Comments on: Cheers, jeers for ruling on Apple bloggers
Business lawyers laud Apple win, but media advocates say ruling could put reporting tools at risk.
Business lawyers laud Apple win, but media advocates say ruling could put reporting tools at risk.
November 29, 2009 9:02 PM PST
November 29, 2009 5:54 PM PST
November 29, 2009 5:10 PM PST
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Not.
There's a world of difference between an individual sharing corporate secrets and a bona-fide news organization (and their lawyers) vetting a news story.
It's just part of the on-going control of the Wild West of the Web. It's all good.
The judge's decision in this case has some odd overtones. He, in particular, focuses in on "trade secrets." However, his ruling could easily be adapted and applied to mainstream journalists who leak secret or confidential reports, memoranda, etc. from the government. It incredibly easy to make a case that a classified government document has even more import than a "trade secret" just based on the wording that the judge himself used in the decision.
Inadvertantly or not, Apple and the judge have opened up a potentially slippery slope, and then some, with possiblly far reaching ramifications for the mainstream news media.
This judgement along with the judge is bullsh*t.
Robert
Lets say the judge swung the other way. This would open the door for people to sell information to the highest bidder without fear of getting caught. Lets see, I could get Hailey Berry's home address, phone number, security codes, etc because someone in her camp decided to sell this information to a website. Is this right? But, if the judges ruling said the website did not have to divest its informant, this person would have been able to do this and never punished.
Sorry to say, but all those that fear this will limit our first ammendment rights need to get a grip with reality. The first ammendment gives us the right to speak our opinion without reprimand, not publish classified information. Too many attrocities online and in journalism are done under the so called protection of the freedom of speech.
- Hooray!
- by Michael Grogan March 14, 2005 7:09 PM PST
- for the judge who stalwartly upheld Apple's god-given right to make obscene profits! Let's all stand up and fight, fight, fight to protect government of, by and for the corporate entity!
- Like this Reply to this comment
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