie, after the shipment swap risk) they test what they received. If the product leaves their possession and comes back (ie, attached to a board), they test samples of THOSE (also, again, destructively).
That QC is baked into the COGS for the product in question.
It doesn't absolve you of a need to QC what you're receiving. It just decreases the likelihood of getting bad product.
Those who can, do; those who can't, write. Those who can't write work for the Bell Labs Record.