What is the optimal length of a copyright?

Posted in Economics, Law, Maps | Leave a comment

The Cuban origins of Hemingway’s “Old Man and the Sea”

We will be presenting our work-in-progress titled “Misappropriation in The Old Man and the Sea” at the XVII Biennial International Hemingway Conference taking place in Oak Park, Illinois this week. (We presented a previous draft of this paper last year at Florida International University, and we are hoping to publish a revised draft in a future issue of The Hemingway Review.) Here is the abstract of our paper:

We consider whether the great writer Ernest Hemingway committed the tort of misappropriation or violated any legal rights under Cuban law when he published his masterpiece The Old Man and the Sea. In summary, Hemingway either borrowed or stole (depending on one’s perspective) the following elements of his timeless novella from three Cuban fishermen: (i) the actual story itself [from Carlos Gutierrez], (ii) the “back-story” and other biographical details of the main character of the story, Santiago [from Gregorio Fuentes] and (iii) Santiago’s ascetic persona and physical characteristics [from Anselmo Hernandez]. Although we concede that Hemingway combined these ingredients to create a new and original artistic work, the question we are considering here is whether Hemingway’s creative combination of such elements is enough to negate a legal claim under U.S. or Cuban law.

#EHOP16

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

City scammers (red light cameras edition)

Posted in Deception, Law, Politics, Web/Tech | 2 Comments

Chicago, corner of Webster and Cleveland streets

Image credit: F. E. Guerra-Pujol

Posted in Culture | Leave a comment

A day in the park

Image credit: F. E. Guerra-Pujol

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

If eggs had FDA labels

Ingredients of an All-Natural Egg

Credit: James Kennedy (h/t: Cliff Pickover, via Twitter)

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

#14juillet

Emma Ockerman writes (via Time): “Back in July of 1789, France had already experienced a rough summer that included food shortages, high taxes, and the militarization of Paris. Sensing distress, [King Louis XVI] called upon the Estates-General—an assembly that hadn’t met in more than a century—to deliver a new tax plan. That resulted in the Third Estate, the non-noble/non-clergy portion of the assembly, breaking from the clergy and nobility, and demanding a written constitution from France.” The leaders of the Third Estate then formed a new “National Assembly” in late June, and on July 14 their followers stormed the Hôtel des Invalides, the Bastille, and other strategic locations in Paris to loot firearms and ammunition. In the words of Ms Ockerman: “That hunt for gunpowder—not the hope of freeing prisoners—was the main reason for the storming of the Bastille.”

Happy Bastille Day

Posted in History | 8 Comments

Asymmetrical warfare (Baton Rouge, July 2016)

Posted in Current Affairs, Justice, Law | 3 Comments

Visualization of Dante’s Inferno

Hat tip: renskerbof (via reddit)

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Censorship in Florida (FBI/Orlando police edition)

Hey, what are the FBI and the Orlando police trying to hide from the public in connection with the massacre at Pulse nightclub last month? The police’s slow response to the Pulse shootings (it took the police over three hours to rescue the remaining hostages that night)? Under Florida sunshine laws, 911 phone calls are public records and must be released to the public, yet Orlando police–apparently at the request of the FBI (see letter below the fold)–is still refusing to release all but one of the transcripts of the 911 phone calls made during the Pulse shootings last month, and even the one phone record that was released was originally censored, with all references to Allah and the Islamic State redacted. Isn’t this sorry episode yet another textbook example of the police acting above the law? Continue reading

Posted in Bayesian Reasoning, Current Affairs, Deception, Law, Politics | 5 Comments