This post is a collection of links to materials I've been reading this week, really just trying to catch up on old news and re-engage myself in subjects that I spent most of my summer trying to forget while on vacation. I made supplications to the Muse all morning in the hope she would favor me with a catchy title, something that might yield one of those tragically sardonic acronyms like CAN-SPAM or SPY Act, but no, nothing, and now it's time to get back to work and all I have is Ten Interesting Things I Read This Week (TITIRTW):
1. Cleveland Plain Dealer: Idea for protecting newspapers draws national spotlight, bloggers' ire
2. Media & Communications Policy: More on Newspapers and Aggregators
At this point management at most of the leading newspapers have let go of the notion that "parasitic aggregators" are a significant source of their business problems. Yet here is a respected attorney (and counsel to the Cleveland Plain Dealer) making an argument that parasitic aggregators who are free-riding on newspaper content should be stopped. Stopped by reviving the common law doctrine of "hot news" misappropriation. He believes that the Copyright Act should be amended so that it no longer preempts state-law misappropriation claims. The attorney writes: "If the legal principles that we advocate in this analysis were the law, the newspaper publisher would have a legal right to enjoin temporarily or otherwise impede the business of an aggregator that commercially exploits the publisher's news reports in direct competition with the publisher." I don't want to "Go Pundit" here, but this is a solution to a problem that just does not exist.
3. Citizen Media Law Blog: Southeastern Conference Sacks Social Media, Then Recovers
A nice account of the Southeastern Conference's attempt to protect the interests of its television broadcast partners by prohibiting fans from blogging, twittering et cetera during football games that reminded me we are still very much at the beginning of the user-generated media era. The article summarizes the state of the law on the "hot news" doctrine, making a nice counterpoint to the "save the newspapers" discussions above.
4. U.S. Department of Homeland Security: Secretary Napolitano Announces New Directives on Border Searches of Electronic Media
Modest privacy-enhancing protections announced here, though DHS is not giving back an ounce of their authority to search anyone, anything, any time, at the border. Which still includes laptops: "In the course of a border search, with or without individualized suspicion, an Officer may examine electronic devices and may review and analyze the information encountered at the border."
The American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit this week seeking records relating to searches of electronic devices at the border.
5. The Volokh Conspiracy: How the Ninth Circuit Tried To End Plain View for Computer Searches Without Ending Plain View for Computer Searches
Prof. Orin Kerr ruefully labels the en banc Ninth Circuit's decision in United States v. Comprehensive Drug Testing Inc. as Miranda for computer searches. He writes: "I think the best way to understand today's remarkable Ninth Circuit Fourth Amendment decision in United States v. Comprehensive Drug Testing is that the Ninth Circuit did its best to end the plain view exception for computer searches without formally ending plain view for computer searches. Chief Judge Kozinski's opinion created an elaborate statute-like new regime to make sure the government acts like there is no plain view exception. The decision is a workaround that effectively ends plain view for computer searches by making sure the government will never collect electronic evidence in plain view in the first place."
Sounds a little bitter to me. Judge Kozinski's opinion is a sensational read. And if it really is like Miranda, read it, because it's going to be around for a long time.
6 & 7. Gregg Easterbrook (ESPN): Tuesday Morning Quarterback's AFC preview and TMQ travels back in time to August 2009
A personal favorite, a guilty pleasure, one of the best writers on the Web, reminds me of Tom Wolfe way back when. More than football in here too: smart ruminations on Twitter, the British Humanist Association, and deadly objects from space.
8. Consumer Law & Policy Blog: Official Word from US Courts -- Feel Free to Use RECAP With Our Blessing
The implication here is that the AO's office would naturally have disapproved of RECAP, a Firefox addon that uploads PACER documents to a free repository. But surprise surprise it appears they don't mind at all. Am I the only one who believes the judiciary is the most -- not the least -- open branch of the federal government?
Ah, August 6, 10 a.m. PST. I was fly-fishing a gentlemanly stretch of the Gallatin River in Yellowstone National Park. Wretched souls like Venkat were slogging through Gordon v. Virtumundo's discussion of CAN-SPAM preemption. He writes: "As far as opinions go, this is as good as it gets." I couldn't agree more. About the fishing, of course.
10. Techdirt: Interview With William Patry: Understanding How The Copyright Debate Got Twisted
Prof. William Patry is coming out with a new book, Moral Panics and the Copyright Wars. Here, a very interesting discussion with Techdirt's Mike Masnick draws out Patry's views on fair use, the file-sharing wars, and copyright politics.
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