Friday, December 28, 2007
Human Weapon
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Southwick Approved!!!
Monday, October 1, 2007
DC Sets New Metdata Rules
"We conclude that when a receiving lawyer has actual knowledge that an adversary has inadvertently provided metadata in an electronic document, the lawyer should not review the metadata without first consulting with the sender and abiding by the sender's instructions. In all other circumstances, a receiving lawyer is free to review the metadata contained within the electronic files provided by an adversary."
Wednesday, July 4, 2007
Al Gore's Son Arrested
All Hail, the King is Dead
Tuesday, July 3, 2007
Commute! Commute!
Thursday, June 28, 2007
What was that?
Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Leadership Boca Graduation
Today I graduated from Leadership Boca, Class of 2007. For those who have the opportunity, a Leadership program is a terrific development program.
Monday, June 25, 2007
Beware of Frivolous Cases
Faith OK
New Definition of Free Speech
Next, in Morse v. Frederick, I'm a little troubled by the Court's opinion here. They held that a school principle could restrict a student's speech at a semi-official school event. Despite Justice Thomas' historical contextual concuring opinion, I'm not sure they got the First Amendment right here. Even the dissents got it wrong as well. Justice Breyer tries to weasel out of the case by claiming the student couldn't get damages from the school district which would preclude the First Amendment argument all together. Justice Stevens' dissent agrees with the proposition that the students' banner should have been removed, but goes on to make a rare lucid statement that the school district shouldn't punish the students for their speech, although the rest of the argument falls short.
Hillary's Hillarious Commercial
Operation Valkyrie
Sunday, June 24, 2007
Rotary Induction
Haven's Heros
Friday, June 22, 2007
Another New President?
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
New Desktop Searches
Monday, June 18, 2007
Robot Chicken
Sunday, June 17, 2007
Planet Earth
Fantastic Flop
I saw Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer last night, and wish I didn't. It was awful. It stunk. First the script has holes so large you can drive an 18 wheeler through. Next, the acting was horrible. The actors didn't seem to take it seriously. Jessica Alba and Ioan Gruffud should have been in Team America: World Police. Doug Jones was wasted. Even Stan Lee and Brian Posehn in cameos were nothing.
One thing I hate about comic book movies is the director's almost automatic desire to reboot the franchise and do an origin movie. And to make Gah Lak Tus (as opposed to the more traditional Galactus) a cloud? Come on now . . .
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Condo Life
OK, I haven't seen the Declaration of Condominium for Sherwood Square. But the majority rule, which I agree with, is that if the Declaration provides that unless a guarantee of sound proofing is somewhere in there, there is no protection against your neighbor's sounds. This may be a simple solution, but shouldn't have cost over $10,000 and lasted over 11 years.
Want another Bud?
No Nukes is Good Nukes with Gary Gnuke
Sunday, June 10, 2007
David Chase's Aristocrats
Oceans 13
Friday, June 8, 2007
Al Gore
Sean Connery Retiring
Wednesday, June 6, 2007
Best Buy Blunder Blows Boocoo Bucks
Block has done something very fashionable by admitting liability and then going on medical leave.
Tuesday, June 5, 2007
Academy of Financial Services
Computerless iPods?
Preliminary Injunctions Are the Emperperors' New Clothes
Most importantly, the case stands for the provision that a preliminary injunction obtained under 26 USC 1983 does not serve as a final disposition on the merits and therefore doesn't trigger attorneys fees. Here, Tami Wyner was successful in getting a preliminary injunction to prohibit the Department of Environmental Protection from enforcing Florida's "bathing suit rule" which requires at least bathing suits in Florida State parks. In a subsequent hearing, the District Court found that the restrictions in the preliminary injunction proved unworkable and then granted summary judgment to Florida. The district court also concluded that since Wyner won at least at the preliminary injunction level, she should be entitled to some attorneys fees. The Supreme Court held that it's the end result that counts and not the parts when considering the transfer of attorney fees.
KSR International v. Teleflex
In a companion case, ATT v. Microsoft, the Supreme Court found that software code is not a component and therefore a company could ship software code outside the US for manufacture or infringing products.
Invasion!!!
- Modern USA Insurance Co. of Clearwater
- Keystone Insurance Co. of Ponte Vedra Beach
- Olympus Insurance Co. of Orlando
- Privilege Underwriters Reciprocal Exchange Inc. of Plantaiton
- Homeowners Choice Property & Casualty Insurance Co. of Port St. Lucie
Three other nonresidential carriers have approvals as well:
- Ironshore Insurance Ltd., Bermuda
- Praetorian Specialty Insurance Company - Delaware
- Arch Insurance Company - UK
Just got Maroon Five's New Album
Monday, June 4, 2007
Hell's Kitchen
My Take on the Sopranos Finale
National Intelligence Estimate
Insurance Rates Are Now Adverse Actions?
Fleeting Expletives
So This Is Daffy Duck
Guantanamo Bay
. . . and the Treo morphs into the iPhone
And some people have been asking me about the iPhone. Ed Colligan said, "our Palm Treo already has 90 per cent of Apple's iPhone features at a much lower price". I really can't say I argue with that logic.
UN, Dutch Sued
Musical Acts in Vegas
Nevada finally passed SB053 that provides that musical acts must:
- have at least one member of the recording group to which they claim a connection;
- label their band a "tribute" or "salute";
- own the trademark to the name of the musical act; or
- have permission from the original recording group.
Failure to satisfy these conditions would constitute a deceptive trade or business practice in the state. With all the musical acts that perform in Las Vegas and other casino-tourist spots in the state, it will certainly help the consumer to make sure they are seeing something close to the original.
One issue I have with the legislation is that it doesn't solve problems like the Klymaxx issue. If you recall, Cheryl Cooley has been trying to tour with a band name Klymaxx or the New Klymaxx Band, where Bernadette Cooper, Lorena Stewart, Lynn Malsby and Joyce Irby (the other original members of Klymaxx) has been using their name. Because there is no currently active trademark on file, Cheryl would technically be allowed to perform as Klymaxx. That is like Paul Peterson touring as The Time or Dick Taylor as the Rolling Stones. Imagine going to Vegas and finding out that Klymaxx is performing at five different hotels simultaneously!
Yes, there is technical compliance with the statute if the multiple performance scenario would happen, but the consumer is still at a major disadvantage thinking that there is some substantial link with the original group where the tickets being bought are really for a small part of the original act. I would like to see this legislation, and others like it across the country, beefed up a little and provide either a more substantial connection to the recording group or enhanced disclosures of the constituancy of the band.
I guess this is just a good lesson for musical acts to learn to file trademarks up front and handle dissolution proceedings at the end better.
American blogger `Washingtonienne' files for bankruptcy
At stake in this case is the principle of what are the boundries of privacy in an online world. Namely, what happens if two people have a relationship and one publishes details of it over the internet? At first blush, I think this is nothing more than a ploy to drive Jessica Cutler to economic ruin, rather than having any basis in legal theory. For me, it is no different if I publish a tell-all memoir or publish the same information on the internet, so long as it's true. And I didn't see anything in the complaint to allege that it wasn't true.
Microsoft and Linux
Friday, June 1, 2007
John Dean Got It Wrong
First, Valerie Plame's status was not as a covert agent as intended by the statute. Victoria Toensing, former Chief Counsel for the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, was a key drafter of 50 USC 421. In her testimony before the US House Committee on Government Reform, Toensing stated that Plame was not a "covert agent" under the intent statute.
Second, if Valerie Plame's job was covert, she didn't do a good job at keeping it covert. In a March 11, 2006, article in the Chicago Tribune, John Crewdson blows holes in the theory that she was in deep cover. As he points out, simple internet searches came up with a lot of things that indicated Ms. Plame was not a covert agent but actually connected with the CIA. Russian and Cuban intelligence agencies long before this issue came up. Andrew McCarthy wrote that the CIA durring the Clinton administration exposed Valerie Plame to the Casto government. Furthermore, a careful reading of Robert Novack's collum did not indicate that Valerie Plame was a covert agent. It wasn't until Robert Corn's piece in the nation that indicated that Valerie Plame was a covert agent. And who was his source? Hmmm, Could it be Amb. Joe Wilson himself? After all, he was the primary source for the article.
And let's look at who didn't support the law making it a crime to disclose covert agents names. Do the names Joseph Biden, Gary Hart or Daniel Patrick Moynihan sound familiar? Isn't it funny the hypocrasy of Joe Biden attacking the Bush administration for the Plame affair for a law he didn't support because he thought that US agents in foreign countries should be outed?
Speaking of Amb. Joe Wilson, if you read his declassified CIA report that he filed after his trip to Niger, he claims that Prime Minister Ibrahim Hassanne Mayaki told him that although the Iraqi government has not directly contact him about purchasing Uranium, but third parties did contact him about "expanding commercial relations" with Iraq. Prime Minister Mayaki took that to mean selling Iraq Uranium through these third parties. Then Amb. Wilson contradicted himself in his July 6, 2003, op ed piece by stating that there was no evidence Iraq tried to develop nuclear weapons by purchasing Uranium from Niger. Three seperate investigations all came to the same conclusion: Prime Minister Mayaki was right and that Iraq through third parties tried to purchase Uranium from Niger.