Lawgarithms
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Touched by the TSA
Time was when having “the talk” with your kids meant the birds and the bees. Nowadays parents also have to be ready to explain shoe- and underwear-bombers, molotov toothpaste, and the touchy-feely TSA.
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Video Kinect: The telepresent under the tree
Easter eggs in December? When Santa brings the XBox Kinect, cheap, sophisticated video conferencing comes along for the ride.
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Four legal predictions for Foursquare
Checking in? Check out how law and businesses will respond to the rise of location services.
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Bill would let U.S. kill allegedly infringing sites without trial, immunize ISPs
Proposed new legislation would strip domain access from sites ‘dedicated to infringing activities,’ cutting through the red tape of due process, sovereignty, and property rights.
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Sites harvesting kids' data fly under the radar, even for the FTC
Parents routinely fear creepy online individuals, but creepy online data collection and sales practices are commonplace and rarely exposed, discussed, and considered.
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Facebook ads might work, but not how they think
Facebook ads are notoriously and comically off-base. But even when they pique our interest, in today’s multi-option environment they are likely to sell something for a competitor.
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Another reason for ACTA caution: U.S. rightsholders as government pawns
ACTA negotiations are coming to a close, but even without it, nothing prevents repressive governments from seizing dissident computers on the pretext of infringement on U.S. copyrights. Do we really need to amplify opportunities for abuse?
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In Autodesk case, 9th Circuit missed better reason to bar resales
The software Timothy Vernor tried to sell was supposed to have been destroyed due to subsequent upgrades. This would have been a sounder basis for the 9th Circuit’s decision than the fact the EULA restricted sales, transfers, and copying.
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Muddling through privacy and the social Web
Chief privacy officers from Yahoo!, IBM, and Comcast, as well as CDT’s public policy guru, weigh in on where things stand with privacy as social network usage becomes ubiquitous.
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Six things to know if your Facebook username has been squatted
Mike Arrington couldn’t get his name as a Facebook username when registration opened on 6/12/09. Here are six things you should know if you’re in the same boat.