Home » 2009 » June (Page 3)

The extent of online tracking

Does Google know what you're doing online? Eighty-eight percent of the time, the answer might be yes. Earlier this month a group of graduate students at UC Berkeley released a detailed report on the extent of online tracking and the disconnect between reality and user expectations. The data in the report was collected from various […]

A Fine Balance: Protecting and Giving-Away Content

In general, intellectual property (IP) rights encourage innovation by providing creators with an economic incentive to develop and share ideas through a form of a temporary monopoly. Proponents of traditional IP rights believe that individual creators should not only have a chance to profit from their works but also control how they are used. In […]

CRTC decides to keep New Media Broadcasting unregulated a little while longer

The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) announced its decision this past Thursday (4 June 2009) to extend the exemption of new media broadcasting from regulation. After considering the current state of broadcasting in new media, the CRTC felt that while new media is of growing importance, it currently does not pose any threat to […]

Sleepless in Seattle: A Trademark Lawyer's Work Isn't All in the Office

Arnold Ceballos practices intellectual property law with Pain & Ceballos LLP in Vaughan, Ontario.  He obtained his LLM from Osgoode Hall Law School. Like many intellectual property lawyers, I am back in my office recovering from the whirlwind that is the annual meeting of the International Trademark Association.  Held in Seattle from May 16 to […]

Conference Board of Canada Event Highlights Importance of IP Protections

James Gannon is an Osgoode Hall alumnus and is currently an articling student at McCarthy Tétrault.  Jonathan Frydman recently completed his second year of the J.D. program at Osgoode Hall Law School.  James and Jonathan took notes at a recent conference they attended and they report on the speaker presentations in this blog. On Friday, […]

U.S. Newspaper Industry: Next in line for Bailout?

The print media, newspapers in particular, appears to be hanging by a thread all across the United States and some of the big names in the field are contemplating the 'toll booth' approach regarding their online websites. The causes of this outcome can be traced back to the decisions made in 1990s to make the […]

Is Online Censorship in China Weakening?

Currently, China has an estimated 70 million bloggers posting on a wide range of subjects.  In January, the country's number of internet users was estimated at 298 million, the most of any nation in the world.  Unfortunately, China's internet censorship is one of the most pervasive and sophisticated in the world.   Bloggers' freedom of expression […]

Social Networking Sites and Privacy in the Workplace

Consider the following scenario: The sales team at a large software company is meeting with a particularly hot prospect and is hoping to seal the deal on a big sale of Product X. Things have been going great, but right in the middle of the meeting someone pulls out a printout of a message board […]

Emily the Strange, or Emily the Plagiarized?

For nearly two decades, Rob Reger and his company Cosmic Debris have spent millions of dollars developing the fictional character "Emily the Strange" as a gothic rebel who finds nothing more boring than copying everyone else. Over the years, Emily has evolved from a skateboard design to a media empire which includes clothing lines, comic […]

The Danger of Equating Social Networks to Nations

Three months ago I posted a response to Dan Hartrell’s article: Facebook’s grassroots earn policy voice. Dan’s article focused on the new grassroots, open approach Facebook was taking which allowed social network users to comment and vote on Facebook policies. In my response, I questioned the wisdom of having a corporation emulate a nation by […]