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Category: General

Ireland’s new coalition on media, IT & IP law | Lex Ferenda

7 March, 2011
| No Comments
| Cyberlaw, General

Daithí has written the post I was going to write on the impact of the new Programme for Government on media, IT & IP law. It’s an excellent post, and there is little I could usefully add. One of the key points is the promise:

We will pioneer within the EU a model of ‘fair use’ in European Copyright Law, like in the USA, which effectively permits the use of portions of a copyrighted work so long as the normal economic exploitation of the originating work is not undermined. This will allow internet companies and other digital innovators to bring their services to market.

Read Daithí’s full post here on lexferenda.com
…

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Great news: criminal libel case in France against Joe Weiler is dismissed

3 March, 2011
| No Comments
| Academic Freedom, criminal libel, Freedom of Expression, General

Journal Editor Wins Libel Case Over Negative Book Review

March 3, 2011, 1:49 pm

A journal editor who was sued in France for criminal libel because of a negative book review has won his case, he told The Chronicle today. Joseph H.H. Weiler, a professor of law at New York University, said that a French court had ruled against the complaint brought against him by Karin N. Calvo-Goller, a scholar in Israel. Ms. Calvo-Goller took issue with a critical review of one of her books on the Global Law Books Web site, which Mr. Weiler edits. 

via chronicle.com

 

…

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Fair Game (2010) – IMDb – A thriller based on a book the CIA litigated to redact

2 March, 2011
| 1 Comment
| 1A, Freedom of Expression, General, Law and movies

Fair Game Poster

More at IMDbPro

Fair Game (I) (2010)

… CIA operative Valerie Plame discovers her identity is allegedly leaked by the government as payback for an op-ed article her husband wrote criticizing the Bush administration. …

Stars: Naomi Watts, Sean Penn and Sonya Davison

… Plame’s status as a CIA agent was revealed by White House officials allegedly out to discredit her husband after he wrote a 2003 New York Times op-ed piece saying that the Bush administration had manipulated intelligence about weapons of mass destruction to justify the invasion of Iraq.

via imdb.com

This movie is based on the experiences of Valerie Plame, about whom I have blogged here. The case about the redaction of the book which became the screenplay is here. Given that trailers and posters for the movie have been appearing over the last short while, I don’t expect it to suffer the same direct-to-dvd fate as befell Nothing But the Truth, more loosely based on the experiences of Judith Miller, about whom I have blogged here.

…

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SSRN-Government Speech and Online Forums: First Amendment Limitations on Moderating Public Discourse on Government Websites by David Ardia

28 February, 2011
| No Comments
| 1A, General

Government Speech and Online Forums: First Amendment Limitations on Moderating Public Discourse on Government Websites

David S. Ardia, Berkman Center for Internet & Society

Brigham Young University Law Review, Forthcoming

Over the past decade, governments at all levels have moved with alacrity to engage with their citizens online, launching thousands of government websites, including blogs, discussion boards, and other online platforms that solicit public participation. When government engages with the public online, however, it raises difficult questions about the limits of the government’s ability to control its own message, to subsidize the speech of others, and to restrict private parties from speaking.

Courts typically apply the First Amendment’s public forum doctrine to answer these questions, but that doctrine is ill-suited to deal with online forums because it has not kept pace with the changes in public discourse in our increasingly networked world. To overcome the public forum doctrine’s shortcomings, courts are looking to the recently minted government speech doctrine to deal with conflicts over speech on government websites. Unlike the public forum doctrine, which is premised on the idea that all citizens have an equal right to speak in the public forum and a right to equal treatment from the government, the government speech doctrine is based on the assumption that government not only can, but must, privilege some viewpoints over others.

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Views: Save Academic Freedom – Inside Higher Ed

28 February, 2011
| No Comments
| Academic Freedom, General

… “Academic freedom now confronts challenges powerful enough to ask not what its future will be,” writes Cary Nelson, president of the American Association of University Professors, in No University Is an Island: Saving Academic Freedom (2010), “but whether it will have a future at all.

Nelson’s warning is timely. But his analysis is incomplete. Focusing on how political, corporate, and administrative intrusions threaten academic freedom, Nelson casts professors as victims of powerful anti-intellectual forces. But that’s not the whole story. And if academic freedom is to be saved, the whole story must be told.

… Academic freedom belongs to the public — it is not the property of academics. Professors must explain why academic freedom is vital to our democracy — and prove that they deserve it.

Beset by budget shortfalls, rising tuition, poor learning outcomes, and scandal, our colleges and universities are under more scrutiny than ever. Demands for accountability have never been louder. Failure to meet those demands has never had a higher price tag.

Professors must decide how much academic freedom is worth to them. Is it worth policing themselves — consistently, consequentially, and transparently? If so, academic freedom might just have a future after all.

Erin O’Connor and Maurice Black are research fellows at the American Council of Trustees and Alumni.

…

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ECHR BLOG: TV Programme on the European Court

28 February, 2011
| No Comments
| ECHR, General

TV Programme on the European Court

Following the controversy in the United Kingdom on the Court’s judgments on voting rights for prisoners, the BBC programme ‘The Record Europe’ has dedicated an episode to the European Court of Human Rights. It explains the controversy and the role and functioning of the Court. You can watch it on youtube (in two parts) here and here. This is the programme’s own announcement
via echrblog.blogspot.com
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Solicitors await a “deluge of legislation” from the next Minister for Justice « A Clatter of the Law

28 February, 2011
| No Comments
| General, Irish law

Solicitors await a “deluge of legislation” from the next Minister for Justice



Published 28 February 2011

Legal profession

Leave a Comment

Tags: irish law, law society, oireachtas, professional indemnity insurance, solicitors

&copy Alan Shatter and/or licensors

“He needs your No 1 vote or he may resort to his phaser weapons.”

Fine Gael will probably have the choice of Minister for Justice & Equality and the position is expected by many to go to Alan Shatter, veteran solicitor, politician and publisher of colourful pamphlets.

Shatter was recently interviewed by Stuart Gilhooly for The Parchment and made the following comment, which is either exciting or terrifying depending on your outlook:

He wants a legacy. He wants to change the way the country works. He wants to make a difference. And you get the feeling that if he gets his chance, three decades of frustration will be released by a deluge of legislation.

via aclatterofthelaw.com
…

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Brian Cowen’s very big, VERY BAD, idea for the third level sector

25 February, 2011
| 1 Comment
| General, Universities

Fewer universities with one big brand leader known as the University of Ireland is in the wider national interest

The Irish Times – Fri, Feb 25, 2011

SEÁN FLYNN

EDUCATION: IN THE COURSE of discussions on the University College Dublin-Trinity research alliance two years ago, the Taoiseach Brian Cowen and his advisers had a Very Big Idea. The secret discussions with the two universities had focused on how to build a world-class research capacity in our leading higher education colleges. But some of the Cowen team wanted to go further.

The logical step, they argued, was for a full merger of UCD and Trinity, pooling the best of both in a reshaped institution that would glide onto any list of the best universities in the world.

via irishtimes.com

This is a terrible idea. It presupposes that it is worthwhile chasing international rankings. This quest is ephemeral at best. But even if it is worthwhile, Cowen’s strategy assumes that scrapping a very strong brand (TCD) and an emerging brand (UCD) and replacing them with an entirely new one is the way to do it. And that cannot be right.…

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Welcome

Me in a hat

Hi there! Thanks for dropping by. I’m Eoin O’Dell, and this is my blog: Cearta.ie – the Irish for rights.


“Cearta” really is the Irish word for rights, so the title provides a good sense of the scope of this blog.

In general, I write here about private law, free speech, and cyber law; and, in particular, I write about Irish law and education policy.


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