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8 Sep 2024 03:18:44 EDT (-0400)
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From: Florian Pesth
Subject: Re: YouTube lameness
Date: 21 Nov 2008 17:03:16
Message: <49273024$1@news.povray.org>
Am Fri, 21 Nov 2008 13:46:46 -0800 schrieb Darren New:
> The problem is that when you let censorship go on in restricted ways, it
> gets applied in increasingly less restricted ways.
> 
> http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20071207-german-politician-sues-
unsues-wikipedia-over-nazi-symbols.html

Well, yes, they try.

> 
> Granted, he shouldn't have done that:
> 
> http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20071211-german-politician-may-be-
charged-over-wikipedia-nazi-dustup.html
> 

It seemed to me, that the public in general in germany thought in that 
case, that it was ridicoulous and that it wouldn't go through - at least 
not the higher levels in the german law system. It looked like a PR stunt.

> But that doesn't help if you're already spending your money defending
> against the rancor of some politician that doesn't like you.

It's hard to compare directly to the US, because our law system is quite 
different. But in principle you don't have to spend any money if you win 
the case. AFAIK the loosing party and the state pay for your legal costs 
(including costs for taking free days of your job). The state even 
provides you with the money in advance to pay a lawyer if you can't pay 
it yourself (of course it would be claimed back, if you loose the case). 
What I mean to write is, it seems highly unlikely, that someone sues you 
out of existance as it seems it is possible in the US (Is it? You 
probably have other protections against that? Maybe on law firms, which 
specialise on that cases? I think I read that in some liability cases it 
is a real legal business and this law firms will take your case for free, 
if it is likely that it can be won.)
I don't know how well it works, but in principle it should.


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From: Darren New
Subject: Re: YouTube lameness
Date: 21 Nov 2008 17:20:03
Message: <49273413$1@news.povray.org>
Florian Pesth wrote:
> So all in all the law system in germany still seems to work ;).

Yeah. I think I'll just stick with a place where it's OK to advocate 
what you believe in as long as you're just talking. :-)

-- 
Darren New / San Diego, CA, USA (PST)


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From: Darren New
Subject: Re: YouTube lameness
Date: 21 Nov 2008 17:25:52
Message: <49273570$1@news.povray.org>
Florian Pesth wrote:
> It's hard to compare directly to the US, because our law system is quite 
> different. But in principle you don't have to spend any money if you win 
> the case. AFAIK the loosing party and the state pay for your legal costs 
> (including costs for taking free days of your job).

That sounds like a better system. Ours seems to encourage people getting 
their way by filing lawsuits they know they'd lose if the other side had 
the money up front to fight it.

> The state even 
> provides you with the money in advance to pay a lawyer if you can't pay 
> it yourself (of course it would be claimed back, if you loose the case). 

We do get that, even if you lose the case. Or rather, the government 
assigns a lawyer to you, which is similar but not as good.

> What I mean to write is, it seems highly unlikely, that someone sues you 
> out of existance as it seems it is possible in the US 

Yep. That's sadly possible. I don't think anyone thinks it's a good idea 
on a personal level, altho of course large companies like it.

You don't get that as much with criminal cases, because the government 
has to supply a lawyer in those cases. Most people think those lawyers 
aren't as good as the ones you pay for yourself, tho.

> I think I read that in some liability cases it 
> is a real legal business and this law firms will take your case for free, 
> if it is likely that it can be won.)

This is more "we'll countersue them for sueing you, and we'll take some 
of the money you win if you win" sort of thing.

Some lawyer do "pro bono" work, which means they spend some of their 
time for free helping those who need it.

But it's by no means cheap here to defend against any sort of civil or 
criminal case that you win.

-- 
Darren New / San Diego, CA, USA (PST)


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From: Florian Pesth
Subject: Re: YouTube lameness
Date: 21 Nov 2008 17:27:28
Message: <492735d0$1@news.povray.org>
Am Fri, 21 Nov 2008 13:51:13 -0800 schrieb Darren New:
> Ah, so, because Hitler was bad, we're going to make sure you're not
> allowed to advocate a political leader from a similar party? In spite of
>   it being a democracy? :-)

No, no, no ;). Basically it's just forbidden to organize a mob randomly 
murdering other people. If you lead a party which includes peoples of 
mobs randomly murdering other people, but you don't tell this people 
explicitly to murder, nothing prevents you of becoming Bundeskanzler (if 
you get elected). The NPD exists and everyone knows, that there are Nacis 
in it (and they are the mobs in Germany murdering randomly people). But 
despite the failure to forbid this party was mainly due to other reasons 
(german secret service had to many people in it) it is highly doubtable, 
if the NPD could be forbidden on grounds of that law. Actually the 
majority of current politicians right now are against forbidding them, on 
the grounds, that it would legally not go through.

> 
> The problem with all these sorts of things is the slippery slope, and
> the application in ways that the original authors didn't intend. That
> always happens here: the politicians pass some overly broad law,
> everyone complains it's overly broad, the politicians say "it would
> never be used in that way, that makes no sense."  And then you get
> regular people being shipped off to foreign countries because they might
> be terrorists.

Well, the judges in germany are very independent and if they think the 
law is overly broad and unconstitutional, they don't apply it (Ok, don't 
quote me on the technical process of that - but in practice it means 
going back to the drawing board for the politicians). If the politicians 
make unconstitutional laws they will be sacked at some point (sometimes 
it takes the highest court - but independence of that court is taken very 
seriously. While I agree, that slippery slope is a problem in a lot of 
cases (surveillance laws for example are going overboard right now) in 
general it levels out after some time if people notice that they went 
over board. BTW, I found that blog of an american law professor living in 
germany quite interesting (he also writes about general stuff, but the 
posts about the law made some differences clearer to me - for a german 
the american law system looks ridiculous at first sight. However I think 
that has mostly to do with a lack of knowledge of the details. Maybe it 
is the same vice versa.):

http://andrewhammel.typepad.com/


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From: Florian Pesth
Subject: Re: YouTube lameness
Date: 21 Nov 2008 17:29:38
Message: <49273652$1@news.povray.org>
Am Fri, 21 Nov 2008 14:20:04 -0800 schrieb Darren New:

> Florian Pesth wrote:
>> So all in all the law system in germany still seems to work ;).
> 
> Yeah. I think I'll just stick with a place where it's OK to advocate
> what you believe in as long as you're just talking. :-)

It is here, just think how to say it first and you can express 
everything :)


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From: Darren New
Subject: Re: YouTube lameness
Date: 21 Nov 2008 17:45:17
Message: <492739fd$1@news.povray.org>
Florian Pesth wrote:
> No, no, no ;). Basically it's just forbidden to organize a mob randomly 
> murdering other people. 

Oh, same here. I don't think anyone thinks that organizing a lynch party 
should be legal. Arguing that organizing a lynch party should be legal 
is what is leagl.

> Well, the judges in germany are very independent and if they think the 
> law is overly broad and unconstitutional, they don't apply it 

They're supposed to do that here too. It winds up costing someone a lot 
of money, and everyone without money who gets involved before the law is 
overturned winds up being screwed.  Sounds like Germany has a better system.

> http://andrewhammel.typepad.com/

I'll check it out. :-)

-- 
Darren New / San Diego, CA, USA (PST)


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