
House Financial Services Committee, March 26, 2009 http://www.house.gov/apps/list/hearing/financialsvcs_dem/press031309.shtml
OSCON 2002
House Financial Services Committee, March 26, 2009 http://www.house.gov/apps/list/hearing/financialsvcs_dem/press031309.shtml
“Law and technology produce, together, a kind of regulation of creativity we've not seen before.”
OSCON 2002
OSCON 2002
Context: Here's a simple copyright lesson: Law regulates copies. What's that mean? Well, before the Internet, think of this as a world of all possible uses of a copyrighted work. Most of them are unregulated. Talking about fair use, this is not fair use; this is unregulated use. To read is not a fair use; it's an unregulated use. To give it to someone is not a fair use; it's unregulated. To sell it, to sleep on top of it, to do any of these things with this text is unregulated. Now, in the center of this unregulated use, there is a small bit of stuff regulated by the copyright law; for example, publishing the book — that's regulated. And then within this small range of things regulated by copyright law, there's this tiny band before the Internet of stuff we call fair use: Uses that otherwise would be regulated but that the law says you can engage in without the permission of anybody else. For example, quoting a text in another text — that's a copy, but it's a still fair use. That means the world was divided into three camps, not two: Unregulated uses, regulated uses that were fair use, and the quintessential copyright world. Three categories.
Enter the Internet. Every act is a copy, which means all of these unregulated uses disappear. Presumptively, everything you do on your machine on the network is a regulated use. And now it forces us into this tiny little category of arguing about, "What about the fair uses? What about the fair uses?" I will say the word: To hell with the fair uses. What about the unregulated uses we had of culture before this massive expansion of control?
2010s, 2016, September, First presidential debate (September 26, 2016)
Source: The Ideology of Fascism: The Rationale of Totalitarianism, (1969), p. 294
Source: Management Science (1968), Chapter 6, The Viable Governor, p. 154.
On the financial crisis of 2007–08, as quoted in "Full text of Manmohan Singh's speech at UN General Assembly" http://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/full-text-of-manmohan-singh-s-speech-at-un-general-assembly/article1-340789.aspx, Hindustan Times (27 September 2008)
2006-2010
“It is argued that regulators are frequently captured by those whom they are supposed to regulate.”
Source: Economics Of The Welfare State (Fourth Edition), Chapter 4, State Intervention, p. 88-89
Ronald Coase: in Reason, january 1997 ( read online http://www.reason.com/news/show/30115.html): About state regulation.
1990s and later