Ask yourself: what would Larry do?

you really find out about anything on the net…

Had the Lessig’s, Jiro Kokuryo, Sen, Yoon and Neeraj over for Thanksgivings Dinner

Ok, this is definitely a voyeuristic bit of trivia, but the process of following a chain of three links (talk about lowered expectations) that made me discover something funny and unexpected, although not vital, was nice. And that was without hitting a single pop-up or annoying ad. This is what I remember from my Mosaic days…Viva la blogosphere

[via A frog in the valley > Marc’s voice > Joi Ito]

If that’s not unanimous criticism, I don’t know what is.

Among the list of people outraged by our good government’s plan to keep a database on the travel information of any citizen for 6 years, we can add retired Supreme Court Justice Laforest, who was on the Supreme Court bench when I was in law school, and Roger Tassé, attorney general of Canada from 1977 to 1985. They base their opinion largely on the Charter, which is indeed an instrument both are quite familiar with (note: understatement of the year).

A press release by the Privacy Commissioner introduces the letters to the Minister of National Revenue. Will this be a nonwhistanding solution? Can the federal even use that clause? Has it ever been used by the parliament or is it a provincial government only prerogative?

But remember, it could be worse.

DVD Audio: ready at last?

The Japan Times reports that

An industry body representing seven developers of DVD technology and formats said Tuesday it will start global licensing of patents for DVD-audio and recordable DVD products in early January.

I’ll believe it when I’ll hear it.

In the meantime I’m curious about the DVD recordables bit. Which format is that? I’d also be very curious to read the terms of the patent licenses.

[via Baker&McKenzie E-law alert]