By krisnelson on Feb 21, 2011 in constitution / government / history / law / privacy / search and seizure / technology / wiretap
Anuj C. Desai explains that the extension of the Fourth Amendment to cover postal mail, and then later to telephones, is based not so much on the inherently Constitutional nature of opening mail, but instead on the increasingly firm belief in the sanctity of the mail as expressed by Congress, legislators, and the public.
Posted in constitution, government, history, law, privacy, search and seizure, technology, wiretap | Tagged confidentiality, Congress, constitution, Fourth Amendment, originalism, search and seizure, supreme court, telegraph |
By krisnelson on Jan 31, 2011 in government / history / law / technology
Ex parte Jackson, which dealt with government agents opening mail in search of banned lottery materials, hints at the future Court’s ruling on wiretaps in Katz v. United States that the Fourth Amendment “protects people, not places.”
Posted in government, history, law, technology | Tagged Congress, constitution, Fourth Amendment, history, law, privacy, supreme court, telegraph |
By krisnelson on Jun 22, 2009 in business / copyright / intellectual property / law / technology
Latoicha Givens writes: In the case of RIAA vs. Joel Tenenbaum, the court is currently accepting an argument that peer to peer file sharing is a Fair Use exception to Copyright Infringement Laws. Essentially, the argument is that file sharing is not commercial use and therefore not copyright infringement. In lay terms, this means that as […]
Posted in business, copyright, intellectual property, law, technology | Tagged business, Congress, copyright, fair use, file sharing, intellectual property, law, RIAA |
By krisnelson on Jun 18, 2009 in constitution / copyright / intellectual property / law / patents
There are many who disagree, but the study appears to raise interesting issues regarding the benefit to society of copyright protections. As Mike Masnick writes, copyright is about balancing benefits (incentives to create with the benefits of distribution).
Posted in constitution, copyright, intellectual property, law, patents | Tagged Congress, constitution, copyright, file sharing, intellectual property, law, Michael Geist, Mike Masnick, patents |