eYou Guide – European Union Guide to Internet Rights

The European Commission has created a Web site for citizens to learn about EU Internet law, e-commerce,  privacy rights online, and copying digital content. Although not designed for attorneys, the site does link to the full-text of legislation and case law mentioned in the text.

eYou Guide to your rights online          http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/eyouguide/navigation/index_en.htm

 

Examples of questions addresed by eYouGuide site:

Protecting privacy

Tips and precautions you should take in order to prevent misuse of your personal information online.

Can the company that provides my internet connection see which sites I visit? If so, how do they use this information?

What you should know about the consumer contracts, unfair terms and delivery of goods bought online.

Shopping online

When buying goods/services online, what are the consequences of clicking “I have read and approved the terms & conditions”?

Safety & security

Concerns about the security of your computer, Internet connection or safety of your online payments.

What are the risks of using social networking websites?

Copyright & IPR

What you should know about your rights and obligations related to music files, movies, CDs and DVDs and books online.

Can I lawfully copy images and texts I found on the internet?   

Can I record streaming video and audio?

Disabled, older people

Access to and use of online services for older people and people with disabilities.

I am a blind user and sometimes I have difficulties accessing some literary or artistic works online. What can I do about this?

Who’s liable?

How to find who is responsible for illegal content online and for faulty goods sold or advertised on the internet.

Can an online seller be held liable for faulty products?

Who is going to pay for the damages caused by a defective product bought online?

UNICEF Information by Country

The UN Children’s Fund’s (UNICEF’) Information by Country portal is a quick way to get access to health, development and demographic statistics for over 150 couintries.  Makes comparisons among countries very easy. Simply selct a country and then click on the statistics link on the left.

http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/

Categories of statistics avaialable on the site:

Basic Indicators

Nutrition

Health

HIV AIDS

Education

Demographic Indicators

Economic Indicators

Women

Child Protection

The Rate of Progress

Under-five mortality rankings

Lawsuit alleges Chadbourne overcharged for computerized legal research

Everything is negotiable.  Most law firms have flat rate contracts with LexisNexis and/or Westlaw.  The databases also have transactional or hourly (more accurately:  minutely) charging.  For example, according to the March 2006 Westlaw Plan 1 Price Guide, to search the ALLSTATES database costs $ 13.86 a minute.  Some firms charge their clients these per minute rates, even if they are paying for the service under a flat rate contract.  If this is not done with the client’s knowledge, it can lead to a dispute, as this story in the National Law Journal reports:

Lawsuit alleges Chadbourne overcharged for computerized legal research

Tresa Baldas

 

. . .

Consumer protection attorney Patricia Meyer filed a suit against New York’s Chadbourne & Parke on March 2 for allegedly overcharging J. Virgil Waggoner, a Texas businessman, by several thousands of dollars for computerized legal research. His bill was roughly $20,000 for the research, she said, but it should have been closer to $5,000. Waggoner v. Chadbourne & Parke, No. BC408693 (Los Angeles Co., Calif., Super. Ct.).Meyer of San Diego’s Patricia Meyer & Associates said that many similar lawsuits are in the pipeline, noting that she has amassed evidence that shows at least a dozen other law firms are overcharging clients for legal research, but not telling them.

. . .

“This appears to be more widespread than you would think,” Meyer said. “Basically what we’re finding is that certain law firms are using Westlaw and Lexis as profit centers, as compared to simply passing along their actual costs to their client….Quite candidly, what we’re finding is the clients really have no idea that this is going on.”

Irish student’s Jarre wiki hoax dupes journalists

Irish student’s Jarre wiki hoax dupes journalists

Reuters
Thursday, May 7, 2009; 5:18 AM

“When I die there will be a final waltz playing in my head,” Oscar-winning French composer Maurice Jarre once said, according to several newspapers reporting his death in March. However, the quotation was invented by an Irish student who posted it on the Wikipedia Web site in a hoax designed to show the dangers of relying too heavily on the Internet for information. The 22-year-old sociology and economics student at University College Dublin said he had expected blogs and perhaps small newspapers to use the quotes but did not believe major publications would rely on Wikipedia without further checks.

 

Source: BNA’s Internet Law News – 5/8/09

Nuts and Bolts of Scholarship – Get it all in a Binder!

As I was skimming through the latest blog postings on Google Reader, I ran across this entry on “Revisiting the Nuts and Bolts of Scholarship” on Empirical Legal Studies.

The post calls attention to the article THE NUTS AND BOLTS OF SCHOLARSHIP or The “NEW” Rules for Legal Scholars, by Cheryl Hanna (Vermont Law School).  For anyone new to legal academia, this is a handy article offering very useful advice for the new scholar embarking on a writing career.

But, what really, really caught my eye was the advice that Hanna offers, not once, but twice in the article.  She explains:

“One of the most frustrating parts of writing a law review article is doing the footnotes. I suggest that for every article you get a binder. Have your research assistant photocopy everything that you cite. You can then send this binder to the law review editors, saving yourself the problem of remembering where you read something and them the task of pulling sources.”

And, later in the work:

“send the editors your binder of citations. They will instantly love you and work harder on your behalf.”

All I have to say: The Librarians will LOVE you, too!

If all authors supplied a binder to the journals with all of their works cited, what a wonderful world this would be.  Imagine how much more time journal editors would have to really work on the articles and find new content to publish if they weren’t so bogged down in cite-pulls.

And, the fiction of citing to the official version of a code or to the hard copy of a journal would be exposed.  Students regularly come to the reference desk looking for a paper copy of a source that is on-line — the source that the author probably used on-line, too.  If the binder were supplied with all accepted articles, this would be simple and transparent.

Now if only the law journals were to require that all authors submit such a binder…..we can dream.

Islamic Finance Report from the Financial Times

The Financial Times has posted its May 5th special report on Islamic finance. The article on Sharia boards lists the leading scholars on the Sharia boards from Bahrain, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and UAE. Registration may be required.

http://www.ft.com/reports/islamic-finance-2009

Articles available in the report:
Credit crunch may test industry beliefs
The industry has held up well so far in the crisis but is unlikely to remain insulated, reports Robin Wigglesworth

Regulation: Further development needs a common rule-book
More standardised products would let the industry go global, writes Simeon Kerr

Islamic Banks: Real estate exposure may be largest threat
And in theory depositors must share any losses, notes Robin Wigglesworth

Sukuk market: Credit freeze victim shows signs of a thaw
An increase in conventional bond deals could help restart transactions, reports David Oakley

Innovation: Downturn temporarily blunts inventiveness
Scholars are taking stock of products, reports Robin Wigglesworth

Asia: Malaysia aims to be hub for its region
However, it is facing increasing local competition, writes Andrew Wood

Sharia boards: Scholars hold sway over the success of products
A small coterie wields power, explains Robin Wigglesworth

Western markets: France and the US vie for the UK’s crown
Shyamantha Asokan says London’s lead in the race to win clients is shrinking

Guest column: New world or false dawn?
Islamic finance faces challenges centred around the increased needs for standardisation and innovation in the industry, writes Mukhtar Hussain

The Google Book Search Settlement: A New Orphan-Works Monopoly?

“The Google Book Search Settlement: A New Orphan-Works Monopoly?”

U of Chicago Law & Economics, Olin Working Paper No. 462

RANDAL C. PICKER, University of Chicago – Law School

This paper considers the proposed settlement agreement between Google and the Authors Guild relating to Google Book Search. Google boldly launched Google Book Search in pursuing its goal of organizing the world’s information. Even though Google was sensitive to copyright values, the service relied on mass copying and thus Google undertook a substantial legal risk in setting up the service. That risk was realized with the lawsuits by the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers. The October, 2008 settlement agreement for those suits will create an important new copyright collective and will legitimate broad-scale online access to United States books registered before early January, 2009.

The settlement agreement is exceeding complex but I have focused on three issues that raise antitrust and competition policy concerns. First, the agreement calls for Google to act as agent for rights holders in setting the price of online access to consumers. Google is tasked with developing a pricing algorithm that will maximize revenues for each of those works. Direct competition among rights holders would push prices towards some measure of costs and would not be designed to maximize revenues. As I think that that level of direct coordination of prices is unlikely to mimic what would result in competition, I have real doubts about whether the consumer access pricing provision would survive a challenge under Section 1 of the Sherman Act.

Second, and much more centrally to the settlement agreement, the opt out class action will make it possible for Google to include orphan works in its book search service. Orphan works are works as to which the rightsholder can?t be identified or found. That means that a firm like Google can?t contract with an orphan holder directly to include his or her work in the service and that would result in large numbers of missing works. The opt out mechanism – which shifts the default from copyright?s usual out to the class action?s in – brings these works into the settlement.

But the settlement agreement also creates market power through this mechanism. Absent the lawsuit and the settlement, active rights holders could contract directly with Google, but it is hard to get large-scale contracting to take place and there is, again, no way to contract with orphan holders. The opt out class action then is the vehicle for large-scale collective action by active rights holders. Active rights holders have little incentive to compete with themselves by granting multiple licenses of their works or of the orphan works. Plus under the terms of the settlement agreement, active rights holders benefit directly from the revenues attributable to orphan works used in GBS.

We can mitigate the market power that will otherwise arise through the settlement by expanding the number of rights licenses available under the settlement agreement. Qualified firms should have the power to embrace the going-forward provisions of the settlement agreement. We typically find it hard to control prices directly and instead look to foster competition to control prices. Non-profits are unlikely to match up well with the overall terms of the settlement agreement, which is a share-the-revenues deal. But we should take the additional step of unbundling the orphan works deal from the overall settlement agreement and create a separate license to use those works. All of that will undoubtedly add more complexity to what is already a large piece of work, and it may make sense to push out the new licenses to the future. That would mean ensuring now that the court retains jurisdiction to do that and/or giving the new Registry created in the settlement the power to do this sort of licensing.

Third, there is a risk that approval by the court of the settlement could cause antitrust immunities to attach to the arrangements created by the settlement agreement. As it is highly unlikely that the fairness hearing will undertake a meaningful antitrust analysis of those arrangements, if the district court approves the settlement, the court should include a clause – call this a no Noerr clause – in the order approving the settlement providing that no antitrust immunities attach from the court’s approval.

 

Source:  LSN Intellectual Property Law Vol. 2 No. 51,  05/07/2009

Citability – Help Solve Link Rot…

We have lamented here about the headaches that link rot causes…Who doesn’t get annoyed by the web link that no longer works?

But, the folks at Citability.org are trying to do something about it.

Their basic goal is very simple and compelling: to have the government create advanced permalinks on a paragraph level to all public government documents.

The beauty of a permalink is quite obvious; and, any fan of public-domain, vendor neutral citation should be pleased by the paragraph level specificity of these links.

Here is an example and explanation  from their site:

“Permalinks are human-readable URLs with timestamps, document ID, and an an anchor to the section/paragraph:
Example: http://archive.senate.gov/20090502082437/bills/SB1234#S1b1Bii.  The example would point to section 1, subsection b, chapter 1, paragraph B, clause ii in SB 1234 on May 2, 2009 at 8:26:16 am UTC”

If you are interested in lending your support, visit their site.  Also, visit http://citability.pbworks.com if you would like to help promote or give feedback on some of the standards that they are suggesting.

Facebook’s new headquarters and office arrangement

Yesterday’s Financial Times included an article by Michael Skapinker, “Time to be honest about open-plan offices,” which detailed the mainly negative aspects of working in cubicles; the author opines: “[w]hatever small gains open-plan offices do offer in enhanced communication are, in any event, wiped out by the loss of productivity.”

Two years ago we did a complete renovation of office space here at the law library.  Only three librarians have private offices; everyone else works out of a cubicle.   Visitors often remark, “well, that’s the Silicon Valley way, right?’   I do not sense that there is any loss of productivity; if anything, I think both communication and productivity have increased with our work environment.

And now I’m reading about Facebook’s new headquarters, which takes shared office space to a new level.

Facebook, next week, is moving into a large building in the Stanford Research Park which is just three blocks from my house.  Our neighborhood has a very active residents association and the latest neighborhood newsletter has an article by our research park observer which I’ve excerpted below.  See the bolded sentences for information about the Facebook “open plan” office scheme.

– Facebook will be moving into their new facility at 1601 California Avenue on May 14-15. Their current estimate is 750 employees, over a third of which live in Palo Alto. Another 200 live in San Francisco.  . . .

(1) They will be setting up their own shuttle
service from the University Avenue train station,
and distributing free Go-Passes to employees to
move as many as they can to/from San Francisco by train.
(2) They will encourage biking by those living locally.
(3) They will provide free gas for those that carpool.
(4) They will use valet parking on site to
increase the parking density behind the building, and
(5) They are now searching for parking space
to rent from other tenants along California
Avenue if additional space is needed.

 

. . . the building includes about 160,000 square feet on two floors. The marketing and administrative staff will occupy the bright spacious top floor; the engineering staff the more cloistered bottom floor. No cubicles. People will work four to a table the size of modest dining room table.The cafeteria is spacious and their new chef will prepare three meals a day for employees, and well as endless snacks, all designed to keep the employees close at hand. Facebook’s growth rate is measured by the week rather than the year. They are advancing into Europe with great speed, and their fastest growth demographic are the oldsters, the grandparents who like to look at the pictures of their grandkids. They are now translated into 40 languages thanks to their members who have kindly provided the translation for free. All they had to do was ask.

. . .

 

Source:

College Terrace Residents’ Association eNews
May 4, 2009

And the prices go up, up, up

While our budgets go down, down, down.

The only option?  Cancellations left and right.

 

In the April issue of Library Journal there is a periodicals price survey. It’s an interesting read. Here’s the full article:
http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6651248.html?q=periodicals+price+survey

The pertinent numbers for law:

Law

Average Cost Per Title 2005   $223
Average Cost Per Title 2006   $246
% of Change   10
Average Cost Per Title 2007   $273
% of Change    11
Average Cost Per Title 2008   $292
% of Change    7
Average Cost Per Title 2009   $322
% of Change    10

So, in a 5-year period, journal prices have risen an average of $99 per tile, or 44%.  Ouch.