Daily Archives: October 2, 2014

Dialogue: First Amendment Advocate Mary Beth Tinker – Video

Posted: October 2, 2014 at 7:47 pm


Dialogue: First Amendment Advocate Mary Beth Tinker
Dialogue host Marcia Franklin talks with Mary Beth Tinker, whose 1969 U.S. Supreme Court case, Tinker v. Des Moines, led to a precedent for students #39; rights....

By: Idaho Public Television

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The First Amendment…(Historically Speaking) – Episode #3 – Video

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The First Amendment...(Historically Speaking) - Episode #3
Frederick Douglass Dixon hosts this weekly series on UPTV.

By: UPTV6

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Mr. John Seigenthaler – Video

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Mr. John Seigenthaler
JOHN SEIGENTHALER, 2014 / cut paper, collage and mixed media on canvas / 24 x 30 inches American journalist and prominent Nashvillian and defender of First Amendment Rights, Mr. Seigenthaler #39;s...

By: wayne brezinka

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Mr. John Seigenthaler - Video

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First Amendment – Chelsea Graff and Teahl Rice – Video

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First Amendment - Chelsea Graff and Teahl Rice
Class Project.

By: Chelsea Graff

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Register editor posthumously given First Amendment honor

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Randy Brubaker(Photo: Register photo)Buy Photo

Randy Brubaker, a longtime editor of The Des Moines Register who died in May, will be remembered tonight as a "Friend of the First Amendment."

The posthumous honor awarded by the Iowa Freedom of Information Council will be formally announced during the "Celebrating a Free Press and Open Government Banquet" in the Hall of Cities at the Des Moines Marriott Downtown. The event is a fundraiser for the Iowa Center for Public Affairs Journalism, best known as IowaWatch.

Brubaker was a Register journalist for about three decades. In his last role, he oversaw the Register's investigative team and led the information council's initiative to educate the public on open meetings and records law through a series of statewide workshops.

He died of heart failure at the age of 55, two days before he had planned to return to work following recovery from a heart attack.

"He was an invaluable leader, partner and mentor to so many former and current staffers, including myself," Register President and Publisher Rick Green said in announcing Brubaker's death to the Register staff in May. "Obviously, for so many reasons, this is a painful, painful loss."

Brubaker's death came on the heels of the sudden death of his wife, Jan, on Jan. 8. She had been a longtime guidance counselor at Dowling Catholic High School.

Brubaker is survived by his two sons, Christopher and Patrick, along with his parents and other relatives.

"Randy was a fierce advocate for openness in government and spent many hours working with reporters and appearing before the Iowa Public Information Board to further that cause," Register Executive Editor Amalie Nash said. "It's certainly fitting that he is being recognized as a "Friend of the First Amendment," and it's a legacy we are continuing at the Register."

DESMOINESREGISTER

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Big payday for ex-college sports stars?

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Posted Thu, October 2nd, 2014 6:40 am by Lyle Denniston

Two significant First Amendment cases that have been awaiting the Supreme Courts reaction for a year are on the way to beingsettled, with the real prospect that former stars in big-time college football and basketball will get a share of a $60 million fund. Of that, $40 million would be put up by the maker of video games about college sports, and $20 million by the National Collegiate Athletic Association the group that makes policy for competition in collegiate athletics.

The proposed settlements, which will be circulated among collegians who previously played in the NCAAs Division I (its major league for football and basketball competition), are due for a federal district court hearing next May on whether the deal is a fair one. In the meantime, the two sides agreed to end attempts (see hereand here) to get the Supreme Court to rule on a claimed clash between the First Amendment and the right under state law giving people of some renowna legal right to exploit financially their own fame (the so-called right of publicity).

The NCAA and Electronic Arts Inc. a video-game developer that has gained its own fame with games under the label EA Sports have been in a running, years-long legal battle with former Division I athletes who gained fame for their playing feats. At issue were television broadcasts of the games in which the athletes had played, and video games using near-lifelike avatars of the collegians, with their feats opento manipulation by the players. The NCAA made deals for the broadcasts and the development of the video games.

The settlements that have won a California judges preliminary approval involve the class-action lawsuits against the NCAA and Electronic Arts over the video games.

The legal battle is not over yet, at least for the NCAA, because an ongoing lawsuit, now developing in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, grows out of the athletes claim that the NCAA violated federal antitrust law by stifling competition for publicity about the stars performances on gridirons and basketball arenas.

The same judge who gave at least initial approval in early September to the settlement of the video games hadruled last August that the NCAA had violated antitrust law, and nowmust put together a fund that would give the athletes covered by the ruling $5,000 for each year they were featured in televised broadcasts of their games.

It has been estimated that the antitrust case could lead to payments totaling $300 million over a four-year period. That would be five times the size of the funds that would be provided to settle the two videogames cases against Electronic Arts. Those are cases about the right of publicity. Earlier, Electronic Arts faced an antitrust claim, like that against the NCAA, but that was settled earlier, and the antitrust case moves aheadin the Ninth Circuit only against the NCAA.

Meanwhile, at the National Labor Relations Board, the NCAA is fighting against a lower-ranking board officials ruling that collegiate athletes are legally entitled to be treated as employees of their institutions, and thus are entitled to form and join labor unions to bargain over pay and working conditions. That dispute focuses on the meaning of federal labor law.

The two cases that were filed at the Supreme Court a year ago by Electronic Arts have been idling away for months on the Courts docket, with the former athletes getting repeated extensions of time to respond. The issue in both cases one from the Ninth Circuit, and one from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit raised the same constitutional question: does the First Amendment right to free speech give video-game developers a right to create visual and sound games, and does that right provide a defense to a lawsuit claiming a violation of the right of publicity? Both circuitsrejected that defense.

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Download Tor Browser Windows 3.6 Keygen Crack [No Survey] – Video

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Download Tor Browser Windows 3.6 Keygen Crack [No Survey]
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By: Ramona Pedagogiu

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Download Tor Browser Windows 3.6 Keygen Crack [No Survey] - Video

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Firefox could be adding built-in Tor support for improved private browsing

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In future releases of Firefox, you may have access to a private browsing mode thats a whole lot more private. Theres a chance that Mozilla could be working to integrate support for Tors anonymous surfing tech into their browser. Tor integration might not be a perfect privacy solution but its definitely an upgrade over the private browsing modes our browsers currently offer.

Patrick Howell ONeill of The Daily Dot recently spoke with Andrew Lewman, executive director of the Tor Project. During their exchange, Lewman mentioned that several major tech firms have ongoing discussions about adding Tor functionality to their products. One of those companies, Lewman said, has a 10% to 20% share of 2.8 billion internet users.

He didnt specifically name Mozilla, but those numbers line up pretty nicely with estimates of Firefox market share from trackers like NetMarketShare and StatCounter. And theres every reason to think that Mozilla would at least consider adding Tor support to Firefox.

Mozilla is one of the most trusted companies on the internet, particularly when it comes to user privacy. They spearheaded the push for Do Not Track (which has unfortunately failed) and they launched the Lightbeam add-on to show Firefox users how the sites they visit were sharing their browsing data with third parties. Firefox has always offered loads of configuration tweaks that allow users to lock things like cookies down, too.

Mozilla and the Tor Project also have a pretty decent working relationship already. They share many of the same values and goals and Mozilla says theyre always discussing new ways to increase trust and privacy on the web.

Youll already find Firefox in the Tor browser bundle, but Firefox integration would bring easy Tor access to hundreds of millions of additional users. Tors network will need to be scaled up to handle the additional traffic not that 100% of Firefox users will click in, but even 10% of its base would be hard on todays Tor network.

Now read:PORTAL router puts hassle-free TOR privacy in your pocket

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Tapcoin | Community Designed Cryptocurrency – Video

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Tapcoin | Community Designed Cryptocurrency
Take part in the design of a new cryptocurrency at http://tapcoin.me.

By: Tapcoin.me

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BITNEWS: Reddit Closes $50 Million Raise And Goes After Its Own Cryptocurrency – Video

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BITNEWS: Reddit Closes $50 Million Raise And Goes After Its Own Cryptocurrency
Reddit Closes $50 Million Raise And Goes After Its Own Cryptocurrency Congratulations reddit! Get More Details Here: http://www.followthecoin.com/?p=3384 Lik...

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