[wordup] Disabling graphics in web browsers violates copyright law
Adam Shand
adam at personaltelco.net
Thu Aug 15 13:05:35 EDT 2002
Morons ...
From: politech at politechbot.com
Date: Thu, 15 Aug 2002 00:12:27 -0400
To: declan at well.com
From: Doug Isenberg <disenberg at gigalaw.com>
Subject: Pop-up ads and the law
Declan:
As you know, a district court judge recently entered a preliminary
injunction against Gator in a lawsuit brought by numerous website news
publishers over Gator's pop-up advertising service. In my most recent
column for The Wall Street Journal Online (now available on GigaLaw.com
at http://www.gigalaw.com/articles/2002/isenberg-2002-08.html), I
examine the potential greater effect of this lawsuit. For example:
"Terence Ross of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, the news publishers' attorney,
even told me that he thinks Internet users who configure their browsers
to disable graphics (a common tactic to boost the speed of Web surfing)
are committing copyright infringement because they are interfering with
Web publishers' exclusive right to control how their pages are
displayed."
Doug Isenberg, Esq.
Author, "The GigaLaw Guide to Internet Law" (Random House, October 2002):
http://www.GigaLaw.com/guide
FREE daily Internet law news via e-mail! Subscribe today:
http://www.GigaLaw.com/news
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