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February 25, 2008

Ordinary People Doing Extraordindary Things

08_logo2 ""Hope is the bedrock of this nation.  The belief that our destiny will not be written for us but by us....by all those men and women who are not content to settle for the world as it is, who have the courage to remake the world as it should be," said Obama in his Iowa victory speech on January 3, 2008.  "Together ordinary people can do extraordinary things."

Justin Kosslyn, a junior in Ezra Stiles College at Yale University and David Manners-Weber a sophomore in Yale's Calhoun College take the message to heart.  In an article the Yale Daily News, Kosslyn and Manners-Weber imagine that, instead of simply getting out the vote, young people follow Obama's exhortation to make change happen in the world. 

We have three examples of what such projects might look like. The first is simple: neighborhood cleanup. Residents driving through town squares and walking through local parks would find groups of enthusiastic Obama volunteers picking up cigarette butts and candy wrappers. The volunteers on this project, and all such projects, would be decked out in Obama T-shirts, stickers and buttons."

Our second sample service project is a 5K run through Main Street to raise money for a local charity. In Connecticut, our state, we could support Operation Fuel, which subsidizes heating for low-income families. Obama has spoken about the impact of high fuel prices on working families, so this type of service complements Obama’s message.

Finally, Obama volunteers could work through local YMCAs to further a myriad of small-scale local projects. These range from re-tiling the bathroom in a local women’s shelter to distributing children’s books from the local book bank. Though often less visible than traditional campaigning, these efforts have the potential to generate tremendous word-of-mouth credibility and support for Obama.

They have the right idea.  Unlike the Republican leaders who after 9/11 called for us to shop as a sign of patriotism, these Yale students, inspired by Obama's leadership, talk of becoming engaged and involved.  They do not ask what Washington will do for them nor do they contentedly envision their role as passively voting every fourth year.  These are the young people who want to make change happen for themselves in their own communities.  Working together, people have the ability to do what they cannot do alone and the projects they envision imagine people collaborating to improve their own social conditions.  Obama's message, strongly echoed in the Tech Plan's new vision for government, puts inspired students like Kosslyn and Manners-Weber at the center of the solution. 

Powerpoint Does Not Go to Washington

Lessig is not running.

http://lessig.org/blog/2008/02/on_why_i_am_not_running.html

February 19, 2008

IP Surprise: IP in Unconventional Industries

Ipsurprise Music, movies, book publishing, computer software, pharmaceuticals. Everyone knows what the “intellectual property industries” are—or do they? Intellectual property today plays a leading role in some unexpected areas. Today’s hoteliers and sommeliers need to know their trademarks and copyrights; game designers and golfers are playing with patents. Meanwhile, haute couture and haute cuisine have built innovation-intensive industries just outside the limits of formal intellectual property protection. Intellectual property is now showing up in some surprising places, and intellectual property issues are increasingly part of the daily work of counsel to a wide variety of industries. The Institute for Information Law & Policy at New York Law School presents IP Surprise!—a lecture series about the new intellectual property industries.

RSVP required to IPsurprise@nyls.edu

Video Games

February 26, 2008 - 5:00 PM
Dr. S Gregory Boyd, Associate at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, will discuss how the entirety of the video game industry is supported by protection of and investment in intellectual property.

Golf

March 10, 2008 - 4:30PM
James H. Schnare II, General Counsel for Nicklaus Companies, LLC, will discuss the relevance of intellectual property to the golf industry, from celebrity lifestyle and marketing to protection of golf courses, and will identify challenges and practical solutions to the application of traditional legal theories to this unique business. This lecture is co-sponsored by the Center for Real Estate Studies at New York Law School.

Fashion - SOLD OUT!

March 25, 2008 - 5:00 PM
Susan Scafidi, Visiting Associate Professor of Law at Fordham Law School and author of the weblog Counterfeit Chic, will discuss the increasing importance of intellectual property in the fashion world, trademark protection for designers, and the debate over copyright protection for fashion designs.

Comics

Closed to the public.  Students only.

Magic

April 10, 2008 - 5:00 PM
Jacob Loshin, Law Clerk for the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and author of Secrets Revealed: How Magicians Protect Intellectual Property without Law, will discuss the challenges magicians face in protecting their intellectual property and the creative ways in which the magic community has adapted to those challenges.

Routing Around

http://www.wikileaks.cx

February 18, 2008

Draft Lessig Change Congress: Donate!

"There's chatter about the possibility that Professor Lessig would make a terrific member of Congress to replace the wonderful Rep. Tom Lantos, who recently passed away. This group is for anyone who thinks that Prof. Lessig would be a great candidate and an even better member of Congress," explains the new Facebook group set up by John Palfrey to launch the movement.  I'm proud to have been among the first to join the now 2,000+ and growing number.  Here's the website.

The special election is April 8th.

Sign up for the mailing list here.

And more important: here's the fundraising page at ActBlue.

I'll be co-hosting the New York Fundraiser.  Date TBD.

As one mutual friend remarked: "what has he done to deserve this."  It's true, we're not doing him any favors but we're doing one for ourselves and for future of politics and civil liberties in this country.

WikiLeaks Domain Ordered Taken Down

Last year, the Digital First Amendment class at Stanford reported about the new Wikileaks project and one team even made the legal issues surrounding wikileaks the topic of their final project.  Sometimes a school paper is more than just a school paper.

Here's the injunction ordering the take down of the domain (2 pages).  The order is to the domain name registrar to take down the domain and thereby effectively block access to the site.

http://wikileaks.cx/wiki/images/Dynadot-injunction.pdf

Then the Amended Temporary Restraining Order handed down later the same day:

http://www.citmedialaw.org/sites/citmedialaw.org/files/2008-02-15-Amended%20Order%20Granting%20Temporary%20Restraining%20OrderAgainst%20Wikileaks.pdf

The Citizen Media Law Project comments:

http://www.citmedialaw.org/blog/2008/court-orders-wikileaksorg-shutdown-then-grants-limited-reprieve

The new order "drops the requirement that Dynadot disable the entire Wikileaks.org domain. Among other things, the amended order enjoins the defendants from "displaying, posting, publishing, distributing, or linking to . . . all documents and information originating from [the plaintiffs' banks] which are internal non-public company documents and/or which contains private client or customer bank records." (I should note, however, that the original order is still listed on the court's docket and the amended order does not rescind -- or even mention -- the earlier order.)"

The BBC Story appears after the injunction and before the TRO:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7250916.stm

The Wikileaks press release follows.

Continue reading "WikiLeaks Domain Ordered Taken Down" »

February 17, 2008

Now You See It, Now You Don't

Copied wholesale from ThinkProgress.......

http://thinkprogress.org/2008/02/13/economic-indicators/

"The U.S. economy is faltering. Family debt is on the rise, benefits are disappearing, the deficit is skyrocketing, and the mortgage crisis has worsened. Conservatives have attempted to deflect attention from the crisis, by blaming the media’s negative coverage and  insisting the United States is not headed toward a recession, despite what economists are predicting.

The Bush administration’s latest move is to simply hide the data. Forbes has awarded EconomicIndicators.gov one of its “Best of the Web” awards. As Forbes explains, the government site provides an invaluable service to the public for accessing U.S. economic data:

This site is maintained by the Economics and Statistics Administration and combines data collected by the Bureau of Economic Analysis, like GDP and net imports and exports, and the Census Bureau, like retail sales and durable goods shipments. The site simply links to the relevant department’s Web site. This might not seem like a big deal, but doing it yourself–say, trying to find retail sales data on the Census Bureau’s site–is such an exercise in futility that it will convince you why this portal is necessary.

Yet the Bush administration has decided to shut down this site because of “budgetary constraints,” effective March 1:

econind.gif

Economic Indicators is particularly useful because people can sign up to receive e-mails as soon as new economic data across government agencies becomes available. While the data will still be available online at various federal websites, it will be less readily accessible to members of the public.

In its e-mail announcement on the closing of Economic Indicators, the Department of Commerce acknowledged the “inconvenience” and offered “a free quarterly subscription to STAT-USA®/Internet™” instead. Once this temporary subscription runs out, however, the public will be forced to pay a fee. So not only will economic data be more hidden, it will also cost money.

It’s ironic that the Economic and Statistics Administration is facing “budgetary contraints,” considering Bush recently submitted a record $3.1 trillion budget to Congress for FY ‘09.

UPDATE: Steve Benen has compiled other examples of the Bush administration hiding inconvenient data.

UPDATE II: OMB Watch has put together an index to replace Economic Indicators, offering one-stop-shopping for economic data links."

February 16, 2008

New Applications on Peer-to-Patent

Peer-to-Patent is hosting a number of applications that need your expertise!  There are currently 12 applications covering a wide array of inventions, including one by world-famous cryptographer, Whitfield Diffie

Method for configuring a windfarm network
(Submitted by GE, available for review until February 21, 2008)

Technique to modify a timer
(Submitted by Intel, available for review until February 28, 2008)

Cross-cutting detection of event patterns
(Submitted by IBM, available for review until March 6, 2008)

User interface paradigm for manufacturing applications
(Submitted by GE, available for review until March 13, 2008)

Computer compliance system and method
(Submitted by GE, available for review until March 13, 2008)

Vector length tracking mechanism
(Submitted by Intel, available for review until March 27, 2008)

Method and apparatus for determining the switch port to which an end-node device is connected
(Submitted by HP, available for review until March 27, 2008)

System and method for managing virtual collaboration systems
(Submitted by HP, available for review until March 27, 2008)

Automatic tracking of user data and reputation checking
(Submitted by Microsoft, available for review until March 27, 2008)

Relocating page tables
(Submitted by Sun Microsystems, available for review until April 3, 2008)

Method for generating mnemonic random passcodes
(Submitted by Sun Microsystems, available for review until April 17, 2008)

Method for resource sharing in a multiple pipeline environment
(Submitted by IBM, available for review until April 17, 2008)

Descriptions for each of the applications can be found here.

The success of Peer-to-Patent depends upon participation from a knowledgeable, diverse community.  If you know anyone who might be interested in these applications, please forward this on to them or ask them to visit www.peertopatent.org!

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