> without first making reasonable and just efforts to find the owner and to restore the property to him See, the problem is that according to the law you quoted simply picking up and taking the lost phone home is…
It means that the DA and Jobs are buddies. Simple as that.
It's not bias when an organization that believes bloggers are journalists makes a statement that it believes bloggers are journalists.
That's interesting, but I don't think that's what positr0n was describing. The Washington Post reporter describes Gawker's work repeatedly as journalism. Even the photograph caption uses "Gawker Web site reporter" to…
How's that a conflict of interest? It's valid context, but in what ways are EFF obligations in conflict?
Do you have any sort of specific criteria for what is considered a journalist? It seems like the discussion here tends to equate journalists with reporters and then speculate to what extent Chen should be considered a…
I think a bigger question is whether the warrant would have been issued/executed against his home if he didn't work from home. Somehow I doubt the DA would have had the balls to raid Gawker's offices over this.
Are you talking about trade secrets or theft? Gizmodo never disputed that the phone was Apple's property and they returned it to Apple as soon as Apple claimed it. If Gizmodo physically damaged the phone they should be…
The question is the difference in public response at the two cases. Just FYI for the ESLs and reading-comprehension-impaired.
If you lose your wallet and assume that credit card numbers are not compromised you're an idiot. Are you saying Gizmodo refused to return the phone to Apple claiming it was now their own property? Or that Gizmodo…
So, how exactly is it necessary to test the phone while the user is inebriated with access to the public? They couldn't host a private party for that? Test it at workers houses? Why is access to the public so vital?…
If these secrets are so valuable maybe Apple should rethink its policy of letting them walk out the door to go to a bar.
If Apple is claiming trade secret protection, they need to demonstrate that they attempted to protect the secret. Apple authorized taking the phone into the public. These "secrets" were not taken from the Apple campus…
If a company can't keep its own secrets it should be their problem. We give protections to patents and copyrights for a reason.
...and here I was thinking about X11 authority. Silly me.
Not to mention that Apple had just burned Adobe with the whole ditching Copland fiasco. I'm sure Adobe was thinking, "Oh, sure yet another framework from Apple." Also, remember at the time Apple was promising windows…
Don't you usually pay more for the "professional" cameras or the "professional" phones. Apple seems to play it the other way. Charging more for the dumber hardware.
Are you saying they are supposed to leave the baby attached to the placenta while the afterbirth is delivered? I would imagine that remaining attached to the afterbirth as it is delivered is an infection and antigen…
And yet: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34149853/
After the cord is clamped, how is the blood on the other side expected to get into the baby?
The problem with He is also why it's so useful--it doesn't react with anything. It's a bitch to filter because the only strategy you have is to get rid of everything else.
How does anyone decide to trust mint.com? It gives me the security hebbie-jebbies and all their claims of security assurances make the jebbies worse. They're still storing accounts and passwords in a form that can be…
Well, they do have hardware to seize a running server without shutting it down (by splicing into the power cables/power lines at the wall plate and introducing battery power). How secure is a running machine sitting in…
I was skeptical but I'm really swayed by a victory that occured six years prior to the PATRIOT act.
> without first making reasonable and just efforts to find the owner and to restore the property to him See, the problem is that according to the law you quoted simply picking up and taking the lost phone home is…
It means that the DA and Jobs are buddies. Simple as that.
It's not bias when an organization that believes bloggers are journalists makes a statement that it believes bloggers are journalists.
That's interesting, but I don't think that's what positr0n was describing. The Washington Post reporter describes Gawker's work repeatedly as journalism. Even the photograph caption uses "Gawker Web site reporter" to…
How's that a conflict of interest? It's valid context, but in what ways are EFF obligations in conflict?
Do you have any sort of specific criteria for what is considered a journalist? It seems like the discussion here tends to equate journalists with reporters and then speculate to what extent Chen should be considered a…
I think a bigger question is whether the warrant would have been issued/executed against his home if he didn't work from home. Somehow I doubt the DA would have had the balls to raid Gawker's offices over this.
Are you talking about trade secrets or theft? Gizmodo never disputed that the phone was Apple's property and they returned it to Apple as soon as Apple claimed it. If Gizmodo physically damaged the phone they should be…
The question is the difference in public response at the two cases. Just FYI for the ESLs and reading-comprehension-impaired.
If you lose your wallet and assume that credit card numbers are not compromised you're an idiot. Are you saying Gizmodo refused to return the phone to Apple claiming it was now their own property? Or that Gizmodo…
So, how exactly is it necessary to test the phone while the user is inebriated with access to the public? They couldn't host a private party for that? Test it at workers houses? Why is access to the public so vital?…
If these secrets are so valuable maybe Apple should rethink its policy of letting them walk out the door to go to a bar.
If Apple is claiming trade secret protection, they need to demonstrate that they attempted to protect the secret. Apple authorized taking the phone into the public. These "secrets" were not taken from the Apple campus…
If a company can't keep its own secrets it should be their problem. We give protections to patents and copyrights for a reason.
...and here I was thinking about X11 authority. Silly me.
Not to mention that Apple had just burned Adobe with the whole ditching Copland fiasco. I'm sure Adobe was thinking, "Oh, sure yet another framework from Apple." Also, remember at the time Apple was promising windows…
Don't you usually pay more for the "professional" cameras or the "professional" phones. Apple seems to play it the other way. Charging more for the dumber hardware.
Are you saying they are supposed to leave the baby attached to the placenta while the afterbirth is delivered? I would imagine that remaining attached to the afterbirth as it is delivered is an infection and antigen…
And yet: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34149853/
After the cord is clamped, how is the blood on the other side expected to get into the baby?
The problem with He is also why it's so useful--it doesn't react with anything. It's a bitch to filter because the only strategy you have is to get rid of everything else.
How does anyone decide to trust mint.com? It gives me the security hebbie-jebbies and all their claims of security assurances make the jebbies worse. They're still storing accounts and passwords in a form that can be…
Well, they do have hardware to seize a running server without shutting it down (by splicing into the power cables/power lines at the wall plate and introducing battery power). How secure is a running machine sitting in…
I was skeptical but I'm really swayed by a victory that occured six years prior to the PATRIOT act.