Author Archive

Oops — we sued our own viral marketers

A classic, from TechDirt (Oct. 30):

It appears that Universal Studios recognize that the followers of the cult favorite TV show Firefly would be a great source of viral marketing for the movie based on the show, Serenity. They put together a huge viral marketing campaign…. However, as with so many of these things, it appears that the marketers at Universal forgot to tell the lawyers at Universal, who recently decided to send out cease and desist letters to a bunch of the guerilla marketers they had pushed to promote the film.

More: Tijir, Oct. 28.

Cops sue over pot-sprinkled burgers

Police officers Mark Landavazo and Henry Gabaldon say three rogue employees at the Burger King in Los Lunas, N.M., spitefully (or was it company policy?) put marijuana on their hamburgers, so they want the fast-food chain to pay them money for “personal injury, negligence, battery and violation of fair practices”. (“N.M. Cops Sue Burger King Over Marijuana-Laced Hamburgers”, AP/FoxNews.com, Nov. 7).

“The US election: how did the lawyers fare?”

My new column, on Tuesday’s vote, is up at the online Times (UK). “The result didn’t hang on a chad this time, but lawyers still played a starring role”. I make various comments about Eliot Spitzer and his brethren, the importance of winning by a vote “beyond the margin of litigation”, and the return of John Dingell and Henry Waxman (Nov. 9).

CAN-SPAM Act

Didn’t work very well, it seems:

While there has been some progress in the fight against spam, it’s mostly come from improving filter technology. In the meantime, however, CAN SPAM’s continued uselessness is highlighted in this new report showing that the amount of spam that “complies” with CAN SPAM disclosure rules is at an all-time low of 0.27 percent.

(TechDirt, Nov. 1)(via Jim Harper, Cato-at-Liberty).

Election observation

I seldom agree with Kevin Drum of Washington Monthly, but I don’t think he’s entirely off base here about one of the factors behind yesterday’s Republican wipeout:

* Terri Schiavo and Katrina. This is sort of a gut feeling on my part, but I think it was the combination of these two things within a couple of months of each other that really hurt Republicans last year, not either one alone. The contrast was deadly: the Republican Party (and George Bush) showed that they were capable of generating a tremendous amount of action very quickly when the issue was something important to the most extreme elements of the Christian right, but were palpably bored and indifferent when the issue was the destruction of an American city. It’s hard to think of any two successive issues painting a clearer and less flattering picture of just what’s wrong with the Republican Party leadership these days.

No on state marriage amendments

“The irony in Virginia is that conservatives fearful of an out-of-control judiciary are in fact inviting the judiciary to get involved in micro-managing family law.” (David Boaz, “Marriage measure is an amendment too far”, Examiner.com, Oct. 30). For more of the many, many reasons to vote no, see Sept. 20, 2006, May 31 and Nov. 2, 2004, etc., etc.

Update: David Frum gloats — and quite prematurely, it would seem.

Nifong faces Durham voters

Can prosecutors be made to pay a price at the ballot box for malfeasance? Durham, North Carolina, county district attorney Mike Nifong is up for re-election, and has run well in polls despite his hounding of three Duke lacrosse players — perhaps the year’s banner case of abusive prosecution (see Oct. 11, Oct. 12, Oct. 30, etc.). One challenger, County Commissioner Lewis Cheek, “has said he won’t serve if elected, instead allowing Gov. Mike Easley to appoint a new prosecutor”; a third candidate, Steve Monks, has been waging a write-in campaign. (Ray Gronberg, “Durham DA race is hot”, Durham Herald-Sun, Nov. 6; Ruth Sheehan, “Turning the tide in Durham”, Raleigh News & Observer, Oct. 30). For some recent developments in the case, incidentally, see here, here and here (witnesses say accuser soon after incident performed dances inconsistent with alleged injuries), here (Nifong never interviewed accuser), and here (“Go ahead, put marks on me”). Update: and yet more doubt cast here (Nov. 11).