Monthly Archives: March 2009

Thomas Tamm Wins a Prize

Thomas Tamm, whom I wrote about in Wouldn't It Be Nice if Obama Pardoned Thomas M. Tamm? has been awarded a 2009 Ridenhour Prize for truth-telling.

But no words on whether Justice will bring charges or not….

Posted in Civil Liberties | 1 Comment

Legal Background to AIG Bonuses

There's a very interesting contrast between this news story, Cuomo Says Some A.I.G. Bonuses Will Be Repaid and the legal opinion AIG got on March 16, 2009 regarding its obligation to pay the bonuses (source: the American Lawyer).

This letter is going to be the fodder for a lot of law courses. The question it answers is artfully narrow; what it leaves out, and why it leaves it out, are fascinating issues that will engender many discussions in Professional Responsibility and Corporate Law.

Posted in Law: Everything Else | 1 Comment

Naive or Predatory?

I own a very small number of .com domain names, one of which is a very nice memorable English word with no particularly commercial overtones. I use it for a bunch of private servers that handle my news feeds and some other web-based stuff I've set up to make my life easier, all stuff that moving wouldn't be that hard. There is a web page there, but it is just a silly image acting as a placeholder.

Every so often someone offers to buy it. I am amenable, but no one has ever offered serious money — the offers usually top out at the very low four figures — so I have held on to it.

Today I got the most ridiculously low offer yet:

Dear Sir/Madam,

I am contacting you on behalf of a small web development firm with which I work.

We have just recently instigated a development plan whereby we are slowly but surely building a large network of simple, information based websites. The intention is to create a Wikipedia style encyclopaedia of information. The difference is however that rather than be located on one central domain, we intend to develop these sites on individual, keyword rich domains. Our aim is to create a network such that if you want information on 'Childrens Birthdays' for example, then you can simply type in childrensbirthdays.com and find all the information you need. At the moment search engines like Google provide an unnecessary middle man. We aim to make finding what you want even simpler than it already is!

We are contacting you with regards to the domain name [NiceWord].com. Having completed a check of the whois database we obtained your details as being the owner/administrator of said domain name. We are interested in purchasing this domain name from you as it is an ideal domain name for our development.

We would be prepared to offer you 50 USD for your domain name. If this is acceptable, please do let us know and we will provide information on how we may proceed. We do not consider ourselves naive or unknowledgeable, and appreciate that some domains are being used for other things than websites: email for example, and again we appreciate that you may simply not want to sell your domain. If this is the case we ask that you let us know such that we can pursue alternative domains.

Independent of your decision, I thank you for your time and wish you all the best. Thanks

Jennifer

I don't know if they are just fishing, hoping to find a deal, if the recession is much worse than I thought, if this a lo-ball opening bid, or what, but the initial offer was so low it almost makes me mad.

On reflection, the “Dear Sir/Madam” bit, given they claimed they looked me up on whois and the nice word isn't in fact all that suitable for a search engine — more the reverse — makes me suspect a form-letter-based attempt to grab (at absurdly low prices) single word domains that don't appear from the outside to be in use for much.

So my reply suggesting their offer is risible probably will not produce anything.

Posted in Internet | 3 Comments

Amar on Bush v. Gore et al.

Yale Prof. Akhil Amar will be giving a webcasted lecture on “Bush, Gore, Florida and the Constitution” at 10:00am today, sponsored by UF Law.

Posted in Law: Constitutional Law, Law: Elections | Comments Off on Amar on Bush v. Gore et al.

DataBase State (UK)

A quarter of the UK's largest public-sector database projects, including the ID cards register, are fundamentally flawed and violate European data protection laws, according to DataBase State, a report published today. The report also fingers the UK's national DNA database and the Contactpoint index of all children in England as particularly flawed.

Funded by the Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust, the report identifies 46 UK government databases and systems, more than half of which it says fail tests of privacy or effectiveness, and thus could be illegal under European privacy law.

Posted in ID Cards and Identification, Law: Privacy, UK | Comments Off on DataBase State (UK)

Making the Rounds

This quote, which I saw at Opinio Juris, The Greatest Quote Ever, and half a dozen other blogs, is certainly making the rounds:

There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old’s life: “The Lord of the Rings” and “Atlas Shrugged.” One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs.

Original source: Kung Fu Monkey.

Posted in Blogs | 1 Comment