Sophisticatedjanedoe / FightCopyrightTrolls Favorite Techdirt Posts Of The Week
from the not-just-about-trolls dept
Hi Techdirt! I'm known to this and other tech blog communities as sophisticatedjanedoe (or SJD). I run an anti-shakedown, anti-copyright-troll opinion blog Fight Copyright Trolls, which, I'm sure, most of you know: Techdirt often links to my posts, especially recently, since we all have been watching an illustrious show of SS Prenda sinking slowly but steadily.
Some might expect that my favorite posts would be all about Prenda, but no — I have wider interests than fighting ethically handicapped lawyers. Still I'm quite happy that copyright trolling disease that has penetrated the legal system is finally gaining attention from the general public. Techdirt, together with ArsTechnica and TorrentFreak (and, recently, Popehat), have been pivotal in this respect.
The only Prenda-related post I want to specifically recommend is about the ISPs' appeal over former RIAA lobbyist judge allowing Prenda to get info on over 1,000 John Does. This post features an amicus curiae brief filed by four respected advocate organizations: EFF, ACLU, Public Citizen and Public Knowledge. To date, this is one of the most comprehensive and beautiful briefs on the topic, a must read to anyone who follows the copyright trolling phenomenon.
For some reason, the story I remember the most is the one about the North Carolina politicians and car dealers trying to outlaw the direct sales of Tesla cars in their state. It makes me sad and angry when special interest groups, mostly incumbents, attempt to derail progress: not that it is unnatural or unexpected, but the BS smuggled as public concern is always unbearable to hear.
It is not much better when certain groups try to widen revenue streams quietly. The story about the Florida Department of Transportation doing it at the expense of public safety — by decreasing yellow traffic light intervals (to increase the number of red-light tickets) — is, unfortunately, also not unexpected.
Good news is that the most innovative area — the Internet — is largely immune to the tricks that authorities can forcefully impose on citizens. It is mind-boggling that certain power structures can't grasp the futility of trying to put the cat back in the bag when it comes to the digital world. This week we watched how the government tried to suppress the dissemination of the first fully 3D-printed gun blueprint using some "export regulations." "Export-import of digital goods" concept is irreversibly dead in the Internet age.
Meanwhile the incumbent entertainment gatekeepers continue their delusional fight against the Internet — pretending to fight piracy, while study after study (this time commissioned by the UK government) finds that top downloaders are top spenders. The following stories remind us one more time that the collateral damage in this war — the civil liberties — is truly an international concern. In the USA, the MPAA thinks that considering fair use before filing a DMCA takedowns is a crazy idea. In the UK, the country's recording industry, dwelling on the success of the last year censorship, plans a new wave of blockades — over two dozen new victims (including a relatively good player Grooveshark) — all without trial and conviction. And the Germany's GEMA does not want to yield its status of the worst collection society in the world.
Fortunately, the new generation does not sit idle. I was moved by the news of Peter Sunde, of The Pirate Bay & Flattr, planning a run for the EU parliament.
To finish on a lighter note, read about a pathetic and sloppy usage of Photoshop by the Church of Scientology: you'll have a good chuckle.
See you next week in the comments!

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For the record, I'm very sympathetic to those 14, mainly due to a huge disproportionality of the punishment they have been receiving (even before the trial or judgement).
So I just made a gift to Nazaire: next time you, Jacques, can build your pleading on the fact that the owner of a blog critical to your (fake) client and your scumbag masters expressed sympathy to evil hackers.
Re:
As @JohnHenryLawyer nicely put it,
Re: Re: Re:
Ohai TAC,
Risking to sound rude, I note that Duffy's wife probably can't spell half of the words Nora/Heather used.
Also: the only person I know who use the word "tossed" describing lawsuits.... you know who.
Re: Re: Re:
Ohai TAC,
Risking to sound rude, I note that Duffy's wife probably can't spell half of the words Nora/Heather used.
Also: the only person I know who use the word "tossed" describing lawsuits.... you know who.
(untitled comment)
Nazaire continues to entertain.
Re: Re: Re:
Ohai John. I knew you couldn't resit.
(To clarify my suspicion:
1. I never heard anyone BUT John Steele thinking that I == Erin.
2. The language, especially by "Nora below").
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Hey, John Steele, where is the promised "a lot of egg on people's faces"???
Re: Re: The story that just keeps on giving
John Steele agrees. Right after the April 2 hearing he told to his mates off the record that the judge was immature.. like teenager... 14 years old.
Don't ask me how I know.
Re:
Begins? :)
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Today is a bumpy day. This order can easily make one's day if not for the mixed feelings regarding the Cooper v. Prenda default hearing, and another event: today Judge Chen, who could become a second Wright, issued a strange order, which indicated that he bought Lutz's bullshit. I don't know what to think about it.. trying to be optimistic, I hope that his reasoning was something like "I have other stuff to do, and since there is a criminal investigation going on, let's not duplicate the efforts."
Re:
Don't forget about two federal Prenda v. the Internets cases: there are counterclaims pending, and they can be a vehicle for Copper's vindication. Even more, Godfread's work was not disappeared in vain: GoDaddy's subpoena alone has a hell of a value (which contains the evidence of Steele's involvement he bragged no one has -- in the interview to Ars).
Re:
It's a very strange trolling. "Leading the legal fight" is quite a compliment. Very flattering :)
Re: How droll
B- on geography. My domain name is registered in Bahamas, not Panama.
Re: Re: There you go
Sorry about that. It seems that (unintentional) refreshing of the after-comment page ("You comment is posted...") generates a comment copy.
Re: There you go
Appreciate it. I don't feel bad in any case: my enire life is a perpetual exercise in humbleness :)
Re: There you go
Appreciate it. I don't feel bad in any case: my enire life is a perpetual exercise in humbleness :)
Re: There you go
Appreciate it. I don't feel bad in any case: my enire life is a perpetual exercise in humbleness :)
Re: Pro-Prenda Sites?
A lot of them. But since Prenda is in beef with the Internets, and the Internets are by definition online, those pro-Prenda sites are.. um.. located offline. By design.
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My comment, crossposted from the Ars' comment section:
While John is struggling with mastering the subtle art of keeping his mouth shut, some people are silently working. And some visit my site in their line of the duty. And I like it. I like it a lot.
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More Lipscomb's douchebaggery.