20100531

When Online Gripes Are Met With a Lawsuit


Justin Kurtz with his car, which was towed from his apartment complex parking lot near Western Michigan University.

By DAN FROSCH

After a towing company hauled Justin Kurtz’s car from his apartment complex parking lot, despite his permit to park there, Mr. Kurtz, 21, a college student in Kalamazoo, Mich., went to the Internet for revenge.

Outraged at having to pay $118 to get his car back, Mr. Kurtz created a Facebook page called “Kalamazoo Residents against T&J Towing.” Within two days, 800 people had joined the group, some posting comments about their own maddening experiences with the company.

T&J filed a defamation suit against Mr. Kurtz, claiming the site was hurting business and seeking $750,000 in damages.

Web sites like Facebook, Twitter and Yelp have given individuals a global platform on which to air their grievances with companies. But legal experts say the soaring popularity of such sites has also given rise to more cases like Mr. Kurtz’s, in which a business sues an individual for posting critical comments online.

The towing company’s lawyer said that it was justified in removing Mr. Kurtz’s car because the permit was not visible, and that the Facebook page was costing it business and had unfairly damaged its reputation.

Some First Amendment lawyers see the case differently. They consider the lawsuit an example of the latest incarnation of a decades-old legal maneuver known as a strategic lawsuit against public participation, or Slapp.

The label has traditionally referred to meritless defamation suits filed by businesses or government officials against citizens who speak out against them. The plaintiffs are not necessarily expecting to succeed — most do not — but rather to intimidate critics who are inclined to back down when faced with the prospect of a long, expensive court battle.

“I didn’t do anything wrong,” said Mr. Kurtz, who recently finished his junior year at Western Michigan University. “The only thing I posted is what happened to me.”

Many states have anti-Slapp laws, and Congress is considering legislation to make it harder to file such a suit. The bill, sponsored by Representatives Steve Cohen of Tennessee and Charlie Gonzalez of Texas, both Democrats, would create a federal anti-Slapp law, modeled largely on California’s statute.

Because state laws vary in scope, many suits are still filed every year, according to legal experts. Now, with people musing publicly online and businesses feeling defenseless against these critics, the debate over the suits is shifting to the Web.

“We are beyond the low-tech era of people getting Slapped because of letters they wrote to politicians or testimony they gave at a City Council meeting,” said George W. Pring, a University of Denver law professor who co-wrote the 1996 book “Slapps: Getting Sued For Speaking Out.”

Marc Randazza, a First Amendment lawyer who has defended clients against suits stemming from online comments, said he helped one client, Thomas Alascio, avoid a lawsuit last year after he posted negative remarks about a Florida car dealership on his Twitter account.

“There is not a worse dealership on the planet,” read one post, which also named the dealership.

The dealership threatened to sue Mr. Alascio if he did not remove the posts. Mr. Randazza responded in a letter that although Mr. Alascio admitted that the dealership might not be the worst in the world, his comments constituted protected speech because they were his opinion.

While the dealership did not sue, that outcome is unusual, said Mr. Randazza, who conceded that sometimes the most pragmatic approach for a Slapp defendant is to take back the offending comments in lieu of a lawsuit.

In the past, Mr. Randazza said, if you criticized a business while standing around in a bar, it went “no further than the sound of your voice.”

Now, however, “there’s a potentially permanent record of it as soon as you hit ‘publish’ on the computer,” he said. “It goes global within minutes.”

Laurence Wilson, general counsel for the user review site Yelp, said a handful of lawsuits in recent years had been filed against people who posted critical reviews on the site, including a San Francisco chiropractor who sued a former patient in 2008 over a negative review about a billing dispute. The suit was settled before going to court.

“Businesses, unfortunately, have a greater incentive to remove a negative review than the reviewer has in writing the review in the first place,” Mr. Wilson said.

Recognizing that lawsuits can bring more unwanted attention, one organization has taken a different tack. The group Medical Justice, which helps protect doctors from meritless malpractice suits, advises its members to have patients sign an agreement that gives doctors more control over what patients post online.

Dr. Jeffrey Segal, chief executive of Medical Justice, said about half of the group’s 2,500 members use the agreement.

“I, like everyone else, like to hear two sides of the story,” he said. “The problem is that physicians are foreclosed from ever responding because of state and federal privacy laws. In the rare circumstance that a posting is false, fictional or fraudulent, the doctor now has the tool to get that post taken down.”

The federal bill, in the House Subcommittee on Courts and Competition Policy, would enable a defendant who believes he is being sued for speaking out or petitioning on a public matter to seek to have the suit dismissed.

“Just as petition and free speech rights are so important that they require specific constitutional protections, they are also important enough to justify uniform national protections against Slapps,” said Mark Goldowitz, director of the California Anti-Slapp Project, which helped draft the bill.

Under the proposed federal law, if a case is dismissed for being a Slapp, the plaintiff would have to pay the defendant’s legal fees. Mr. Randazza would not disclose specifics on the legal fees he has charged his clients, but he said the cost of defending a single Slapp suit “could easily wipe out the average person’s savings before the case is half done.”

Currently, 27 states have anti-Slapp laws, and in two, Colorado and West Virginia, the judiciary has adopted a system to protect against such suits. But the federal bill would create a law in states that do not have one and offer additional protections in those that do, Mr. Goldowitz said.

In Michigan, which does not have an anti-Slapp measure, Mr. Kurtz’s legal battle has made him a local celebrity. His Facebook page has now grown to more than 12,000 members.

“This case raises interesting questions,” said the towing company’s lawyer, Richard Burnham. “What are the rights to free speech? And even if what he said is false, which I am convinced, is his conduct the proximate cause of our loss?”

On April 30, Mr. Kurtz and his lawyers asked a judge to dismiss the suit by T&J, which has received a failing grade from the local Better Business Bureau for complaints over towing legally parked cars. Mr. Kurtz is also countersuing, claiming that T&J is abusing the legal process.

“There’s no reason I should have to shut up because some guy doesn’t want his dirty laundry out,” Mr. Kurtz said. “It’s the power of the Internet, man.”

FCC asked to monitor "hate speech," "misinformation" online

By Matthew Lasar

Over thirty organizations want the Federal Communications Commission to open up a probe on "hate speech" and "misinformation" in media. "Hate has developed as a profit-model for syndicated radio and cable television programs masquerading as 'news'," they wrote to the FCC earlier this month.

As for the Internet, it "gives the illusion that news sources have increased, but in fact there are fewer journalists employed now than before," they charge. "Moreover, on the Internet, speakers can hide in the cloak of anonymity, emboldened to say things that they may not say in the public eye."

The groups who want this new proceeding include Free Press, the Media Access Project, Common Cause, the Prometheus Radio Project, and the League of United Latin American Citizens. Their statement, filed in the Commission's Future of Media proceeding, comes in support of a petition to the agency submitted over a year ago by the National Hispanic Media Coalition.

"Hate speech against vulnerable groups is pervasive in our media—it is not limited to a few isolated instances or any one media platform," NHMC warned the FCC in 2009. "Indeed, many large mainstream media corporations regularly air hate speech, and it is prolific on the Internet. Hate speech takes various forms, from words advocating violence to those creating a climate of hate towards vulnerable groups. Cumulatively, hate speech creates an environment of hate and prejudice that legitimizes violence against its targets."

The coalition has asked the agency to request public comments on hate speech in the media, inquire into its extent, explore "the relationship between hate speech in the media and hate crimes," and look into options "for counteracting or reducing the negative effects of such speech."

In addition, the groups wants the FCC to examine "the prevalence of misinformation" in the media, since misinformation "creates a climate of prejudice."

"The NHMC understands that those who would prefer hate speech to remain under the radar will claim that such an inquiry violates the First Amendment," the group added. "No doubt they will raise the red herring of the restoration of the 'fairness doctrine,' trying to divert the attention of the vast majority of Americans who find hate speech reprehensible."

NHMC says it wants none of this, "but merely the collection of information and data about hate speech."

Concrete harms

The gist of NHMC's concern is that "hate speech over the media is producing concrete harms," particularly against Latinos in the United States. Hate crimes against Latinos have gone up 40 percent over the last four years, the petition says. And the victims of hate speech suffer not just physical but psychological distress. "These harms may be particularly acute for Latino children given that children are uniquely susceptible to messages in the media."

The campaign for this probe comes as the national temperature is rising over Arizona's controversial immigration enforcement law. No surprise then that the petition cites various related commentaries from talk radio and cable television, such as this excerpt from a tirade allegedly given by nationally syndicated radio host Michael Savage:

America is being overrun by an invasion force from Mexico... Is it racist to protect your nation against an invading horde, from another nation that wants to sweep you off the map?... And you think the gang banger with baggy pants is going to pay for your retirement... ? [Y]ou're digging your own grave ... [a]ll that's missing is the worm from the tequila bottle to go with it.

And this, allegedly from a local AM station:

On September I, 2007, on KGEZ-AM in Montana, John Stokes advocated that those who do not speak English should have their hands chopped off. He went on to pontificate that 'Romans 15: 19 says that if they break into your country, chop off their leg. We have to forcibly get rid of them!' These statements clearly urge listeners to regard all Latinos—including their fellow citizens—as 'enemies' and suitable objects of physical violence.

As for the Internet, NHMC notes that at, at the time of the petition, inputting "I hate spics" into Google.com generated over 45,000 results. Of the first fifty, about 65 percent led to pages containing hateful messages found on chat boards, blogs, and social networking sites.

The more recent group statement in support of NHMC's request links this problem to the lack of localism and the consolidation of radio and television.

"Numerous studies find that people of color continue to be under-represented, stereotyped or misrepresented in both news and entertainment programming," the organizations write. "Indeed, media consolidation leads to a less diverse, less responsive, less responsible media."

Collecting this hate speech data would be helpful, they conclude, "even if the Commission does nothing more than turn that information over to the public, researchers and other government entities." The probe will allow groups like NHMC "to hold the media accountable." It will encourage media organizations to correct their mistakes. And it will help researchers better understand the "effects of hate speech in media and the correlation between hate speech and hate crimes."

Benefits and costs

We share these groups' concerns about the current media environment and appreciate their emphasis on non-regulatory solutions. And we have a lot of respect for the NHMC, one of the few prominent minority media organizations that supports the FCC's proposed open Internet rules.

But we still hope that the Commission dodges this bullet. It will bring upon the agency a world of pain, dragging it into a quagmire of accusatory politics at a time when the FCC faces a host of crucial regulatory tasks.

Before jumping into this project, the FCC should assess the benefits and costs of launching such a probe. The payoff will obviously be some kind of government summation on hate speech in the media. That, we presume, is what NHMC is hoping for when the group mentioned that it has also asked the National Telecommunications and Information Administration to follow up on its 1993 report, The Role of Telecommunications in Hate Crimes, "and to work in conjunction with the FCC in these efforts."

No doubt the new opus will satisfy those already convinced that there is a problem, although just like the NTIA study and the FCC's 2007 report on violence in broadcasting, it will likely cite scholarship questioning any direct links between speech and violence.

Beyond that, the document will probably accomplish little more than those earlier surveys—unless you regard the current media environment as progress.

Now for the costs.

First, none of the media targets of these petitions will believe that NHMC doesn't want some kind of direct or indirect regulation, especially if they fear that the materials served up by this inquiry could be used as fodder for advertiser boycotts similar to the one that drove Lou Dobbs from CNN.

And why shouldn't they come to that conclusion after they've read this footnote to the Free Press et al commentary about making the media more accountable:

"This sort of awareness-raising has worked in the past. On November 11, 2009, under mounting pressure from organizations and individuals across the nation, Lou Dobbs resigned from CNN. Presente.org was one of the key coordinators of the far-reaching BastaDobbs.com effort, collecting over 100,000 signatures from concerned individuals. That effort was only possible because communities across the country were aware of Dobbs' tirades, but organizations such as Presente.org and NHMC do not have the resources to monitor the growing number of vitriolic media personalities."

Second, this inquiry will leave the FCC with the daunting task of cataloguing every conceivable kind of hate speech, including those directed at Republicans and right wing talk show hosts, in order to avoid the appearance of having run a political proceeding.

Third, the Commission will have to sort out which of the plethora of examples it receives are hate speech. On which data pile will complaints about harsh criticisms of Israel or Muslims land? How about misogynist hip-hop tunes? What about Internet pornography, especially the rough kind? All we can say is, good luck with that.

Fourth, despite claims to the contrary, such a proceeding will further burden the media reform movement with the perception that its campaigns for more localism and against broadcast media consolidation are really calls for back-door Fairness Doctrine-style content regulation. Again, why shouldn't critics draw this inference, when the supporters of this inquiry link the hate speech problem to those very themes?

Finally, why would the FCC want to run an inquiry on Internet content at a time when, in pursuit of revised net neutrality rules, its chair is trying to convince the public that the agency doesn't want to regulate Internet content?

This proposed investigation will lead the Commission down a landmine-laced road at a time when it has taken on more challenges than ever, including net neutrality, getting broadband to rural and low income America, spectrum reallocation, and a new IP video policy. And watching the probe would be a polarized Congress up for mid-term elections, its members itching to run with any tirade that will get them on cable TV.

In sum, this is a well-meaning idea whose time, we hope, has not come.

Go to the doctor, lose the copyright to your writings

Today's New York Times has an interesting article about people being sued for critiquing businesses online. Most of the article deals with those crap-filed strategic lawsuits against public participation (SLAPPs), but what really caught my eye is an item on page 2 halfway down the article. To quote:

"The group Medical Justice, which helps protect doctors from meritless malpractice suits, advises its members to have patients sign an agreement that gives the doctor copyright over a Web posting if the patient mentions the doctor or practice."

Are you freaking kidding me? As a writer, I have a good bit of interest in protecting the copyrights to my works. And now if I go to my doctor I might be asked to sign over my copyright to the M.D.! Hell no!

According to a page on the Medical Justice website, it appears the NY Times article is correct. While the Medical Justice website doesn't publicly state that doctors should take the copyright from people, the site does say that their "solution" means that "Patients are free to post online. In the rare event the feedback is not constructive, doctors have a tool to address fictional or slanderous posts."

That tool? Likely a DMCA takedown notice. If a patient has signed over the copyright to their online writings to their doctor, all the doctor has to do is flash that signed document to the offending website and the nasty words will be removed. No lawsuit and no fuss, at least for the doctor.

Medical Justice and the doctors using this copyright grab will likely defend their actions by saying it only applies when someone mentions their doctor or practice in their online writings. But I doubt the legal document which transfers copyright is that specific. For example, the Medical Justice website states their "solution" gives doctors a way to "address fictional or slanderous posts."

Fictional? Does this mean that if my novel includes a doctor as a character then my real doctor can claim that novel's copyright? Could be. After all, if the legal document addresses fictional posts, then the doctor could claim that the character is really him. Plenty of people have sued fiction writers for similar reasons, and if your doctor has a form giving him your copyright ... well, you get the idea.

Perhaps that is far-fetched. But the simple truth is that signing over the copyright to your writings is a bad idea for any writer--especially when you are not being paid to do so and must do it to receive medical care.

I hope writers raise a stink about this. Because if Medical Justice and doctors' groups succeed in making this copyright form the standard for receiving medical care, you better believe other professional groups and businesses will soon do the same. And if that happens, all bets are off for both freedom of speech and the ability of writers to own the copyrights to their works.

UPDATE: This evening I noticed that the NY Times changed the quote I referenced above. Their quote now says "The group Medical Justice, which helps protect doctors from meritless malpractice suits, advises its members to have patients sign an agreement that gives doctors more control over what patients post online." I looked for a correction notice but they haven't posted one. I'm kicking myself for not having copied the original article. However, others noticed this same quote, including The Legal Satyricon and this blog, which posted original article. If the NY Times misquoted Medical Justice, they need to run a correction, not simply change the article without notice. I'm also wondering if the NY Times accidentally revealed the trade secret to how Medical Justice "too" for dealing with online criticism.

The "flotilla video": Israeli troops storm boat with aid supplies bound for Gaza Strip

Xeni Jardin

flotilla.jpg In the news today, worldwide controversy around an Israeli commando attack on a "Free Gaza Movement" flotilla carrying aid supplies to the blockaded Gaza strip. NYT story here. Varying reports on how many were killed: 10 according to Israel, and 19 or more according to the activists and some news organizations. Some 600 people were aboard the flotilla including a Nobel Peace Prize recipient and an 85-year-old Holocaust survivor. The attacked ship was some 100km (70 miles) off the coast, in international waters. Above, video of the event.

Analysis and reactions around the web: The Wikinews article is interesting, in part for the clash of perceptions from those who condemn and those who support the actions of Israel's military. This Jerusalem Post article touches on the resulting PR and media offensive out of Israel, and the government's rationalization for what it maintains was a justified and defensive event (and pointed to ties with Turkey and alleged "Islamist" groups). More reading: "Why the Gaza boat deaths are a huge deal," Blake Hounshell in Foreign Policy. Condemnation from South African Anglican Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu. "A Lesson in Information Operations," Center for a New American Security. Ha'aretz: "Israel Lost at Sea." Top Israeli official when Gaza blockade was imposed several years ago: "The idea is to put the Palestinians on a diet."

China Bans Court Evidence Gained Through Torture

By ANDREW JACOBS

BEIJING — The top judicial and law enforcement bodies in China have issued new guidelines that seek to halt the use of torture in obtaining confessions or witness testimony, especially in death penalty cases.

The rules, announced Sunday, would nullify evidence gathered through violence or intimidation and give defendants the ability to challenge confessions presented during their trials.

The new regulations were issued weeks after the authorities conceded that the confession used to erroneously convict a farmer for a murder was based on torture. The case came to light only after the supposed victim turned up alive and the defendant had spent 10 years in prison. It has provoked national outrage.

“Judicial practice in recent years shows that slack and improper methods have been used to gather, examine and exclude evidence in various cases, especially those involving the death penalty,” said a statement released by the central government.

Although such provisions are a basic feature of modern criminal codes, legal experts said it was the first time Chinese law has explicitly spelled out rules for the admissibility of prosecutorial evidence.

Confessions gained through torture are thought to be common in China, though rights advocates and defense lawyers say such mistreatment gains public notice only when a defendant dies in custody. In some recent cases, jailhouse deaths have spurred protests and alarmed the authorities, who are eager to maintain social stability.

In a rare admission of the problem, the Supreme People’s Procuratorate, which carries out investigations and prosecutions, issued a report in 2003 acknowledging that what it characterized as forced confessions had led to the deaths of 460 people and serious injuries for 117 others.

The stakes are high in China, which puts to death more people than all other countries combined. The government does not release figures on executions, but Amnesty International estimates more than 1,700 last year.

Lawyers and legal scholars praised the new regulations, which are part of a larger package of legal reforms that have been in the works for years, but have been stalled by powerful interests within the country’s public security apparatus.

“They have come just in time because the necessity is so great,” said Zhang Xingshui, a defense lawyer. “It is a good cure for loopholes, because legal workers are often under so much pressure to get cases closed no matter what it takes.”

Several lawyers said that they were curious to see the extent to which the regulations would be carried out, pointing out that China often fails to abide by its own rules and regulations.

The larger problem, legal experts say, is the disconnect between China’s stated desire for the rule of law and the Communist Party’s insistence that the judicial system serve the party.

When it comes to criminal justice, the Ministry of Public Security and Supreme People’s Procuratorate are often averse to measures that might limit their powers. After a previous round of legal revisions in 2007, for example, prosecutors refused to allow lawyers to meet with clients accused of violating state-secrets laws, a hazy designation that is often used against dissidents.

Nicholas Bequelin, a researcher with Human Rights Watch in Hong Kong, called the new guidelines a welcome step, but said that they were weak medicine for an ailing criminal justice system.

“I think the government has abandoned any ambition of carrying out systemic reform and instead has adopted an approach where it aims at marginal procedural improvements,” he said.

Cui Min, a professor at Chinese People’s Public Security University, was somewhat more optimistic. One important element of the regulations, he noted, requires the police to testify in court if they are accused of using torture to extract a confession.

“This may be common practice for police in the West or in Hong Kong, but it is a new thing for Chinese policemen to testify in court,” he said. “We have to cultivate a new mindset, one that accepts the idea of possibly setting free a criminal over wrongfully convicting an innocent man.”

20100530

Monopolists of the Genetic Code?

Last week, Craig Venter created a media frenzy – and a frenzy of bioethical hand-wringing – when he announced the creation of the first “synthetic cell.” In reality, his team of researchers had created the first synthetic genome, the operating system of the cell. They had, in effect, switched the operating system of a particular cell to a new operating system that they had synthesized and edited.

Though many of the headlines talked of Venter being God and having created life in the lab, that is not an accurate way to describe it. Venter started with a particular naturally occurring cell and effectively, de-compiled, analysed and then painstaking edited and reassembled that cell’s genome to create a version of the cell never found in nature. Researchers had already synthesized the genome of the polio virus, creating a genome that would actually “produce” a live virus that infected mice in the lab, but the size of that initiative was several orders of magnitude smaller. The significance of what Venter’s team did lay in the scale of the enterprise and the mastery of the code that it demonstrated. It is as if I took your computer, copied the operating system, figured out what each part of that system did, pruned, cut and edited its functions, and then reloaded a substantially edited system back into the computer – a version which actually proved capable of running it.

Why do this in the first place? Why create a cell with a synthetic genome? Synthetic biology is a term with lots of meanings, but at its most imaginative and inventive, it is striving to move from genetic tinkering to genetic engineering. At the moment we have lots of examples of artisanal editing of genetic code, splicing a gene for luminosity taken from jellyfish into a tomato plant, say, or creating a transgenic goat which secretes spider silk, or insulin in its milk. To an outsider these examples seem impressive (and sometimes creepy) enough. But according to the synthetic biologists, we are still largely at the stage of medieval artisans hand crafting objects; the artisan’s workshop produced impressive creations, but there were no standard screws, valves, gauges, no “off-the-rack” components, no assembly line.

Synthetic biology seeks to remedy that deficiency, to provide the standard platforms for all genetic engineering, so that the next researcher who wishes, say, to create a biofuel with low carbon emissions will be able to use a standard synthetic cell line, the genome of which is completely known, edited so that no unwanted functions remain. When you turn on your computer to finish that essay, or complete that spreadsheet, you do not first have to write an operating system – it comes already loaded. The code writers of synthetic biology want to provide you with something very similar and, just as with computer operating systems, there are reasons to believe there will be strong network effects – markets will tip towards standardization and those who control these basic biological tools will thus gain considerable market power.

In an article written for the journal PloS Biology in 2007, my colleague Arti Rai and I explored the likely legal future of synthetic biology. We found reason to worry that precisely because synthetic biology looks both like software writing and genetic engineering, it might end up combining the expansive patent law aspects of both those technologies, with the troubling prospect of strong monopolies being created over the basic building blocks of science itself. Some of the patents being filed are astoundingly basic, the equivalent of patenting Boolean algebra right at the birth of computer science. With courts now reconsidering both business method and perhaps software patents, and patents over human genes, the future is an uncertain one.

In the world of software, the proprietary model faces competition from open source alternatives, free both in price and in that their code is openly available and can be scrutinized and rewritten. Internet Explorer competes with the open source browser, Firefox. Microsoft dominates the desktop operating system market but there is a Linux alternative. Microsoft web server software competes with (and trails) the open source offerings from Apache and others. The same is true in the world of synthetic biology. The Biobricks Foundation is a nonprofit founded by scientists who are keenly aware of the parallels to the software world. They want to create an open source collection of standard biological parts, to make sure in other words, that the basic building blocks, the standard tools of this new world of biological science, remain “open” in a scientific commons. But their efforts, too, are rendered uncertain by the threat of overbroad patents on foundational technologies.

Innovation in synthetic biology has the potential to produce extraordinary scientific advances, helping to cure diseases, to engage in benign environmental engineering and biofuel development and much, much more. Patents will have an important role to play in that process – they will encourage investment and commercialization in ways that are socially beneficial. But patents that are handed out at too fundamental a layer could actually hurt science, limit research and slow down technological innovation. This is where the sloppiness of the reporting about the creation of artificial life has hurt public debate. The danger isn’t that Craig Venter has become God, it is that he might become Bill Gates. We do not want a monopolist over the code of life.

Ubisoft DRM 'benefits pirates'

The DRM issue has split the gaming industry, with Namco Bandai recently vouching for Ubisoft saying that its approach to DRM is the best solution at this moment in time.


Digital Rights Management is "too draconian" and "pirates now have a better experience than legitimate consumers" as a result.

Those are the words of top analyst Nicholas Lovell, founder of Gamesbrief.com, who told PC Zone, "It seems crazy to me that Ubisoft didn't emulate Steam, which by some estimates has more than half the market, and instead went for their own, draconian system."

"There is no doubt in my mind that pirates now have a better experience than legitimate consumers," he continued.

"Publishers spend a ton of money on promoting its games. So there are ways to see piracy as the start of a relationship with a future consumer, not theft."

When asked about alternatives, Lovell said, "Give the whole game away entirely for free, make it small and charge for DLC."

"Slash the marketing budget and rely on pirated copies to spread the word about how good your game is, then charge for additional elements."

Transgenic Spider-Goat Hybrids Produce Tougher-Than-Steel Silk

by Jasmin Malik Chua, 05/26/10

Transgenic Spider-Goat

Transgenic spider-goat hybrids may sound like the premise of a made-for-SyFy movie, but it’s a concept that’s very much grounded in reality, with plenty of real-world applications to spare. Prized for its off-the-charts elasticity and strength, spider silk has an abundance of untapped potential, from artificial ligaments and tendons to bulletproof vests. The trick is amassing enough raw material. While spider farms are not unknown, the eight-legged critters have a tendency to kill one another, whether out of territoriality or nuances in arachnid social etiquette we’re not privy to. That’s when someone decided to bring in the goats.

Golden Orb Spider

Photo by mbarrison

HERE’S LOOKING AT YOU, KID

With his team of researchers, Randy Lewis, a professor of molecular biology at the University of Wyoming developed a way splice the spider’s silk-making genes into goats, so the protein can be harvested from their milk. “When the goats have kids, and they start lactating, we collect the milk, and we can purify that spider silk protein in much, much higher quantities,” Lewis tells the Science Nation, a publication of the National Science Foundation, which helped fund the research.

The silk-making protein can be harvested from the milk of the transgenic goats in much higher quantities.

Because of the vagaries of the genetic lottery, not all the goats wind up with the spider gene. Of the seven kids (three sets of twins and one single) born in February, only three are would-be web-slingers.

Of course, any endeavor that involves animals or genetic engineering is bound to find itself knee-deep in an ethical quagmire, but Lewis insists that the transgenic goats are no different in health, appearance, or behavior “In lots of ways, these goats are a lot more pampered because they are very valuable,” he says.

Alfalfa

SPIDER ALFALFA

But PETA may be able to breathe easier in the future. Even large quantities of silk might be possible if the web-producing gene can be introduced to alfalfa plants.

The silk-making gene could one day be introduced to alfalfa plants.

Widely grown across the country, alfalfa also produces a whopping protein content of between 20 and 25 percent. And after the silk protein is extracted? The rest of the alfalfa plant can be converted into biofuel. Or, you know, fed to goats.

Your movie purchasing decision

20100528

The Fight for Fair Copyright

UK "three strikes" rules could snare libraries, coffee shops

By Nate Anderson

The UK has just released a draft set of rules for its new "three strikes and you're... on a list" approach to online copyright enforcement. The quick and dirty details: ISPs must log copyright infringement warnings, rightsholders can sue when anyone picks up three warnings within a year, rightsholders must prove they use a solid process to uncover violations, ISPs must prove they can properly match IP addresses to names, and there's an appeals process. At first glance, it doesn't seem too bad.

That's until you start thinking about the key question: who counts as an ISP, and who counts as a "subscriber"? A coffee shop that offers WiFi might count as an ISP. A business that offers open WiFi access in its lobby would count as a subscriber—and could be liable for lawsuits and penalties based on how visitors use its network. Libraries that offer Internet access may need to collect e-mail or postal addresses from users before allowing access. Running an open WiFi network could get individuals into trouble for copyright infringement.

These aren't theoretical questions. The UK telecoms regulator, Ofcom, spells out the implications of Britain's new approach to dealing with online infringement in its own implementation proposal (PDF), released today.

"Some businesses provide access in their public areas, and some consumers may also run unprotected WiFi networks to allow others in their community free access to the Internet," says section 3.30. These groups are Internet "subscribers," meaning that they could be reported by rightsholders for any illicit use of their networks.

"Those who wish to continue to enable others to access their service will need to consider whether [to] take steps to protect their networks against use for infringement, to avoid the consequences that may follow," concludes Ofcom, even while noting that such protection will be "challenging" to implement.

As for libraries, they appear to be ISPs, and may need to collect addresses or e-mails (and, apparently, verify accuracy somehow) from everyone who uses the Internet connection.

And when it comes to WiFi that is "provided in conjunction with other goods or services to a customer, such as a coffee shop or a hotel," such providers would also be called ISPs. That means collecting user information, having processes in place to handle infringement letters from rightsholders, and maintaining a list of users who rack up more than three "strikes."

Start slow

The good news is that none of this will affect small ISPs at first. Ofcom's plan would apply the rules only to the seven wireline ISPs that serve more than 400,000 customers (BT, O2, Orange, Post Office, Sky, TalkTalk, and Virgin). Mobile operators are excluded, as are all small players.

But Ofcom doesn't want to create a situation in which infringers simply sign up for small ISPs instead, or head over to the local library, so it will reconsider this decision regularly. Ofcom makes it clear that, if infringement becomes an issue at libraries, WiFi hotspots, and coffee shops, even small ISPs could eventually fall under the new regime.

Internet disconnection isn't an option at the moment; for now, rightsholders can only get an anonymized list of people who have racked up at least three strikes. If they want to pursue the cases, they can go to court and uncover individual identities. But UK law allows for much tougher penalties down the line if the Secretary of State decides they're needed.

This mean that one year from now, without needing to pass additional laws, it's entirely possible that the UK could boot repeat infringers (including businesses) off the Internet and that everyone from coffee shops to libraries to open WiFi hotspots will need to lock down their services and collect more data from users.

While the Liberal Democrats have expressed opposition to many parts of the Digital Economy bill that brought the new regime to the UK, their Tory senior coalition partners don't appear to have the same concerns.

Internet democracy at stake in Google/Viacom lawsuit?

By Matthew Lasar

eBay, Facebook, Yahoo, and Ask.com owner IAC/Interactive may compete with Google for users, views and ad clicks, but the four know which side their bread is buttered on when it comes to digital copyright law. That's why they've rushed to Google's side this week to defend their rival in a massive copyright infringement lawsuit launched by Viacom.

Viacom's interpretation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) "would slow development of the Internet by making the hosting of user generated content an activity fraught with legal peril," eBay et al warned the court hearing the case in an amici brief. "The threat of ruinous liability would mean that other companies and services might never get off the ground in the first place."

And that, in turn, would "retard the development of the Internet and electronic commerce and inhibit the growth and development of user-centric online models that, day after day, make the Internet and the world more democratic."

Blatant disregard

So now the future of global democracy is tied up in this case—plus a billion bucks. That's the sum for which Viacom is suing Google as it charges the search engine giant with "blatant disregard for the intellectual property laws" contained in the DMCA.

The media company has found 150,000 Viacom content clips on Google's YouTube service, it says, and they just keep popping up despite repeated takedown notices. Plus YouTube has an extortionist's history of refusing to implement filtering technologies, Viacom insists, unless content companies sign licensing agreements favorable to Google.

Nonsense, Google lawyers respond, "For years, Viacom continuously and secretly uploaded its content to YouTube, even while publicly complaining about its presence there," they charge. "It hired no fewer than 18 different marketing agencies to upload its content to the site. It deliberately 'roughed up' the videos to make them look stolen or leaked. It opened YouTube accounts using phony email addresses."

Discourse between the litigants has gotten pretty nasty of late, with public document dumps that one side or the other says are taken massively out of context, and, recently, internal e-mails that win the Ars Technica Corporate Potty Talk prize, hands down.

Multiplications

But various public interest groups and Web companies are nervously watching this case, fearful that the United States Southern District Court of New York could side with Viacom's contention that the DMCA and its "safe harbor" provisions offer Google few protections. This, in turn, could expose a host of sites to "statutory damages—multiplied by thousands of works" demanded by media companies in lawsuits, say eBay and others.

eBay and the gang are particularly worried about arguments suggesting that when a service provider sets up an automated process to make content uploadable to a site, the offering of those tools excludes the site from any protections under the DMCA. Viacom contends that YouTube's activities go way beyond "storage"—thus exempting it from the safe harbor law.

These companies disagree. Congress clearly intended the DMCA to cover sites that do more than simply store data—"Internet access, e-mail, chat room and Web page hosting services" were mentioned at one Senate hearing discussing the legislation, they note.

These Google defenders also want the court to interpret the DMCA's "red flag" awareness provisions as narrowly as possible. Section 512(c) of the law stipulates that it doesn't protect service providers who have "actual knowledge that the material or an activity using the material on the system or network is infringing" or are "aware of facts or circumstances from which infringing activity is apparent."

There's huge back-and-forth between Google and Viacom over whether the former had this sort of red flag knowledge or not.

But the eBay and Facebook crowd contend that, whatever the situation actually was at YouTube, Congress targeted these red flag provisions at "sophisticated 'pirate' directories—which refer Internet users to other selected Internet sites where pirate software, books, movies, and music can be downloaded or transmitted."

Lawmakers wanted the DMCA's "knowledge disqualifiers" to apply "only in the most extreme of situations," they write. "Mere generalized awareness of infringement on a site is not enough."

That was then

And if keeping track of infringement was tough in 1998 when Congress passed the DMCA, consider the challenge now, the amici brief notes:

If service providers lacked the practical ability to determine which of their users' materials were infringing in 1998, that is all the more true for amici and other service providers today. More than half of Facebook's 400 million users log in on any given day, and the average user creates 70 pieces of content every month. At any given moment, there are more than 200 million listings available for sale on eBay. IAC-owned Vimeo hosts over 10 million videos at any given time and receives an average of 15,000 new video uploads per day.

The "widespread use of amici's services, as well as those of other service providers, is the foundation of the democratizing virtues of the Internet," they add. If Viacom's arguments prevail, service providers would be exposed to lawsuits, "even where they lack particularized knowledge regarding what material is infringing and should be removed."

Financial benefits

The eBay filing also takes on what is perhaps the most dicey question in this case, whether Google received "a financial benefit directly attributable to the infringing activity, in a case in which the service provider has the right and ability to control such activity." Under those circumstances, DMCA safe harbor protections disappear.

But Google's allies contend that Congress never intended this "financial benefit" language for companies that engage in legit activities and marketing practices. In support of that position, they extract this prose from a Congressional hearing:

"In general, a service provider conducting a legitimate business would not be considered to receive a 'financial benefit directly attributable to the infringing activity' where the infringer makes the same kind of payment as non-infringing users of the provider's service. Thus, receiving a one-time set-up fee and flat periodic payments for service from a person engaging in infringing activities would not constitute receiving a 'financial benefit directly attributable to the infringing activity'."

No predictions from us as to what the Southern District Court will make of this logic. Viacom's reaction was easier to obtain:

"The courts have been clear that creating and building a Web-based business on the intellectual property of others is illegal," a Viacom spokesperson told us. "That is exactly what YouTube did in its formative years. Nothing in this case threatens the principles of the DMCA or the ability of legitimate Internet-based businesses to flourish. At its core, the DMCA seeks to protect both the work of content creators and lawful online businesses for the benefit of all consumers."

Student Handcuffed for English-Arabic Flashcards Sues TSA, FBI

By Matthew Rothschild

Nicholas George was just trying to get to college for his senior year. It was August 29, 2009, and he was attempting to fly from Philadelphia to Southern California to start up his senior year at Pomona College.

While he was going through the security line at Philadelphia International Airport, TSA agents put him through extra screening, according to his lawsuit, filed by the ACLU.

They asked him to empty his pockets, and he had some English-Arabic flashcards in them, as he’d been learning Arabic for three years and was a Middle-Eastern Studies major. After discovering the flashcards, the TSA agents kept him in the screening area for a half hour.

Then a TSA supervisor arrived and “immediately began questioning Mr. George in a hostile and aggressive manner.”

She asked about how he felt about 9/11.

“Mr. George responded that he though 9/11 was a terrible event,” says the suit, filed by the ACLU.

Then she noted a book he had entitled “Rogue Nation: American Unilateralism and the Failure of Good Intentions, “ by Clyde Prestowitz.

And she kept up the inquisition on 9/11.

TSA supervisor: “You know who did 9/11?”

George: “Osama bin Laden.”

TSA supervisor: “Do you know what language he spoke?”

George: “Arabic.”

TSA supervisor: “Do you see why these cards are suspicious?”

Then a Philadelphia police officer arrived and handcuffed George and led him
away to the airport police station.

“At no time did the officer inform Mr. George of any rights he retained, including the right to speak with an attorney, the right to remain silent, or the right to leave the airport rather than get on the flight,” the suit says.

Instead, the officer put him in a jail cell, with his handcuffs still on, and told him he was being detained.

After a couple of hours, two FBI officers arrived, and they led him to an interrogation room. They never informed him of his rights, either, according to the lawsuit.

They “proceeded to ask a large number of questions about his personal and educational background, his religious and political beliefs, his prior travels, and other personal matters.”

When George told them he didn’t know why he was being held, one of the agents called him a “fucking idiot.”

They asked him about his travels to Egypt, Sudan, Ethiopia, and Malaysia. (George had taken a semester abroad in Jordan, and spent five weeks after that traveling in northwest Africa. He also had visited Malaysia and Indonesia.)

“Are you Islamic?”

George told them no.

They followed up by “asking whether Mr. George was a member of any “pro-Islamic groups” on campus or any “communist groups.”

George said no.

After 30 minutes, they told him he wasn’t a threat and could go.

By this time, he’d missed his flight, and he couldn’t get another one until the next day.

George is suing agents of the TSA, the FBI, and the Philadelphia police force for violating his First and Fourth Amendment rights.

Messages left with the TSA and the FBI were not returned in time for this filing.

Says George, in an ACLU press release, “No one should be treated like a criminal for simply learning one of the most widely spoken languages in the world.”

Pseudo-science and airport security Maggie Koerth-Baker at 2:52 PM Friday, May 28, 2010 tsapseudosci.jpg The Pomona College student who was detaine

Maggie Koerth-Baker

The Pomona College student who was detained by airport security after they found Arabic flashcards in his carry-on luggage was originally pulled aside for questioning because of Screening Passengers by Observation Technique (SPOT), a pseudo-scientific program that's supposed to teach TSA employees how to identify deceptive or hostile behavior in travelers.

Or, rather, SPOT is supposed to help pick out people who are trying to hide their cruel intentions. The pushy, cranky guy behind you in line who's yelling at his kid = no. Sneaky terrorists trying to look innocent = yes.

The problem, of course, is that there's no evidence this system works any better than a lie detector. Which, just to be perfectly clear, means it doesn't work.

"Simply put, people (including professional lie-catchers with extensive experience of assessing veracity) would achieve similar hit rates if they flipped a coin," noted a 2007 report1 from a committee of credibility-assessment experts who reviewed research on portal screening. "No scientific evidence exists to support the detection or inference of future behaviour, including intent," declares a 2008 report prepared by the JASON defence advisory group.

The TSA does track statistics. From the SPOT programme's first phase, from January 2006 through to November 2009, according to the agency, behaviour-detection officers referred more than 232,000 people for secondary screening, which involves closer inspection of bags and testing for explosives. The agency notes that the vast majority of those subjected to that extra inspection continued on their travels with no further delays. But 1,710 were arrested, which the TSA cites as evidence for the programme's effectiveness. Critics, however, note that these statistics mean that fewer than 1% of the referrals actually lead to an arrest, and those arrests are overwhelmingly for criminal activities, such as outstanding warrants, completely unrelated to terrorism.

I'm in favor of reasonable security measures at airports. But, from my perspective, a big part of defining "reasonable" is providing objective evidence that the measure actually does any good.

Scientists disagree. You should not be surprised.

Maggie Koerth-Baker

Ardipithecus ramidus—the skeletal proto-human also known as Ardi—was discovered almost 18 years ago. The first scientific reporters were published last year. And now, other researchers are coming forward to challenge the way Ardi's discoverers interpreted the evidence about her habitat and place in the human family tree. But here's the kicker—these challenges aren't a scandal. In fact, this is the normal way that science, of all sorts, happens. I point this out, because I think it's a basic fact that the public doesn't really understand, and that we—the science reporters—often forget to clarify. Science works because scientists disagree. They challenge each other's ideas, find better ways to interpreting the data and eventually come to conclusions that bring us closer to truth.

Too unfit to run: Two-year-old who smokes 40 cigarettes a day

Taking a deep drag on his cigarette while resting on the steering wheel of his truck, he looks like a parody of a middle-aged lorry driver.

But the image covers up a much more disturbing truth: At just the tender age of two, Ardi Rizal's health has been so ruined by his 40-a-day habit that he now struggles to move by himself.

The four-stone Indonesia toddler is certainly far too unfit to run around with other children - and his condition is set to rapidly deteriorate.

Truck on bad habits: Ardi Rizal sits smoking on his favourite toy  at home in Musi Banyuasin, Indonesia

Truck on bad habits: Ardi Rizal sits smoking on his favourite toy at home in Musi Banyuasin, Indonesia

But, despite local officials' offer to buy the Rizal family a new car if the boy quits, his parents feel unable to stop him because he throws massive tantrums if they don't indulge him.

His mother, Diana, 26, wept: 'He's totally addicted. If he doesn't get cigarettes, he gets angry and screams and batters his head against the wall. He tells me he feels dizzy and sick.'

Ardi will smoke only one brand and his habit costs his parents £3.78 a day in Musi Banyuasin, in Indonesia's South Sumatra province.

But in spite of this, his fishmonger father Mohammed, 30, said: 'He looks pretty healthy to me. I don't see the problem.'

Ardi's youth is the extreme of a disturbing trend. Data from the Central Statistics Agency showed 25 per cent of Indonesian children aged three to 15 have tried cigarettes, with 3.2 per cent of those active smokers.

The percentage of five to nine year olds lighting up increased from 0.4 per cent in 2001 to 2.8 per cent in 2004, the agency reported.

Gun smoke: Four-stone Ardi puffs one of 40 cigarettes he smokes a  day while toting a water pistol

Gun smoke: Four-stone Ardi puffs one of 40 cigarettes he smokes a day while toting a water pistol

A video of a four-year-old Indonesian boy blowing smoke rings appeared briefly on YouTube in March, prompting outrage before it was removed from the site.

Child advocates are speaking out about the health damage to children from second-hand smoke, and the growing pressure on them to smoke in a country where one-third of the population uses tobacco and single cigarettes can be bought for a few cents.

Seto Mulyadi, chairman of Indonesia's child protection commission, blames the increase on aggressive advertising and parents who are smokers.

'A law to protect children and passive smokers should be introduced immediately in this country,' he said.

A health law passed in 2009 formally recognizes that smoking is addictive, and an anti-smoking coalition is pushing for tighter restrictions on smoking in public places, advertising bans and bigger health warnings on cigarette packages.

Puff baby: Ardi blows smoke while trundling around on his truck

Puff baby: Ardi blows smoke while trundling around on his truck

But a bill on tobacco control has been stalled because of opposition from the tobacco industry.

The bill would ban cigarette advertising and sponsorship, prohibit smoking in public, and add graphic images to packaging.

Benny Wahyudi, a senior official at the Industry Ministry, said the government had initiated a plan to try to limit the number of smokers, including dropping production to 240 billion cigarettes this year, from 245 billion in 2009.

'The government is aware of the impact of smoking on health and has taken efforts, including lowering cigarette production, increasing its tax and limiting smoking areas,' he said.

Mr Mulyadi said a ban on advertising is key to putting the brakes on child and teen smoking.

'If cigarette advertising is not banned, there will be more kids whose lives are threatened because of smoking,' he said.

Ubiquitous advertising hit a bump last month when a cigarette company was forced to withdraw its sponsorship of pop star Kelly Clarkson's concert following protests from fans and anti-tobacco groups.

Always having a break: Ardi, who is rarely seen without a  cigarette, insists on the same brand, costing £78 a day

Always having a break: Ardi, who is rarely seen without a cigarette, insists on the same brand, costing £3.78 a day

However, imposing a non-smoking message will be difficult in Indonesia, the world's third-largest tobacco consumer.

Tubagus Haryo Karbyanto, a member of the National Commission of Tobacco Control, said Indonesia must also address the social conditions that lead to smoking, such as family influence and peer pressure.

'The promotion of health has to be integrated down to the smallest units in our society, from public health centres and local health care centres to the family,' he was quoted as saying by the Jakarta Globe on Friday.

Health Minister Endang Sedyaningsih conceded turning young people off smoking will be difficult in a country where it is perceived as positive because cigarette companies sponsor everything from scholarships to sporting events.

'This is the challenge we face in protecting youth from the dangers of smoking,' she said in a statement on the ministry's website.

When science clashes with beliefs? Make science impotent

By John Timmer


It's hardly a secret that large segments of the population choose not to accept scientific data because it conflicts with their predefined beliefs: economic, political, religious, or otherwise. But many studies have indicated that these same people aren't happy with viewing themselves as anti-science, which can create a state of cognitive dissonance. That has left psychologists pondering the methods that these people use to rationalize the conflict.

A study published in the Journal of Applied Social Psychology takes a look at one of these methods, which the authors term "scientific impotence"—the decision that science can't actually address the issue at hand properly. It finds evidence that not only supports the scientific impotence model, but suggests that it could be contagious. Once a subject has decided that a given topic is off limits to science, they tend to start applying the same logic to other issues.

The paper is worth reading for the introduction alone, which sets up the problem of science acceptance within the context of persuasive arguments and belief systems. There's a significant amount of literature that considers how people resist persuasion, and at least seven different strategies have been identified. But the author, Towson University's Geoffrey Munro, attempts to carve out an exceptional place for scientific information. "Belief-contradicting scientific information may elicit different resistance processes than belief-contradicting information of a nonscientific nature," he argues. "Source derogation, for example, might be less effective in response to scientific than nonscientific information."

It might be, but many of the arguments against mainstream science make it clear that it's not. Evolution doubters present science as an atheistic conspiracy; antivaccination advocates consider the biomedical research community to be hopelessly corrupted by the pharmaceutical industry; and climatologists have been accused of being in it to foster everything from their own funding to global governance. Clearly, source derogation is very much on the table.

If that method of handling things is dismissed a bit abruptly, Munro makes a better case for not addressing an alternative way of dismissing scientific data: identifying perceived methodological flaws. This definitely occurs, as indicated by references cited in the paper, but it's not an option for everyone. Many people reject scientific information without having access to the methodology that produced it or the ability to understand it if they did. So, although selective attacks on methodology take place, they're not necessarily available to everyone who chooses to dismiss scientific findings.

What Munro examines here is an alternative approach: the decision that, regardless of the methodological details, a topic is just not accessible to scientific analysis. This approach also has a prominent place among those who disregard scientific information, ranging from the very narrow—people who argue that the climate is simply too complicated to understand—to the extremely broad, such as those among the creationist movement who argue that the only valid science takes place in the controlled environs of a lab, and thereby dismiss not only evolution, but geology, astronomy, etc.

To get at this issue, Munro polled a set of college students about their feelings about homosexuality, and then exposed them to a series of generic scientific abstracts that presented evidence that it was or wasn't a mental illness (a control group read the same abstracts with nonsense terms in place of sexual identities). By chance, these either challenged or confirmed the students' preconceptions. The subjects were then given the chance to state whether they accepted the information in the abstracts and, if not, why not.

Regardless of whether the information presented confirmed or contradicted the students' existing beliefs, all of them came away from the reading with their beliefs strengthened. As expected, a number of the subjects that had their beliefs challenged chose to indicate that the subject was beyond the ability of science to properly examine. This group then showed a weak tendency to extend that same logic to other areas, like scientific data on astrology and herbal remedies.

A second group went through the same initial abstract-reading process, but were then given an issue to research (the effectiveness of the death penalty as a deterrent to violent crime), and offered various sources of information on the issue. The group that chose to discount scientific information on the human behavior issue were more likely than their peers to evaluate nonscientific material when it came to making a decision about the death penalty.

There are a number of issues with the study: the sample size was small, college students are probably atypical in that they're constantly being exposed to challenging information, and there was no attempt to determine the students' scientific literacy on the topic going in. That last point seems rather significant, since the students were recruited from a psychology course, and majors in that field might be expected to already know the state of the field. So, this study would seem to fall in the large category of those that are intriguing, but in need of a more rigorous replication.

It's probably worth making the effort, however, because it might explain why doubts about mainstream science seem to travel in packs. For example, the Discovery Institute, famed for hosting a petition that questions our understanding of evolution, has recently taken up climate change as an additional issue (they don't believe the scientific community on that topic, either). The Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine is best known for hosting a petition that questions the scientific consensus on climate change, but the people who run it also promote creationism and question the link between HIV and AIDS.

Within the scientific community, there has been substantial debate over how best to deal with the public's refusal to accept basic scientific findings, with different camps arguing for increasing scientific literacy, challenging beliefs, or emphasizing the compatibility between belief and science. Confirming that the scientific impotence phenomenon is real might induce the scientific community to consider whether any of the public engagement models they're currently arguing over would actually be effective at addressing this issue.

By Noelle Crombie

roger witter

Witter demonstrates the stance he took before firing twice into the bumper of a car containing two suspected I-phone thieves in Gresham last night. Roger Witter's good intentions landed him in jail late Tuesday.

Gresham police say Witter, 48, was in an AT&T store at 533 Northwest Division Street in Gresham when two men stole multiple iPhones. Witter witnessed the theft and, instead of waiting for police, he took off after the men, firing at their getaway car.

He told police he intended to "shoot out the tires," but it is unclear where the rounds ended up, though police said he fired in a direct line with the Gresham City Hall Max station and the adjacent Park & Ride.

Witter, a customer at the store, told police he didn't feel that his own life – or anyone else's – was in danger. He said he was trying to help police. But instead he got himself into hot water.

witter.roger.jpg
Officers ended up arresting Witter, accusing him of unlawful use of a weapon, reckless endangerment disorderly conduct and unlawful discharge of a firearm. His handgun and concealed weapons permit were seized.

"It is important to remember that no matter how frustrated one may be with crime and the criminal justice system, it is not permissible to use deadly force in this type of situation," Gresham Sgt. Rick Wilson said in announcing Witter's arrest. "Those two rounds could've gone anywhere. In fact, we're still not sure where they went. They could've struck an innocent bystander or damaged property."

Wednesday morning, a gun lobbyist said he realized that Witter was trying to do the right thing but didn't show good judgment.

"I understand the person's frustration," said gun lobbyist Kevin Starrett, with the Oregon Firearms Federation, a pro-firearms group. "I can understand his desire to be helpful. But it was not the thing to do. You cant shoot someone's tires out; its just not TV."

The two suspects, who fled in a silver-colored Chrysler, remained at large this morning.

Both are described as 5-foot-10 to 5-foot-11 inches tall, and about 20 to 30 years of age.

One was wearing a gray and black horizontally striped hooded sweatshirt, blue jeans and white tennis shoes. The other was wearing a brown hooded sweatshirt, blue jeans and dark shoes. Their Chrsyler was last seen heading westbound on Northwest Division.

Witter, meanwhile, has been released from jail.

Reached at his Rockwood home this morning, Witter talked to The Oregonian.

"I'm not a cowboy," he said. "I'm not a hero. I was just doing what I always try to do: help."

AT&T employees at the store Wednesday morning declined to talk about the incident, but a spokeswoman for AT&T issued a statement.

"AT&T takes this matter very seriously," said Colleen Smith, spokesperson for AT&T. "We are cooperating with law enforcement and I'd refer you to law enforcement for any further details or comment."

<Way to step up to the plate, AT&T. Bravo>

Canada's copyright minister: superinfringer

Cory Doctorow

Tony Clement, the Canadian minister who ignored the results of his own consultation on copyright and decided to bring Canadians a restrictive, US-style Canadian DMCA, admits to being a copyright infringer.

First, there's the matter of his much-vaunted iPod, held out as an example of his technical savvy, which he admits to filling with illegally ripped music. His new law will make it legal to rip CDs and load them onto your iPod, but not if there's any DRM on the CDs or other digital music files, in which case, all bets are off. Clement's law makes it illegal to break DRM, even if you're doing so for a lawful purpose.

Then there's the video above. As Ben notes, "Tony Clement, was found to have been doing commercials for a company selling chemicals in China. Aside from hilariously poor production values, the video contains blatant copyright violations. This is ironic, as he is one of the Ministers responsible for overhauling Canadian copyright laws."

Senators call for end to anonymous, prepaid cell phones

By Nate Anderson

Earlier this month, the FBI revealed that the suspected Times Square bomber had used an anonymous prepaid cell phone to purchase the Nissan Pathfinder and M-88 fireworks used in the bomb attempt. The case sparked new calls to regulate prepaid cell phones in order to provide more accountability and make the devices less attractive to criminals. Yesterday, Congress responded.

Senators Charles Schumer (D-NY) and John Cornyn (R-TX) joined forces and announced a new bill that would require an ID at the point of sale. Phone companies would need to keep this information on file in order to help police thwart "terrorists, drug lords and gang members," along with the occasional hedge fund manager.

"In 2009," said the Schumer/Cornyn announcement, "[prepaid cell phones] were even used by hedge fund managers and Wall Street executives implicated in the largest insider trading bust in US history. In court papers, federal prosecutors detailed how traders from the Galleon Group hedge fund communicated with other executives through prepaid phones in order to try to evade potential wiretaps. In one instance, one suspect is described as having chewed the Subscriber Identity Module, or SIM card, until it snapped in half in order to destroy possible evidence."

"We caught a break in catching the Times Square terrorist, but usually a prepaid cell phone is a dead end for law enforcement. There’s no reason why it should still be this easy for terror plotters to cover their tracks," said Schumer.

Prepaid phones can be bought over the counter in many different stores, from big-box retailers to gas stations, and many can be activated without credit checks or ID.

Some countries have already forbidden this sort of anonymous use. The Canadian government funded a study on this question back in 2006. A team from Simon Fraser University looked at 24 OECD countries and found that nine of them require mobile operators to collect registration data for prepaid phone users.

"In all cases, the rationale for a prepaid registration requirement was to improve efficiency of law enforcement and national security activities," said the report.

US states have followed suit; similar laws have been introduced in Texas, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Georgia and South Carolina, according to Schumer and Cornyn. But "in light of the increased reliance of terrorists on the devices," the senators said, "it was time for a federal response."

<You don't deserve the option of anonymity because you are only going to use these phones to make bombs.>

4 ways to Nudge Yourself

A.J. Jacobs

A few months ago, I did an experiment in which I tried to be totally and completely rational for a month. To eliminate all of my brain's mental quirks and Paleolithic biases.

Of course, I failed. My irrational monkey mind has a powerful hold on me, and won't let go so easily. But I made some baby steps.

Plus, the experiment introduced me to the idea of nudging myself. The recent (okay, 10-day-old) New York Times article on Cass Sunstein reminded me of this notion. (Full disclosure: Cass is my cousin, which is how I first heard about nudging and behavioral economics in the first place). The article is about Cass's idea of taking advantage of our brain quirks to produce better behavior. As the Times puts it: Nudgers want "school cafeterias put the fruit before the fried chicken, because students are more likely to grab the first food they see. They support a change in Illinois law that asks drivers renewing their licenses to choose whether they want to be organ donors. The simple act of having to choose meant that more people signed up. Ideas like these, taking human idiosyncrasies into account, might revive an old technocratic hope: that society could be understood so perfectly that it might be improved."

But in addition to the government or institutions nudging us, we can nudge ourselves. Here's some of the homespun, unofficial strategies I've come up with.

They seem to work for me - though I realize it could be the placebo effect. On the other hand, the placebo effect is kind of a nudge as well. So we shouldn't underestimate placebos.

1. A mirror on my desk
This isn't vanity. Or isn't simply vanity. Studies show people behave more virtuously when a mirror is present. They can see themselves sinning, and they stop. So I have a small mirror next to my laptop. I swear it's cut down on the number of times I check gossip websites. Also, I use mirrors in eating. I got this idea from Cass's co-author, the behavioral economist Richard Thaler, who told me that people eat less when they eat in front of a mirror. We're too self-conscious. A warped mirror - one that makes you look fat - could even cut more calories out of your diet, though I haven't resorted to that yet.

2. Watchful eyes
Studies show that people also behave better when there are pictures of eyes on the wall. You don't even need real eyes. Just pictures of eyes.

People unconsciously think they're being watched and judged. So I've snipped out dozens of eyes from magazines - Sela Ward's eyes from a clothing ad, John Malkovich's from an interview -- and taped them around my home office. I put a stern-looking set of eyes (Lynne Cheney's) on the cabinet where the fruit snacks are kept.

I taped some eyes in my kids' room. I realize it kind of makes my house look like it was decorated by DeNiro's character in Cape Fear.

But I kind of like it. Plus, my son seems to throw slightly fewer tantrums. An anecdotal finding no doubt, but nobody's offered to fund a rigorous study.

3. Light Bulb
This is a new addition to my office. I adjusted the lampshade off one of my lamps so I could see the bare bulb. This was inspired by this study on priming effects.

If you see a light bulb, it brings to mind the idea of creativity. And, in one experiment at least, the sight of a light bulb made people more creative: they solved logic problems better. I'm behind deadline, so I need all the creativity I can get.

4. Memento Mori
This is an ancient nudge, and perhaps my most effective. I have a memento mori on my computer desktop. As you might know, memento moris are reminders of death, and were popular in the Middle Ages when paintings often included skulls and other macabre symbols. So I have a JPEG of a skull on my computer. But I didn't want it to be gruesome, so it's a fun, multicolored skull -- a design I downloaded from some site. It puts things in perspective. It helps stop the small-stuff-induced sweating. Reminds me to enjoy my life and my family while I'm here.

The Drug Policy Alliance


Ohio Dairy Farm Brutality

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20100527

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Seriously, we're exactly like Google! isoHunt makes its case

By Nate Anderson

Last week, the Congressional International Anti-Piracy Caucus held a press conference with RIAA CEO Mitch Bainwol. They rolled out a new list of six horrific websites that make copyright infringement simple—and that just might destroy your job and family.

"An Internet of chaos may meet a utopian vision but surely undermines the societal values of safe and secure families and job and revenue-creating commerce," said Bainwol. "Shining the spotlight on these websites sends a vital message to users, advertisers, payment processors and governments around the world."

Canadian-based isoHunt found itself on the list and it wasn't pleased about the inclusion.

"One person's 'worst search engine' is another person's 'robust search engine'," said isoHunt's attorney, Ira Rothken, when I spoke with him this week. "If the RIAA has a problem with the manifestation of torrent files throughout the world on the Internet," he added, the group should take it out on those who host the torrent files.

isoHunt is just a search engine, he argues, citing a 90 percent overlap between the torrent files indexed by isoHunt and torrent files available through a Google search.

This "mere search engine" argument didn't save The Pirate Bay under Swedish law (though an appeal is pending), and it didn't save isoHunt under American law. isoHunt has been targeted in a long-running copyright infringement lawsuit in a California federal court, and a judge issued a summary judgment against the site last year. isoHunt was liable for "inducing infringement."

Ira Rothken

Last week, another blow fell as the judge issued a tough permanent injunction against isoHunt, demanding that it implement tough keyword-filtering rules based on movie titles submitted by rightsholders. It also must block such piratical search terms as "warez," telecine," and "jaybob."

Still, Rothken remains adamant that the site "doesn't do anything more than what a good, automated search engine ought to do." In our conversation, he made the case that search was simply too important to suffer these sorts of blanket injunctions.

"Should we as a society not allow torrent search engines because some groups like the major studios don't like the state of the Internet as it relates to .torrent files?" he asks.

The answer to that question will soon provide another piece of key judicial precedent for these types of cases.

Just another search engine?

Rothken's basic contention remains that isoHunt is a search engine, nothing more. Even if the site ran a tracker (its US-facing tracker was turned off in 2007), he says, it adds nothing to the basic argument about infringing behavior. "Trackers do not have any content going through them," says Rothken, comparing them favorably to sites like YouTube, which actually host infringing content themselves.

And other search engines link to loads of infringing content, even beyond .torrent files. Do a simple image search for any celebrity on Google, for instance, and many of the responses and thumbnails (which Google even caches on its own servers) are unauthorized and copyrighted.

"We all recognize that the greater good is to allow for robust search," says Rothken.

But isoHunt isn't like mainstream search engines in one key respect: it indexes only torrent files, a format used largely to distribute copyrighted material without authorization. Instead of scooping up torrents as part of its quest to index everything, isoHunt makes torrents its business.

Rothken concedes that the distinction "may have a bearing on the optics of the case," but argues that it "shouldn't have a bearing on the substance of the case."

I press on this point: how can the quantity of infringement not matter at all? If some new technology was used to break the law 999,999 times, but the millionth use was a legal one, wouldn't the sheer scale matter to a court?

"It may matter to a court right now," Rothken allows, but he says that it shouldn't. Search is just too important to society. "Regardless of the percentage of files, even if it's a large percentage of those files that ultimately will lead to downstream content that's unauthorized, search of that content should still be allowed... When you look at the total picture... do we believe that search engines for .torrent files should be banned altogether? Most people would say no."

Rightsholders aren't left without remedy here, it's just that they don't like the remedy: sending tens of thousands of DMCA takedown notices.

Unlike sites such as The Pirate Bay, which routinely mock takedown requests, isoHunt responds "every single time" to takedown requests, and those files are blocked by logging their hash values—identical copies will be kept out of the indexing system in future.

The federal trial court did recognize this, but it found that isoHunt's "inducement" of copyright infringement to be the overriding factor. Something similar happened to the Dutch P2P search engine Mininova last year; despite taking down links after a complaint, a Dutch judge said the site needed to exert some level of preemptive filtering due to the massive infringement it was facilitating.

"So vague and so ambiguous and so overbroad"

IsoHunt now faces the same restrictions in the US. It must filter its index using lists of titles supplied by US movie studios, but Rothken objects to the expansiveness of the order. It's not "narrow," he says, but "so vague and so ambiguous and so overbroad." In his view, the injunction will essentially force isoHunt to filter individual English words and numbers... like "Firefox," "Avatar," "10" and "24."

This is something of a blunt instrument—a German court recently recognized how that such filtering would lead to numerous false positives on a site like RapidShare. Filename filters alone, especially when they filter single words, could catch all sorts of things: parodies, a short clip compilation of The Godfather with voiceover criticism, the Firefox browser.

None of this made much headway with the trial judge, who did not even let the case proceed to trial (it was decided on summary judgment). But Rothken says the case is important to isoHunt, to founder Gary Fung, and to society, so he will pursue the case in "every court that will hear us."

isoHunt is currently asking for a stay of the injunction and plans to appeal the case.