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Comment Re:TOR (Score 1) 643

Your personal freedoms and right to anonymity end when you use equipment that is not your own (but your company) and you are doing it while on the clock for purposes other than those tasked to you while on the clock.

BS

By that token, even your home computer can be censured by your ISP, because hey, you're using their equipment to transmit the message. You also need to be careful what you say on the phone at work, or who you talk to. even during your breaks because it is company equipment you know. This excuse for expunging peoples freedoms is used frequently and is often even promoted by many of the people on this site who otherwise are against unreasonable limitations of freedom. I don't buy it, and no one else should either.

My question is would he have been fired if the school knew what he was doing, but he posted a less offensive message?

Businesses

Are Game Publishers a Necessary Evil, Or Just Necessary? 173

An editorial at GameSetWatch examines whether game publishers really deserve all the flak they get from gamers and developers alike. While some questionable decisions can certainly be laid at their feet, they're also responsible for making a lot of good game projects happen. Quoting: "The trouble comes when the money and the creativity appear to be at odds. ... Developers and publishers often have a curious relationship. The best analogy I can think of is that of parent and child. The publisher or parent thinks it knows best, because it's been there before (shipped more games), and because 'it's my money, so you'll live by my rules.' The developer — or child — is rebellious, and thinks it has all the answers. In many ways, it does know more than the parent, and is closer to what's innovative, but maybe hasn't figured out how to hone that energy yet."
Software

Submission + - Company uses DMCA to take down second-hand softwar (computerworlduk.com)

dreemteem writes: "A judge Tuesday heard arguments in a dispute over software sales that could potentially have repercussions on the secondhand sale of virtually any copyright material.
The suit was filed by Timothy Vernor, a seller on eBay, after Autodesk, citing the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, asked eBay to remove some of its software products that Vernor had listed for sale there, and later to ban him from the site.
Vernor had not illegally copied the software but was selling legitimate CDs of the products secondhand. For that reason, he argued, he was not infringing Autodesk's copyright.
Autodesk countered that because it licences the software, rather than selling it outright, a licensee does not have the right to resell its products."

Comment Re:haha (Score 1) 319

do I believe that a person should have a monopoly over the products of the labor of his/her own mind? Absolutely. Society has no right to something that someone has created. It is the property of the person/company that created it.

That is only true for as long as the person who created it keeps it to themselves. As soon as they allow it to become part of the culture, then they have to be willing to give up some control over it, and eventually all control. When it becomes part of the culture it is no longer their sole possession, they have conceded to share it with the world, and they must therefore also concede some of the ownership rights too.

Once works become part of our culture people will naturally use those works to reinterpret that same culture. Witness YouTube. People have to be free to create derived works and share them otherwise we have what I guess could be referred to as cultural tyranny.

Comment Re:haha (Score 5, Insightful) 319

You speak with sarcasm, but you are absolutely correct.

Society does have a need for music, and for more music (and other works to be produced) society NEEDs that music to enter the public domain at some point. The same holds true for pharmaceutical drugs as well. That is why copyright and patent protection are for limited times.

You make the common mistake of confusing real property rights with monopoly rights granted through copyright and patents. and the point you are trying to make illustrates where this analogy breaks down. I wish we user the term Intellectual Monopoly instead of property. It is more accurate and less likely to lead people to making these poor analogies.

Comment Re:haha (Score 1) 319

Sorry but that IS what British citizens call it, because they are tried of hearing a bunch of dictatorial bastards say "no". That organization's job is to DENY care and reduce costs.

Any chance you may be confusing them with Americans HMOs? I've heard that's their job too.

Comment Re:haha (Score 1) 319

Don't exaggerate. It's only around 15%... mostly people over 65. That's how "safety nets" work

Who's exaggerating?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicare_(United_States)#Eligibility In 2007, Medicare provided health care coverage for 43 million Americans

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicaid#Budget In 2002, Medicaid enrollees numbered 39.9 million Americans

http://www.va.gov/NCPS/NEWS/NCPSBg/vha.html 7.9 million veterans enrolled as of October 2006 That is roughly 90 million of a US population of about 300 million or just under 30 percent. These are old numbers too. A lot of people lost jobs since then so I would fully expect the numbers to be well over 30%. Maybe not a majority, but you have to admit it is a significant minority.

Comment Re:haha (Score 1) 319

Well that sure sounds like a big useless piece of rhetoric.

Freedom in America is an illusion. It's an illusion in the rest of the world too, but it is more pronounced in the states. The only people who have any sort of freedom in any country are the ones who are financially independant. All others lead indentured lives of one sort or another.

Since the US has a very poor social safety net the the need to work is all that much greater, and peoples freedom is then that much less. Most people are not free to pick and choose their health insurance. If you are employed then your employer picks it. If you are unemployed and can't affort $1000's of dollars a month then you have medicaid (if your lucky, and can even afford that) otherwise you have none. There are no choices here. You are only fooling yourself.

Americans' fear of "big government" is absolutely bizarre to say the least, especially in light of the fact that they have what is probably the biggest government in the world. Their government simply chooses to spend its money on guns rather than social infrastructure. A very poor choice indeed.

Comment Re:Forces of Reality (Score 2, Informative) 319

How might authors be protected from the devaluation of their work when copyright no longer exists?

By this logic then the optimim level of copyright protection would be that which maximized the value of a piece of work. That would be perpetual copyright, with no fair use exceptions, and a very broad definition of derived work.

You only see it as "devaluation" because of where we are starting from. If we had no copyright at all and were trying to figure out what was the best level of copyright protection you would come up with a very different answer than now when we have to much protection.

If you first ask the question "What is copyright for?" then answer it with something like "to provide incentives for producing creative works" then you would see that your question would not fit in here at all.

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