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By voting for your favorite cause, you help determine which charities get funding from American Express. There are dozens of worthy causes and you can vote every week, so be sure to keep coming back to help.
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By voting for your favorite cause, you help determine which charities get funding from American Express. There are dozens of worthy causes and you can vote every week, so be sure to keep coming back to help.
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David Downs — Fri, Jul 30, 2010 at 1:47 PM
2010 Global Forum on Modern Direct Democracy UC's Hastings College of the Law hosts a five-day international conference free and open to the public. The Marijuana Policy Project's Executive Director Rob Kampia will speak on Sunday, August 1, at approximately 1:30 p.m. during the "Action and Media" session.Oaksterdam founder and Prop 19 authorRichard Lee will speak at 3 p.m. Friday, July 30- Wednesday, Aug. 4. Free.
More events after the jump.
HempCon Medical marijuana show at the San Jose Convention Center. Friday, August 6-8. $20 at the door.
Reggae Rising CANCELED due to logistical errors and poor ticket sales. Was Friday, August 6-Sunday, August 8.
East Bay NORML and Oaksterdam University Monthly Marijuana Activists' meeting. Thursday, August 19 at 7:30 p.m. Free. Oaksterdam University Student Union, 1915 Broadway, Oakland.
Seattle Hempfest Friday, August 20-Sunday, August 22. Free.
The Know Your Rights Expo Sponsored by Orange County NORML and the Law Firm of Glew & Kim, who call it Orange County's first medical cannabis and legal marijuana expo south of Los Angeles. Targeted toward both medical marijuana patients and the general public who are curious about the industry and the upcoming Tax and Regulate Prop 19 ballot initiative. Across the street from Disneyland. Expected attendance: 20,000. Saturday, August 28, at the Anaheim Convention Center. $15.
39th annual national NORML conference At the historic landmark Governor Hotel in downtown Portland, Oregon. Thursday, September 9-Saturday, September 11. $125.
The International Cannabis & Hemp Expo At the Cow Palace, Daly City, CA. Saturday, September 25, & Sunday, September 26. Cost TBA.
About DKTV
Daily Kos TV is a political news video blog published by Kos Media and created and edited by Jed Lewison. Jed, who lives in Las Vegas, Nevada, also publishes Jed Report, a news and politics blog, and is a contributing editor and video producer for Daily Kos, the leading progressive political blog.
A word to the wise…?
By CLAIRE McENTEE – BusinessDay.co.nz
Vodafone, Telecom and 2degrees are pushing for mobile networks to be excluded from a controversial bill that could see repeat copyright infringers disconnected from the internet.
The Recording Industry Association has rejected the move and says any illegal activity on internet service providers' networks should be held to account.
Vodafone says making its mobile systems compliant with the bill could cost it up to $2 million.
Government relations head Roger Ellis told the commerce select committee that copyright infringement over mobile internet connections comprised about 2 per cent of online infringement, and including mobile networks in the bill's scope risked "using a sledgehammer to crack a walnut".
The Copyright (Infringing File Sharing) Amendment Bill requires internet service providers to identify which customers have allegedly infringed copyright, in response to complaints from copyright holders, and issue up to three infringement notices to alleged offenders.
The bill enables the Copyright Tribunal to hear complaints and award penalties of up to $15,000, and allows copyright owners to seek suspension of an internet account for up to six months through the district court.
Vodafone senior policy analyst Andrew Cushen said most of its mobile customers were pre-pay customers, and Vodafone often did not know who they were.
"How do you serve a notice on someone who has never told you who they are in the first place?"
Vodafone could also be required to serve notices to customers of other providers reselling its network, about whom it knows nothing, he said.
"The vast majority of the costs of compliance will fall upon the mobile network."
The company advocates following the lead of countries that have not required mobile operators to implement similar copyright regimes – such as Britain, or that have established "trigger mechanisms" – whereby a copyright regime does not come into effect until the rate of suspected infringement over mobile connections passes a certain threshold.
2degrees and Telecom have echoed Vodafone's call for mobile networks to be exempt.
Recording Industry Association chief executive Campbell Smith says mobile infringement "should absolutely be included".
The bill protects ISPs from being sued by copyright owners for infringements on their networks provided they comply with its requirements on all of their services, he says. "That includes mobile."
Tony Eaton, the executive director of the Federation Against Copyright Theft, says he plans to discuss the proposal with Vodafone and industry group the Telecommunications Carriers Forum in the next few weeks.
"We need to do some research from our side."
Select committee chairwoman Lianne Dalziel said mobile infringements might be low but the growing popularity of internet-enabled tablets such as the iPad – which is designed for downloading and viewing movies and multimedia – could change that.
Telecom, Vodafone, TelstraClear and the TCF said the fees ISPs can charge to copyright owners for issuing notices must reflect their compliance costs, which could reach into the millions of dollars.
Many home internet connections were bundled with other services, such as phone and television, and suspending just the internet connection would be problematic.
They are arguing for a 12-month implementation period for the bill and say the proposed three-month timeframe to alter their systems will drive costs up even further.
The TCF is proposing an alternative scheme under which ISPs would send the original infringement notice but further notices would be sent by the Copyright Tribunal.
It says this would reduce costs for ISPs and mean copyright owners would only have one body to deal with after the original notice, rather than a whole range of ISPs.
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