Where We'll Be This Week (Feb. 18-22)
http://gd.is/dbF2QV

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Algeria
seen from Bangladesh
seen from Taiwan
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Canada
seen from Chile

seen from Brazil

seen from Singapore
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from China
seen from Singapore
Where We'll Be This Week (Feb. 18-22)
http://gd.is/dbF2QV
CopyNight NYC: Aaron Swartz, JSTOR & The Prosecution
During January's CopyNight NYC meeting, members came together at Vig Bar to honor the memory of Aaron Swartz, the young technologist behind RSS, Reddit and Demand Progress. Ealier this month, Swartz took his own life. The event discussed Swartz's prosecution and potential 35-year sentence he faced after hacking into the JSTOR databases via the MIT servers. Phil Weiss, a former BLIPician and current Associate at Fridman Law Group, led the discussion.
The night began with a detailed discussion of the actual charges brought against Swartz under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA). Afterwards, members discussed the merits and weaknesses of prosecutorial discretion and the overreaching nature of the CFAA. The event concluded with the discussion of the proposed "Aaron's Law" which would narrow the applicability of the CFAA.
By Veronica Torres
Hacking the Act, Round Two
We will be joining the folks at CopyNight NYC to begin hacking 17 U.S.C. s. 109 (that's the codification of the First Sale Doctrine for those who aren't CR nerds). The party will start tomorrow night at Vig Bar in Manhattan at 7 PM (see the map below).
In the Internet convergence hard copies are harder to come by, and cloud servers replace sale for licensing. The issue is near and dear to us at BLIP - we strive to figure out how First Sale maintains relevance when iTunes is the primary seller of music, when Redbox loses to Netflix, and when the majority of software sales are for mobile devices, not desktops.
As usual, we'll be using Docracy to post our branched final product(s). Hope we'll see you there (virtually or in real life).
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Reflections on a Legal Hackathon
It finally happened. After months of preparation, BLIP held the first of many legal hackathons here at Brooklyn Law School. The day was filled with explorations into all aspects of what it means to collaboratively create solutions to nascent law and policy issues: panels, workshops, discussions, break-out sessions, and tons of questions. We got so much Twitter traffic during our panels, #LegalHack started trending across the USA (and the porn bots inevitably got wind of the publicity).
Fortunately, our little event was met with great reviews and awesome coverage.
Unfortunately, the first legal hackathon only scratched the surface.
Our morning keynotes set the stage for what we were trying to do over the course of the day. One of Tim Wu's comments, in particular, rang true with many participants. When asked how law could keep pace with technology, Wu challenged the premise. Wu said (as reported by our friend Laure at CopyNight NYC), "It's not law's job to keep pace with technology. Law should be slow, it should restrain power." Andrew Rasiej expressed a complementary sentiment shortly before Wu spoke. Government 2.0 is not the solution to a broken system, said Rasiej; people are.
Our afternoon workshops took these philosophies to heart. Rather than discussing the problems of a gameable DMCA takedown regime, we put the issues to the people and attempted to seek out solutions that straddle the line between crafting law and hacking tech. Our porn troll workshop was especially productive: Amanda Levendowski from the WikiMedia Foundation led a dozen or so eager legal hackers in a breakout session on how to implement a crowdsourced, granularized legal space to distribute the burden of work otherwise impossible to tackle for a single EFF staffer. We look forward to learning more about that project, called Law Mob NYC.
The attendees at our hackathon were clearly passionate about the concept we were introducing. But we recognize that there may have been more "athon"ing than hacking; more lectures than workshops; and more ideation than construction. Alas, these are the risks of being in perpetual beta--we never know quite how our ideas play out in reality. To be sure, our legal hackathon wasn't truly a hackathon. Rather, it was an introduction to an ethos, a method to improve existing legal regimes in innovative ways. As such, we've only begun our journey.
We look forward to the submissions we hope to receive in the next few days for our #HackTheAct competition. And we especially look forward to continuing to develop this concept. Thank you all who attended, and we will see you next year at a bigger and better NYC Legal Hackathon.
#LegalHack Forever,
Phil
@philwdjjd
Had a great time at CopyNight tonight! Professor Derek Bambauer gave the group a great starting point with an info-packed rundown of SOPA and PIPA, and the rest of the group (which was a mix of media and tech people, as well as a couple attorneys) took off with an energized discussion on what should be done and/or changed.
Our Schedule This Week
So much time and so little to do. Wait a minute. Strike that. Reverse it.
--Willy
Monday 1/23
Pizza, Mobile Tech, & Networking, 7 PM @ Olio Pizza e Piu
Tuesday 1/24
CopyNight: Break the Internet Addition, 7 PM @ Vig Bar (http://bit.ly/yG36lI)
Wednesday 1/25
Entrepreneur Space Anniversary Party, 5:30
NY Enterprise Tech Meetup, 7 PM @ Cooley (http://bit.ly/wjY0bk)
Thursday 1/26
Digital DUMBO 3rd Anniversary Party, 6:30 (http://digitaldumbo.eventbrite.com/)
Friday 1/27
DUMBO Tech Breakfast, 8:30 AM
Happy Hour with ERA NYC, 4 PM
Saturday 1/28
Tech@NYU Demo Days, 4 PM (http://bit.ly/AtPuez)