On Monday, the Blog will host the May Carnival of Trust. The Carnival of Trust is a monthly compendium of blog postings related to trust in business, trust in selling, trust in society at large. It is kept interesting by the vibrant and varied commentary of each month’s host, and by the ten post limit for each month. Click here to submit your trust-related posts for the Carnival.
Click here to check out the April Carnival at the True Colors Consulting Blog, and click here for the March edition at Duncan Bucknell’s IP Thinktank Blog.
Read more about the Carnival of Trust here at Charles Green’s Trust Matters Blog.
And while I am discussing blog carnivals, do not miss this week’s Blawg Review #157 hosted by Thoughts from a Management Lawyer.
Continue Reading The Carnival (of Trust) is Coming & Blawg Review #157 is Here
Blawg Review
IP News & Presentations
I have several smaller IP-related items today, none of which warranted a single post:
The Wall Street Journal reported last Friday that the Patent Reform Act (S. 1145) will likely not reach the Senate floor — click here for the story. It was widely reported throughout the first quarter that the bill was expected to be brought to the full Senate by March or April of this year. The WSJ reported that the Act’s move out of the Judiciary Committee stalled because of a stalemate over the Act’s controversial damages provision.
Virtually Blind hosts a Blawg Review #156 focused on, no surprise, all thinks virtual and Second Life.
The John Marshall Law School is hosting a free presentation by Southern Methodist University Law School Professor Shubha Ghosh tited IP as CP: Competition Policy Norms in Intellectual Property Law. Click here for registration information.
The final edition of the 2008 Chicago IP Colloquium is this afternoon from 4:10 – 5:50 pm. The presentation will be by Professor Mark McKenna of the Saint Louis University School of Law about his paper Testing Modern Trademark Law’s Theory of Harm. It looks like it will be another excellent IP discussion.
The Lewis & Clark Law School has a new podcast up with Chicago-Kent College of Law’s Associate Dean and Director of the Program in Intellectual Property Law Graeme B. Dinwoodie. Professor Dinwoodie speaks about developing trademark defenses.
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Blawg Review #155 and a Side of Chicken & Waffles
Blawg Review #155 is up at the California Blog of Appeal.
Also, the excellent Las Vegas Trademark Attorney has a detailed post — click here for the post — about the Roscoe’s v. Rosscoe’s Chicago chicken and waffle restaurant trademark suit that I posted about last week — click here for the post.
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Continue Reading Blawg Review #155 and a Side of Chicken & Waffles
Blawg Review #154 & Anonymous Comments
Blawg Review #154 is up at the Health Blawg, which covers health care law. The Review’s theme this week is World Health Day, but it also points to an interesting story related to anonymous blog comments. SCOTUS Blog eliminated its comments feature — click here for the SCOTUS post explaining their reasoning. This is especially interesting because in October 2006, SCOTUS began requiring that commenters provide their full names before posting. They hoped that this would stop “silly sniping” by anonymous commenters. Unfortunately, after eighteen months, the sniping had not stopped. So, they closed comments completely, although you can still email them comments and they will consider adding the best directly to the posts.
Unfortunately, the SCOTUS experiment suggests that civility may not be enforceable on the internet. Perhaps the social constructs that maintain civility in real world conversations — knowing that you will have to work with the target of your words the next day, watching your target’s reaction in real time, or bystanders acting as civility referees — cannot be duplicated online.
Below is Crime & Consequences’ take on the SCOTUS comments decision:
I, for one, enjoy exchanging ideas with people who can remain civil while disagreeing. Regrettably, commenting on blogs too often involves opening oneself to ad hominem attacks and choosing between letting a public attack go unanswered or wasting time responding. The choices for a blog that has this problem are to (1) let it go uncorrected; (2) police the comments, an expenditure of time that few sponsors wish to make; or (3) turn off the comments, as SCOTUSblog has now done. If the sponsor chooses to let the problem go uncorrected, what typically happens is that thoughtful people stop or greatly reduce commenting, and the insult slingers come to dominate the comments. Choices (1) and (3) lead to the same result, then, that a useful medium is eliminated either de facto or de jure.
So the decline in civility of our society claims another victim. The SCOTUSblog experiment shows that uncivil behavior is reduced when people have to show themselves in public, but it is not eliminated. I suppose the result was to be expected, but it is sad nonetheless.
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Continue Reading Blawg Review #154 & Anonymous Comments
April Fool’s Day Blawg Reviews
Blawg Review #153 or rather Blarrgh Review, it is written in pirate-speak, is up at George Wallace’s Declarations & Exclusions. Wallace also provided a supplemental April Fool’s Day Appendix to Blawg Review #153 at his non-legal blog A Fool in the Forest. The Appendix focuses on non-legal posts from law blogs and off-beat legal posts. Enjoy the Review and happy April Fool’s Day. I hope your assistant is not in cahoots with The Lawyer’s Right Hand.
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Blawg Review #152
Blawg Review #152 can be found here. TechnoLawyer hosts this edition, which is focused on law practice management and legal technology blogs. It is a good read.
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Continue Reading Blawg Review #152
Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day With Blawg Review #151
Happy St. Patrick’s Day! In addition to a few verses of Danny Boy and some homemade shepard’s pie, I am celebrating with Blawg Review #151. The St. Patrick’s Day edition comes from Dublin’s Lex Ferenda blog. Check out the Review and the Lex Ferenda blog, both are excellent.
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Continue Reading Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day With Blawg Review #151
Anonymous Bloggers Carry on Tradition of the Federalist Papers
There has been a lot of coverage of Troll Tracker’s recently disclosed identity.* Troll Tracker ended his anonymity a few weeks ago and now faces a libel law suit along with his employer, Cisco, based upon statements he made about a case involving Cisco — this is one of the many reasons I do not write about cases that my firm or I are involved in.
I did not intend to weigh in on this story because there was not much to add (see below for links to some of the best coverage). But then I read Joe Hosteny’s March 2008 IP Today article – click here for the article — about anonymous blogging and anonymous commenting. Hosteny is a partner in the Niro Scavone firm, a firm that was often a focus of the . I have not always seen eye to eye with Hosteny in the courtroom, but I found his article both very good and thought provoking.
Hosteny raises real concerns about how the anger surrounding the non-practicing entity dispute has gotten out of hand. Death threats over patent litigation (even assuming they are idle threats) cannot be tolerated. These threats make me question whether the patent litigation bar is maintaining the levels of civility and sanity required by our professional standards.
Violent threats and, more broadly, incivility have no more place in the realm of legal blogs than in the legal system. But it does not follow that anonymous blogging and commenting are inherently bad – the issue is more complex than that. Lots of electrons have been spilled over the pros and cons of anonymous blogging – blog guru Kevin O’Keefe is no fan of anonymous blogging, whereas the anonymous editor of Blawg Review provides a great service to both the legal and the blogging communities with the weekly Blawg Review, despite his anonymity.
Anonymous blogging is not the problem. The problem is with anonymous bloggers who believe that anonymity allows them to comment on cases involving themselves or their clients , or to post threatening comments (Troll Tracker, of course, never posted any threats that I am aware of). If Troll Tracker had not blogged about his client’s case and if he had stuck to the verifiable facts, he likely would not have gotten sued.
Similarly, anonymous commenting is not the problem if legal bloggers, including Troll Tracker, monitored and approved comments before** they went live, the death threats against Niro never would have been published. I moderate the comments to this Blog and, as a result, angry rants against a judge or an attorney (none have been violent) do not make it on the Blog. And that anonymity may have provided the writer with false courage. But I prevent that, and so can any blogger, by acting as a gatekeeper.
Hosteny argued that anonymity is cowardly and not in the tradition of the First Amendment because the Declaration of Independence was signed by the Continental Congress. But he leaves out that the Federalist Papers were signed with aliases. Anonymity can be useful in that it can provide courage to voice ideas that otherwise might not be interjected into public discourse. For that reason, I think there is a place for anonymous blogging and commenting, as long as anonymous bloggers do not use anonymity as an excuse to avoid the rules of our profession and of common sense.
As promised above, for more coverage of Troll Tracker and the defamation suit, see:
E.D. Texas Blog
IP Law360 (subscription required, but a very thorough history)
Patently O — discussing a related federal suit filed in the District of Arkansas, including a link to the complaint.
Prior Art Blog — detailing the history of the suit and here and here on other aspects of the story as well.
WSJ Law Blog
* There are no Troll Tracker links because the site is currently either down or subscriber only.
** Troll Tracker did remove violent and offensive comments, but only after they were posted and he became aware of them.
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Continue Reading Anonymous Bloggers Carry on Tradition of the Federalist Papers
Blawg Review #150: Trust Me, it’s Good
Blawg Review #150 is up at Trust Matters by Charlie Green, co-author of The Trusted Advisor and creator of the Carnival of Trust, which I will be hosting on the first Monday of May. This week’s review links to the Blog’s follow-up post about whether photographs of copyrighted Thomas & Friends toy trains are derivative works — click here for the post.
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Continue Reading Blawg Review #150: Trust Me, it’s Good
IP News Roundup
Here are a few IP news items from the weekend and this morning that you will find interesting:
Blawg Review #149 is up at the Antitrust Review with several IP-related links.
Patent lawyer Duncan Bucknell is hosting the March Carnival of Trust, which I will host on the first Monday of May.
The Northern District’s new website is live (and excellent, but more on that Friday), but may be causing you some trouble today. It is requiring that you upgrade your browser to the most current version (if you have not already) in order to access the site. I am told by reliable sources that the upgrade is not actually necessary and that the Northern District is working on a fix so that you should be able to access the site by the end of the day with any browser.
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Continue Reading IP News Roundup

