Every Monday morning I appear on Andrew Bartlett's 4ZzZ breakfast radio show to discuss some of the current public and political issues of the week. This week we discussed federal Australian politics, the Apple-Samsung patent battle, vegemite chips and competition law, and I defended FoxNews:
The
project is called the Intellectual Property Colloquium, and it is
essentially an online audio program devoted to intellectual property
topics. We aspire to be something like an NPR talk show, but focused on
copyrights and patents, and aimed primarily at a legal audience. The
programs are neither lectures nor debates. They are conversations,
ideally thoughtful ones, with guests drawn from academia, the
entertainment community, and the various technology industries.
Each
program lasts one hour; is downloadable; and (the kicker) any lawyer
who listens to our programs can earn (free) CLE credit in California,
New York, and any state that accepts one of those through reciprocity.
(We should soon be able to offer CLE in all the states, but for now the
combination of California, New York, and reciprocity should cover most
of our audience regardless.)
I host each program; and our first
one, a lively conversation with Fred von Lohmann of the EFF, is up and
ready to go. A schedule of up-coming shows is already posted on the
site, as are a variety of subscription features that provide updates
every time a new audio is available.
To get the community established, we’ve gathered together a team of
passionate, community minded Australian bloggers who have demonstrated
a willingness to help other bloggers and are working towards raising
the profile of blogging in Australia.
These bloggers will contribute posts for the blog, and serve as
moderators in the forum. Many have been working very hard behind the
scenes in getting the forum established.
Virtual IP governance in Second Life. From Blawg IT:
According to Virtually Blind, Second Life players FlipperPA Peregrine (aka Tim Allen) and Michael Eckstein have opened up a virtual Second Life Patent and Trademark Office (SLPTO) within the video game. This comes on the heels of six Second Life gamers suing Rase Kenzo (aka Thomas Simon) for stealing their intellectual property. The allegations range
from Unfair Competition, to Copyright Infringement, to Civil
Conspiracy. The designs allegedly stolen include clothing, shoes and
beds.
The SLPTO does not
have any immediate plans for generating income, its owners have wisely
stepped back and decided to let Second Life denizens choose how the
SLPTO can best be utilized.
FNC's Geraldo Rivera took his show At Large,
outside Fox News' Manhattan studios tonight. And while it began
smoothly enough (Rivera on the Times Square big screen, welcoming his
Avenue of the Americas guests), 33 minutes into the live broadcast, a
group of 9/11 conspiracy theorists had shown up, placards in hand,
ready to be heard. And they were.
As he was trying to get through a segment on what happens when a
baby is left in a hot car, Rivera turned to the protesters saying, "if
you hear the shouting it's a group of demonstrators...9/11 was an
inside job? Oh, Get a life!"
Rivera moved on with his guests, including legal analyst Jeanine Pirro.
Then, as he tossed to a break said "when we come back we'll take you
into the secret world of restroom gay sex...I think these demonstrators
are all into restroom gay sex."
Ars Technicalooks at how the US Pirate Party is seeking political legitimacy in the US:
It's a common sentiment among tech-savvy audiences that the current copyright
and patent system in the US is "broken" to some degree. And while
some politicians have put issues like patent and copyright reform at the top
of their lists, there aren't many political parties out there that make it
one of their sole issues. That's where the US
"Pirate Party" hopes to step in; the group is now hoping
to establish itself as an officially-acknowledged political body in the state
of Utah.
Established in 2006, the US arm of the international "pirate party movement"
says that it believes the government should encourage creativity and freedom
instead of smothering it. According to the group's
web site, "Creativity has come to a standstill in this country for
those who wish to work within, and benefit from, the confines of the law."
The Pirate Party cites current copyright and patent laws as the reason for
this, and "that our law not only allows this, but enables this, is a
travesty and a crime against innovators everywhere."
However, contrary to what the party's name implies, the US Pirate Party does
not condone piracy. "We've chosen to adopt the Pirate name so as to pay
homage to the creative artists of the past, or as they would now be known,
Pirates, thieves, and copyright infringers," reads the web site.
Mashable reminds us about another Facebook lawsuit:
The high profile ConnectU case isn’t the only legal action being taken against Facebook: a firm in Radnor, Pennsylvania has filed a complaint against the Palo Alto-based company claiming patent infringement.
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