Monday, April 8, 2013

More Details Revealed On The Patent Lawyers Demanding $1000 For Every Worker At Companies Using Scanners

from the those-shakedown-artists-sure-are-nice dept

Earlier this year we wrote about Joe Mullin's excellent reporting on a series of patent holding shell companies, led by one called MPHJ Holdings, who were sending demand letters to tons of companies demanding that they pay between $900 and $1200 per employee for using scanners connected to a network with a "scan to email" feature. Mullin is back with more on MPHJ, talking to two of the lawyers working for the patent troll, though the identity of the actual patent holder remains a secret.

One of the lawyers is heading up the whole threat letter and (expected) litigation campaign (no lawsuits have been filed but "draft" complaints have been sent to various companies, indicating lawsuits will be coming soon) and the other is in charge of talking to "irate" recipients of the shakedown letter. That lawyer, Jay Mac Rust, apparently is one of a few lawyers who have certain "territories" in this scheme, but in a recorded message that Mullin obtained with a discussion between Mac Rust and one of the letter recipients, Mac Rust explains that he's the one who deals with the angry ones. Mac Rust repeatedly suggests that letter recipients consult a patent lawyer to find out that this is all "legal." Of course, doing so also will help people realize just how much a patent lawyer costs and can then do the math on the value of fighting back.

Also, it's somewhat amusing that a lawyer who claims to have spent time understanding patent law seems quite confused about copyright law. Mullin tried to reach Mac Rust a bunch of times, only to finally get him to call when told that the article was soon to be published, and would include quotes from the recorded phone call with the letter recipient and a picture of Mac Rust. Mac Rust didn't like that and said that copyright law meant Mullin couldn't use his photo:
"I'd appreciate you not running a photo of me, anywhere," said Rust. "You know how photographs work, with copyright and all. If there's a photograph up online of me, I own it."
That's not true. At all. The copyright is normally with the photographer, not the subject of a photo, for one thing (though the copyrights can be assigned). But, on top of that Mullin publishing such a photo at Ars Technica is clearly protected by fair use.

Mullin also runs through some somewhat shady business practices that Mac Rust was sued over in the past, though Mac Rust seems to suggest that the questionable stuff was done by the guy employing him, and for the most part it looks like he's gotten out of the various lawsuits through settlement or dismissal.

Mullin then talks to the lawyer officially representing MPHJ, who doesn't seem to think there's anything wrong with what he's doing, arguing that inventors deserve to be protected. He doesn't seem to acknowledge that the "inventor" appears to have "invented" a general idea that lots of people had, but few people implemented, not because the idea wasn't there, but the tech itself wasn't ready. The fact that the "inventor" on the patent failed to actually successfully sell a product in the market should be indication enough that there was nothing special about the patent itself. But the lawyer, Bryan Farney, doesn't seem to see how that's an issue.
“The inventor obviously came up with something that’s widely used,” Farney said. “That happens sometimes.”
This is the frustrating thing about patent system supporters. They never seem even marginally willing to admit that there are massive problems that come about when someone gets a patent on a general idea that lots of people have, but which the technology is not yet ready for. They seem to think this is fine, never acknowledging how they're actually stomping on the basic rights of everyone else who came up with the idea, followed by (in this case) everyone who is using a basic technology offered by nearly every scanner maker today. There is no way anyone can view this as a reasonable result or the intention of today's patent system.

FLASH WAR ON THE HORIZON KOREA LIVE FIRE EXERCISE CHINESE BORDER

Posted by George Freund on April 8, 2013 at 4:25 PM

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NEWS FLASH CANADA HAS TROOPS ON THE GROUND IN KOREA. ALL HELL COULD BREAK OUT ANY MOMENT.CHINA HAS CLOSED ITS BORDER WITH NORTH KOREA. FOX NEWS REPORTS LIVE FIRE EXERCISES. IT COULD GET REAL HAIRY REAL FAST. BE PREPARED. CANADA IS COMMITTED TO THE CONFLICT. 

Broadcasters worry about 'Zero TV' homes

http://news.yahoo.com/broadcasters-worry-zero-tv-homes-154357101--finance.html
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Some people have had it with TV. They've had enough of the 100-plus channel universe. They don't like timing their lives around network show schedules. They're tired of $100-plus monthly bills.
A growing number of them have stopped paying for cable and satellite TV service, and don't even use an antenna to get free signals over the air. These people are watching shows and movies on the Internet, sometimes via cellphone connections. Last month, the Nielsen Co. started labeling people in this group "Zero TV" households, because they fall outside the traditional definition of a TV home. There are 5 million of these residences in the U.S., up from 2 million in 2007.
Winning back the Zero TV crowd will be one of the many issues broadcasters discuss at their national meeting, called the NAB Show, taking place this week in Las Vegas.
While show creators and networks make money from this group's viewing habits through deals with online video providers and from advertising on their own websites and apps, broadcasters only get paid when they relay such programming in traditional ways. Unless broadcasters can adapt to modern platforms, their revenue from Zero TV viewers will be zero.
"Getting broadcast programing on all the gizmos and gadgets — like tablets, the backseats of cars, and laptops — is hugely important," says Dennis Wharton, a spokesman for the National Association of Broadcasters.
Although Wharton says more than 130 TV stations in the U.S. are broadcasting live TV signals to mobile devices, few people have the tools to receive them. Most cellphones require an add-on device known as a dongle, but these gadgets are just starting to be sold.
Among this elusive group of consumers is Jeremy Carsen Young, a graphic designer, who is done with traditional TV. Young has a working antenna sitting unplugged on his back porch in Roanoke, Va., and he refuses to put it on the roof.
"I don't think we'd use it enough to justify having a big eyesore on the house," the 30-year-old says.
Online video subscriptions from Netflix Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. — which cost less than $15 a month combined — have given him and his partner plenty to watch. They take in back episodes of AMC's "The Walking Dead" and The CW's "Supernatural," and they don't need more, he says.
He doesn't mind waiting as long as a year for the current season's episodes to appear on streaming services, even if his friends accidently blurt out spoilers in the meantime. With regular television, he might have missed the latest developments, anyway.
"By the time it gets to me to watch, I've kind of forgotten about that," he says.
For the first time, TV ratings giant Nielsen took a close look at this category of viewer in its quarterly video report released in March. It plans to measure their viewing of new TV shows starting this fall, with an eye toward incorporating the results in the formula used to calculate ad rates.
"Our commitment is to being able to measure the content wherever it is," says Dounia Turrill, Nielsen's senior vice president of insights.
The Zero TV segment is increasingly important, because the number of people signing up for traditional TV service has slowed to a standstill in the U.S.
Last year, the cable, satellite and telecoms providers added just 46,000 video customers collectively, according to research firm SNL Kagan. That is tiny when compared to the 974,000 new households created last year. While it's still 100.4 million homes, or 84.7 percent of all households, it's down from the peak of 87.3 percent in early 2010.
Nielsen's study suggests that this new group may have left traditional TV for good. While three-quarters actually have a physical TV set, only 18 percent are interested in hooking it up through a traditional pay TV subscription.
Zero TVers tend to be younger, single and without children. Nielsen's senior vice president of insights, Dounia Turrill, says part of the new monitoring regime is meant to help determine whether they'll change their behavior over time. "As these homes change life stage, what will happen to them?"
Cynthia Phelps, a 43-year-old maker of mental health apps in San Antonio, Texas, says there's nothing that will bring her back to traditional TV. She's watched TV in the past, of course, but for most of the last 10 years she's done without it.
She finds a lot of programs online to watch on her laptop for free — like the TED talks educational series — and every few months she gets together with friends to watch older TV shows on DVD, usually "something totally geeky," like NBC's "Chuck."
The 24-hour news channels make her anxious or depressed, and buzz about the latest hot TV shows like "Mad Men" doesn't make her feel like she's missing out. She didn't know who the Kardashian family was until she looked them up a few years ago.
"I feel absolutely no social pressure to keep up with the Joneses in that respect," she says.
For Phelps, it's less about saving money than choice. She says she'd rather spend her time productively and not get "sucked into" shows she'll regret later.
"I don't want someone else dictating the media I get every day," she says. "I want to be in charge of it. When I have a TV, I'm less in control of that."
The TV industry has a host of buzz words to describe these non-traditionalist viewers. There are "cord-cutters," who stop paying for TV completely, and make do with online video and sometimes an antenna. There are "cord-shavers," who reduce the number of channels they subscribe to, or the number of rooms pay TV is in, to save money.
Then there are the "cord-nevers," young people who move out on their own and never set up a landline phone connection or a TV subscription. They usually make do with a broadband Internet connection, a computer, a cellphone and possibly a TV set that is not hooked up the traditional way.
That's the label given to the group by Richard Schneider, the president and founder of the online retailer Antennas Direct. The site is doing great business selling antennas capable of accepting free digital signals since the nation's transition to digital over-the-air broadcasts in 2009, and is on pace to sell nearly 600,000 units this year, up from a few dozen when it started in 2003.
While the "cord-nevers" are a target market for him, the category is also troubling. More people are raised with the power of the Internet in their pocket, and don't know or care that you can pull TV signals from the air for free.
"They're more aware of Netflix than they're aware over-the-air is even available," Schneider says.
That brings us to truck driver James Weitze. The 31-year-old satisfies his video fix with an iPhone. He often sleeps in his truck, and has no apartment. To be sure, he's an extreme case who doesn't fit into Nielsen's definition of a household in the first place. But he's watching Netflix enough to keep up with shows like "Weeds," ''30 Rock," ''Arrested Development," ''Breaking Bad," ''It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" and "Sons of Anarchy."
He's not opposed to TV per se, and misses some ESPN sports programs like the "X Games."
But he's so divorced from the traditional TV ecosystem it could be hard to go back. It's become easier for him to navigate his smartphone than to figure out how to use a TV set-top box and the button-laden remote control.
"I'm pretty tech savvy, but the TV industry with the cable and the television and the boxes, you don't know how to use their equipment," he says. "I try to go over to my grandma's place and teach her how to do it. I can't even figure it out myself."


Meet the nice-guy lawyers who want $1,000 per worker for using scanners

"It's not some kind of bull. We're not trying to harass people."




Starting late last year, hundreds of US businesses began to receive demand letters from secretive patent-holding companies with six-letter gibberish names: AdzPro, GosNel, and JitNom. The letters state that using basic office equipment, like scanners that can send files to e-mail, infringes a series of patents owned by MPHJ Technologies. Unless the target companies make payments—which start at around $9,000 for the smallest targeted businesses but go up from there—they could face legal action.


In a world of out-there patent claims, MPHJ is one of the most brazen yet. It's even being talked about in Congress. Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-OR), who has sponsored the anti-troll SHIELD Act, cited the operation as a perfect example of why the system needs reform. After publishing a story on the scanner-trolling scheme, Ars heard from letter recipients and their lawyers from around the country—Idaho and Texas, California and South Dakota.
Before the AdzPros and GosNels took over, the patents were owned by an entity called Project Paperless, which threatened dozens of businesses in Virginia and Georgia. Project Paperless ultimately filed two lawsuits, prosecuted by lawyers at Hill, Kertscher, and Wharton, an Atlanta firm with complex connections to the patents. In late 2012, Project Paperless sold the patents to MPHJ Technology Investments. Today, the anonymous owner of MPHJ operates GosNel, AdzPro, JitNom, and at least a dozen other shell companies now targeting small businesses around the country.
So how does it all work? Bringing in the patent payoffs is a lawyer-driven business. The top lawyer behind the new scanner-trolling enterprise is Brian Farney, a Texas IP lawyer who is senior partner at Farney Daniels. Farney won't reveal who he's working for; he simply refers to whoever is behind MPHJ as "the client." But the client did agree, surprisingly, to allow Farney to do an interview about the patent-enforcement campaign.
Another lawyer deeply involved in the scanner-trolling enterprise is Jay Mac Rust, a Waco, Texas attorney who works as a kind of in-house patent enforcer for MPHJ. He isn't the only one with that job, but Rust has a special role. It's up to him to calm down letter recipients who are "really irate"—and, at the end of the day, to get them to pay from $900 to $1,200 per worker. Rust didn't agree to talk to Ars, but a source has provided a recording of a revealing conversation he had with Rust.
Together, the Farney and Rust conversations show how the scanner-trolling campaign is designed. They also give a glimpse at how the lawyers involved see themselves. It's the most insight available into a scheme that, to some business owners, feels like a shakedown.
So what are the top lawyers behind MPHJ Technology Investments like? Well, on the phone they come off as really nice guys. Demanding payouts from small business users of everyday technology isn't the typical patent enforcement strategy, but it's perfectly legal under US law. As a business strategy, however, it has generally been considered unworkable—and unwise.
Well, until now. As the art of modern "patent trolling" enters its second decade, the MPHJ scanner-trolling scheme has opened a new front in the battle. The company has a patent that it believes is being violated by "99 percent" of American office workers. And it wants to get paid.


Jay Mac Rust, from 2006 magazine cover of Super Lawyers Texas “Rising Stars.”

“99 percent of people are using it. You know it and I know it.”

Mac Rust is one of a few lawyers who gets certain "territories" of the MPHJ patent scheme. A person who had a conversation with Rust in January about alleged violations of the MPHJ patents—I'll call the source Mr. Smith—gave Ars a recording of his phone call. The recording was made with Rust's knowledge.
In the call, the confused Mr. Smith starts out by telling Rust he can scarcely believe what is happening. "Just to reiterate, my home printer—if I scan to e-mail, it's an option on my Hewlett-Packard printer—I do that, I owe you money?" asks Smith.
"If you said you hooked it up to the Internet, and in one button, you can scan and e-mail directly out—yes, you have violated the patent that we own," says Rust.
That means millions of Americans owe Rust’s anonymous client money. But Smith seemed overly focused on his personal behavior, with his home printer. Individuals aren’t the intended target, Rust explains.
“We’ve been trying to do what we can to focus on businesses that have 10 or more employees,” says Rust. “But look, it's not perfect. All our information is not exactly perfect. That’s why we send a letter to ask you certain questions.”
The six-letter entities are divided up by region, Rust continues. "According to patent law, if we're going to sue you, we have to sue you in your area. So we broke those up, so we could sue in those individual areas, so we don't have to drag you to Delaware [where MPHJ is incorporated]. You don't really want to fight in Delaware, and I don't want you to have to fight in Delaware."
"I see. So you're doing me a favor!" says Smith.
"In a sense, yes," replies Rust.
"So—I'm sorry," says Smith. "You're going to have to bear with me. I'm just flabbergasted."
"I highly recommend you contact a patent attorney," says Rust, a theme he returns to throughout the 15-minute phone call.
Telling target companies to consult an attorney may seem like a surprising suggestion for an enforcer of controversial patent claims. But suggesting that small companies lawyer up probably yields excellent results for Rust and MPHJ. A patent lawyer will likely tell targets that the letters shouldn’t be ignored, and the lawyer will quickly let them know the cost of fighting an issued patent, which can be hundreds of thousands of dollars—or millions, if a case actually goes to trial. That’s far more than the cash asked for by AdzPro, GosNel, and the other MPHJ entities, which will grant a license for between $900 and $1,200 per worker—around $100,000 for a 100-employee business.
"I promise, they'll help you to understand how patent law works,” says Rust. “You'll figure out it's not a scam. It's not some kind of bull. We're not trying to harass people. They'll look up the patents and tell you whether or not what you do infringes. And if you don't infringe, hey, let us know that."
Companies that don’t infringe just need to sign a simple "declaration" document saying so, Rust explains.
In the MPHJ declaration, which Ars has obtained a copy of, a representative of the target company must swear under penalty of perjury that the company doesn't use any equipment that scans a document to e-mail and then transmits it over a network. If that statement proves to be false, the company agrees to a "consent judgment" in the amount of $1,200 per employee.
But most companies do infringe, according to MPHJ. "If you're scanning direct to e-mail, you're violating," says Rust. "It's pretty simple."
"So everyone violates!" says Smith, later in the call.
"99 percent of people are using it," says Rust. "You know it and I know it. So, yeah."
Smith continues to be incredulous that he as an individual, and not a big company, could be on the hook for payments related to patents. At one point, Rust uses an analogy about Apple v. Samsung to explain to Smith the power that MPHJ has over him.
"Do you know that if you had bought a notebook—or whatever, the Samsung version of the iPad—you know they could have come and taken those away from you? Actually made you give them all back? Do you know that?" says Rust. "So I mean—it's interesting how patent law works. They could have actually stopped everybody from using them. Even though you paid your thousand bucks for the thing, they could have taken them away, under patent law."
Near the end of the call, Smith asks Rust how he even got his phone number. (The call was initiated when Rust called Smith; Smith had been repeatedly calling the call center number featured on the threat letters.)
Rust explains that in general, the scheme is broken up geographically, with certain MPHJ lawyers getting certain regions. The lawyers stick with the target company they are assigned to, suggesting they are paid on some kind of commission basis. But there’s a certain type of business owner that always ends up with Rust and his easygoing Texas drawl: the angry ones.
"You're the lucky guy that gets me," Rust explains to Smith. "I get to answer all the ones that are really, really… irate. And I understand that."
"I'm not irate at you, Mac, because like I said, you seem nice," says Smith. "But I am irate."
"I know you are, and I don't blame you," says Rust. He continues:
That's why I encourage people to go to a lawyer. Look, I'm a regular lawyer, too. I started out doing litigation. So if I had seen it [the threat letter], I would have gone, "Aw, bullshit," just like everybody else. But unfortunately once you get into the patent world, you'll find out… some guy that made an invention in 1999, back when this was a novel idea, really does have rights. Even going for a long time into the future. Now that… scanning and e-mailing has replaced the fax machine, all of a sudden his invention is really, really valuable.
Rust ignored our phone calls and e-mails requesting interviews over a period of several weeks. Last week, I made a final phone call to let him know we were moving to publication with a piece that included a recorded phone conversation of him as well as a photo.
He returned that call within minutes.
"I'd appreciate you not running a photo of me, anywhere," said Rust. "You know how photographs work, with copyright and all. If there's a photograph up online of me, I own it."
I simply told Rust that we did have a photo that was fine for us to use, with or without his permission. I asked if he would talk about his work on the MPHJ patent campaign at all.
"No," he said. "I think you've already talked to Brian Farney. I doubt seriously if anything I say is going to change your mind about the legality of this, or anything else."

Mac Rust: From “Ponzi schemes” to patent trolling

The practice known as "patent trolling" certainly has its detractors, but it is unquestionably legal. Patents can be licensed by anyone, whether they're being used or not. Whoever "the client" behind MPHJ is, he or she is unlikely to be accused of criminal behavior.
Rust's earlier clients, however, have faced more serious accusations. Before Rust moved to Waco and became a patent enforcer for MPHJ, he had an office about 90 miles away in Stephenville, Texas, and he did some work for a man named Steven Dean Kennedy. Kennedy offered loans through shell companies he called Atlantic Rim Funding and West Coast Holdings. In 2008, a couple named Jay and Anita Hyman wrote checks to Rust totaling $650,000, thinking they were loaning money to West Coast Holdings that would be paid back, with interest rates ranging from 17 to 22 percent.
But they say they weren’t paid. In 2010, the Hymans filed a lawsuit against West Coast, Kennedy—and Mac Rust. It was Rust who had collected the $650,000, and the checks were made out to him, according to court documents.
Rust tried to get out of the case on jurisdictional grounds, but the judge wouldn't allow it. Rust filed papers that denied any liability and blamed Kennedy and West Coast. Court documents show that Rust reached a settlement with the Hymans in November 2012.
The Hymans weren’t the only ones claiming they got bilked by Rust and Kennedy. A complaint filed by a Philadelphia-area nonprofit in 2012 was more direct about Kennedy's behavior, alleging that Kennedy was running a "Ponzi Scheme"—with Rust as a key lawyer.
Those allegations are from a 2012 complaint filed by the Land Conservancy of Elkins Park, a nonprofit that operates a 42 acre historic estate near Philadelphia. In 2010, the Conservancy was in a bad financial situation and filed for bankruptcy protection. As part of a settlement, it arranged to get funding from a source that would prove unreliable—Kennedy's Atlantic Rim Funding.
In court documents, Conservancy lawyers say Atlantic Rim kept the Conservancy’s $600,000 deposit and went into “radio silence” when they tried to get some of their money withdrawn in late 2011.
Atlantic Rim and Kennedy “represented that they had billions of dollars worth of bonds and that at any time the Deposit would be secure,” wrote Conservancy lawyers. Rust “claimed to have done substantial business with Atlantic Rim” and assured Conservancy representatives that they could get their money back at any time.
The complaint makes clear that Kennedy, not Rust, was in ultimate control of Atlantic Rim. Unlike Kennedy, Rust kept communicating and “indicate[d] a desire to help the [Conservancy] obtain the return of the Deposit.” Still, they claimed that Rust wasn’t providing straight answers. And, they said, “Rust revealed, perhaps unintentionally, that a number of borrowers were looking to have their deposits returned. This caused the Debtor great concern.”
Rust filed an answer in July 2012 saying that he had extricated himself from the matter, selling the Conservancy’s bonds for $360,000, an amount that the Conservancy had agreed to.
In October, the bankruptcy case was resolved. The court entered a $3.1 million judgment against Kennedy and Atlantic Rim, who were nowhere to be found. Lawsuits against Kennedy, meanwhile, keep piling up—but the claims against Rust were dismissed.

Anonymous scanner-trolls “encourage others to invent”

When target companies fail to pay up after the first round of letters, they are ultimately contacted by lawyers from Farney Daniels, the Georgetown, Texas law firm retained by MPHJ. In-house lawyers like Mac Rust refer to Farney Daniels as "litigation counsel," but Farney Daniels has filed no lawsuits on these patents.


At the top of the firm is Bryan Farney, a name partner who's an experienced patent lawyer, and in charge of many aspects of the licensing campaign. Farney, like Rust, is genial on the phone. He read our previous coverage before the interview and was eager to emphasize two points that he felt weren't made clear in the January story.
First of all: Steven Vicinanza, the owner of Atlanta's Blue Wave Computing who spoke out about his fight against these patents, never won his lawsuit on the merits. It was Farney’s client who decided to walk away from the suit. “The new owner, MPHJ, didn’t want any litigation going on,” said Farney. “The client wanted to start with a clean slate and wanted the case dropped. So Blue Wave was the beneficiary of timing.”
Second: Farney said that his client is going after scanner users, not to avoid doing battle with big scanner makers like HP and Canon but because there’s no other use for the patents. Because of the way the patents are written, MPHJ actually can’t go after scanner manufacturers. Only the whole “system”—putting the scanner together with a network—infringes.
“The devices can be used in plenty of non-infringing ways," Farney explained. "Several of the major manufacturers have talked to us about these patents, and they agree with us. The product they sell is not infringing. It’s putting the whole system together. If you have an office scanner that scans with one button, is hooked up to a network, and can send e-mail—you infringe."
If that sounds like pretty much everyone using a modern scanner that is hooked up to the Internet—that's how Farney sees it, too.
“The inventor obviously came up with something that’s widely used,” Farney said. “That happens sometimes.”
I asked Farney if he really believes the named inventor, Laurence Klein, was the first person to think up a system that scans to documents on a network. The earliest of the four patents that MPHJ uses was filed by Klein in 1997.
“No one had a system where you did these things—where a scanner, a LAN, a PC, and the application software [were linked] with automatic or one-button scan,” said Farney. “There were some technical reasons for that.”
As for Klein himself, Farney has scant information about him. “My understanding is that he had an IT business, and he was trying to figure out how to do this exact thing,” he said. “I think the [current] client has some connection [to Klein].”
And Farney says he has looked at all the prior art, like the 1996 Ricoh patent, that has been sent to him. None of it invalidates Klein’s invention, said Farney.
Today, patent office records indicate that Klein lives in an Israeli settlement in the West Bank. There’s no evidence that Klein’s business succeeded, that he ever executed his idea of a networked scanner, or that he ever shared his ideas. There's no evidence the companies that make scanners and printers had heard of him before these threats, although they surely have now. So was Klein really an “inventor,” as most people would understand the term?
“That depends on your understanding of patent law,” said Farney. “Every patent lawyer in the country deals with engineers who tend to think that things aren’t patentable. But that isn’t the law. The first one to invent does get a patent.”
Is it really ethical or fair to demand thousands of dollars from hundreds of American businesses just for using basic scanners? And is it right that this is being done on behalf of an anonymous client with some murky connection to the guy who supposedly invented all this?
“Well, you clearly said it wasn’t fair,” said Farney, referring to Ars’ January story on MPHJ and Project Paperless. He continued:
But it’s a more nuanced question. My expectation is many of your readers work in high tech. I can tell you almost all of them at some point in their career will have a really good idea. Probably more than one.
The second thing they’ll think is: how do they protect that idea and stop someone from copying it? If they try to go make a business out of the idea, they’re going to ask that.
Many of your readers would want to go patent [their idea.] If they went to investors, the investors would want to patent it. Now how do those patents have value if they can’t be enforced?
Farney’s defense of MPHJ’s behavior was wholehearted, and his belief in the patent religion was total. He was sincere and polite on the phone. Still, I had to ask again: did he really think what he and MPHJ were doing was good for innovation in America? MPHJ may have bought patents representing the "idea" of networked scanners, and that's perfectly legal. But MPHJ hadn't created any kind of manufacturing business around them.
“No, but they stepped into the shoes of the guys that did,” said Farney. “MPHJ is getting a fair license value for these patents. That encourages others to invent and allows others to go get patents and raise money based on them.” Even if the original inventor had started a small business, “he wouldn’t have been able to raise money if he hadn’t been able to protect the idea.”
MPHJ still hasn’t filed any lawsuits, but it could happen. Target companies have reported getting copies of “draft complaints” in the last several weeks.
“I believe the client will try to reach people on reasonable terms,” said Farney. “Most likely, there will be litigation at some point.”

Authors Guild's Scott Turow: The Supreme Court, Google, Ebooks, Libraries & Amazon Are All Destroying Authors

from the old-man-yells-at-cloud dept

We've written more than a few times about Scott Turow, a brilliant author, but an absolute disaster as the Luddite-driven head of the Authors' Guild. During his tenure, he's done a disservice to authors around the globe by basically attacking everything new and modern -- despite any opportunities it might provide -- and talked up the importance of going back to physical books and bookstores. He's an often uninformed champion of a past that never really existed and which has no place in modern society. He once claimed that Shakespeare wouldn't have been successful under today's copyright law because of piracy, ignoring the fact that copyright law didn't even exist in the age of Shakespeare. His anti-ebook rants are just kind of wacky.

However, in his latest NY Times op-ed, he's basically thrown all of his cluelessness together in a rambling mishmash of "and another thing", combined with his desire to get those nutty technology kids off his lawn. For the few thousand members of the Authors Guild, it's time you found someone who was actually a visionary to lead, rather than a technology-hating reactionary pining for a mythical time in the past.

First up, a confused reaction to the Supreme Court's protection of first sale rights in Kirtsaeng.
LAST month, the Supreme Court decided to allow the importation and resale of foreign editions of American works, which are often cheaper than domestic editions. Until now, courts have forbidden such activity as a violation of copyright. Not only does this ruling open the gates to a surge in cheap imports, but since they will be sold in a secondary market, authors won’t get royalties.
First of all, no, this was not a "change" in US law. Courts had not forbidden this particular situation in the past, because the specifics of this hadn't really been tested in the past other than a few recent cases with somewhat different fact patterns. The point of the Supreme Court's ruling was to reinforce what most people already believed the law to be: if you buy a book, you have the right to resell it.

As for the "surge" in cheap imports, let's wait and see. It might impact markets like textbooks, which are artificially inflated, but for regular books? It seems like a huge stretch to think that it would be cost effective to ship in foreign books just for resale. And, of course, secondary markets have existed for ages, and studies have shown that they actually help authors because it makes it less risky to buy a new book, since people know they can resell it. Turow admits that secondary markets have always existed, but then jumps to what this is all "really" about in his mind:
This may sound like a minor problem; authors already contend with an enormous domestic market for secondhand books. But it is the latest example of how the global electronic marketplace is rapidly depleting authors’ income streams. It seems almost every player — publishers, search engines, libraries, pirates and even some scholars — is vying for position at authors’ expense.
Yes, that's right. The Kirtsaeng decision isn't just about first sale, it's really about the evil "global electronic marketplace" sucking authors dry. Of course, Turow fails to mention that Kirtsaeng had next to nothing to do with the internet. Yes, Kirtsaeng ended up selling his books via eBay, but tons of books sell on eBay. That had no impact on the ruling at all. The issue in the ruling was about books legally purchased abroad, and Kirtsaeng did that without the internet -- he just had friends and family back in Thailand buying books for him. To blame that on "the global electronic marketplace" is just completely random and wrong. It seems like the kind of thing someone says when they just want to blame technology for everything. Turow has his anti-technology hammer, but he's got to stop seeing nails in absolutely everything.
Authors practice one of the few professions directly protected in the Constitution, which instructs Congress “to promote the progress of Science and the useful Arts by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.” The idea is that a diverse literary culture, created by authors whose livelihoods, and thus independence, can’t be threatened, is essential to democracy.
Turow is a lawyer. As such, I would expect him not to misrepresent what the Constitution says, but he's done so here. Authors are not "directly protected in the Constitution." The Constitution does not "instruct" Congress to create copyright to promote the progress. Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution grants Congress specific powers concerning what it can do. It does not "instruct" Congress that it must do these things. The same section of the Constitution also gives Congress the ability to "grant letters of marque" to privateers ("pirates" on the high seas) to attack enemies. No one would ever argue that the Constitution "instructs" Congress to authorize pirates on the high seas to "attack and capture enemy vessels." In fact, Congress has not officially used this power since 1815. Similarly, there is no requirement that Congress "protect" authors in this manner, no matter how much Turow may pretend this is the case.

Frankly, it's bizarre that Turow would so misrepresent the Constitution, when he must know what he's saying is untrue. It really calls into question why the NY Times allows such blatantly false statements to go out under its name.
That culture is now at risk. The value of copyrights is being quickly depreciated, a crisis that hits hardest not best-selling authors like me, who have benefited from most of the recent changes in bookselling, but new and so-called midlist writers.

Take e-books. They are much less expensive for publishers to produce: there are no printing, warehousing or transportation costs, and unlike physical books, there is no risk that the retailer will return the book for full credit.
Note the implicit assumption: only publishers produce books. Turow, apparently, ignores the fact that these modern technological wonders (which he hates so much) have enabled an entire new world of massively successful self-published authors, who take advantage of this situation to realize that they don't need publishers, and the lower costs and ease of distribution makes things much easier. As Clay Shirky has said in the past, publishing is a button, not an industry. And, no, that doesn't mean that authors should all do it by themselves, but the challenges are in marketing, not in "publishing" or distribution any more (with respect to ebooks).

Also the idea of a literary culture at risk is laughable. More books are being published today than ever before. More people are reading books today than ever before. More people are writing books than ever before. Books that would never have been published in the past are regularly published today. There is an astounding wealth of cultural diversity in the literary world. Sure, some of it means a lot more competition for the small group of authors (only about 8,000 or so) that Turow represents... oh wait, I think we've perhaps touched on the reason that Turow is all upset by this. But, of course, more competition for that small group of authors does not mean the culture of books and literature is at risk at all. Quite the opposite.
But instead of using the savings to be more generous to authors, the six major publishing houses — five of which were sued last year by the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division for fixing e-book prices — all rigidly insist on clauses limiting e-book royalties to 25 percent of net receipts. That is roughly half of a traditional hardcover royalty.

Best-selling authors have the market power to negotiate a higher implicit e-book royalty in our advances, even if our publishers won’t admit it. But writers whose works sell less robustly find their earnings declining because of the new rate, a process that will accelerate as the market pivots more toward digital.
Again, this totally ignores the new reality. Authors who don't like this admittedly crappy deal from the big publishers can go to alternatives. They can self-publish. Or they can sign up with one of a new crop of digitally savvy publishers who are much more like partners than gatekeepers. No surprise that Turow doesn't even seem to know these things exist. Hell, just last week we were talking about a successful self-published author who leveraged his massive success into an extremely favorable deal with Simon and Schuster to handle physical book distribution. And a week later Scott Turow argues that only historical top sellers like himself can negotiate better rates with the Big 6 Publishers in NY? Wake up, Scott, there's a whole new world out there that you seem to be ignoring.

Barry Eisler famously turned down a half million dollar contract with a publisher, because he realized that the economics of going direct were much better. Plenty of authors are recognizing that they have leverage today where they used to have none. It seems odd that Turow doesn't even acknowledge this reality at all, instead assuming that authors are still locked into the system where the only way they can become published is by taking a bad deal with a publisher.
And there are many e-books on which authors and publishers, big and small, earn nothing at all. Numerous pirate sites, supported by advertising or subscription fees, have grown up offshore, offering new and old e-books free.
If you're an author earning nothing at all, then you've got bigger problems than technology. It probably means you're mired in obscurity and no one knows who the hell you are. On top of that, it means you've done nothing at all to connect with your fans. Because we've seen authors who actively encourage the piracy of their books, but who also work to connect with their fans, and have seen their sales go way up, because those fans want to support the authors. Also, as most people know (why doesn't Turow seem aware of this?) ebook "piracy" is a fairly small part of the market, in part because the initial market was dominated by the Amazon Kindle, and publishers smartly jumped on board. Yes, there is ebook piracy, but it's not like the music and movie business where the official sources basically ceded the entire market to piracy for years.
The pirates would be a limited menace were it not for search engines that point users to these rogue sites with no fear of legal consequence, thanks to a provision inserted into the 1998 copyright laws. A search for “Scott Turow free e-books” brought up 10 pirate sites out of the first 10 results on Yahoo, 8 of 8 on Bing and 6 of 10 on Google, with paid ads decorating the margins of all three pages.
Okay, this is just dumb. First of all, no one is searching for "Scott Turow free e-books" so this shouldn't be much of a concern. I did a Google Trends search on "Scott Turow free e-books" vs. "Scott Turow books" and it shows no one searches for "Scott Turow free e-books", so he doesn't have much to worry about. Frankly, he should probably be a hell of a lot more concerned that not too many people seem to be searching for "Scott Turow books" either.
But the larger point here is that, even if people were searching for "Scott Turow free e-books," how would that matter that much? By the very fact that they're doing that particular search, they've more or less self-identified as people not interested in paying money for Scott Turow books, so they're not the market anyway.
If I stood on a corner telling people who asked where they could buy stolen goods and collected a small fee for it, I’d be on my way to jail. And yet even while search engines sail under mottos like “Don’t be evil,” they do the same thing.
This is silly on multiple levels. First of all, by his own numbers, Google (who uses "Don't be evil") had the least number of "bad" sites in the results according to Turow. I did the same search and actually found only a couple sites that possibly were infringing. Instead, I did see links to the Authors Guild, to Amazon, to Turow's Wikipedia page... and to an old Techdirt article about Turow's cluelessness. That said, you could argue that if Google is "being evil" here it's actually by not giving its users what they're looking for -- which is clearly "free e-books." If people were actually doing this search (and we've already shown they're not) then perhaps it really just meant that Turow should be offering his own damn free ebooks, since that's what people are looking for. Why not offer an early work as a free download to get people interested in his books? Hell if he's really worried about it, offer up the first five chapters of a book. I've read a few of his books, and they can really grab you. Let people read the first few chapters for free and I'd bet lots of people would pay a reasonable price for the full book.

Instead of understanding any of this, Turow falsely attacks search engines on multiple levels. First, he suggests they're at fault because people are looking for free ebooks (even if they're not actually doing so for his own books). He assumes that because he did that search, others must. Second, when those search engines actually try to deliver what these theoretical people want (despite the fact that Turow himself has failed to do so) he complains about it. Finally, he falsely suggests that the search engines are making money doing so. They're not. Search engines make money if people click on ads. If someone sees a free ebook and clicks on an organic link, the search engine isn't making any money. I recognize that Turow hates technology, but that's no excuse for being blatantly ignorant about it when spewing misrepresentations in the NY Times.

From there, he attacks Google's book scanning project.
Google says this is a “fair use” of the works, an exception to copyright, because it shows only snippets of the books in response to each search. Of course, over the course of thousands of searches, Google is using the whole book and selling ads each time, while sharing none of the revenue with the author or publisher.
The second sentence has nothing to do with the first sentence. It is fair use because they're only showing snippets at a time, and most of those searches lead people to places where they can buy the books. I just did a search on Google Books for "Scott Turow" and the top links is to an Amazon page listing out all of Turow's books for sale. You'd think he'd appreciate such things. But, then, he'd have to not be a technologically illiterate Luddite.

All of this also ignores that Google's book scanning is really just about creating a rather useful card catalog for books, making them easier to find. Over and over again, people who have actually looked at the issue (i.e., not Scott Turow) have found that Google books increases sales of books. Considering he was just complaining about authors not getting any money, you'd think this would be a good thing.

He drones on about Google scanning books for a while, and then... attacks libraries for wanting to lend out ebooks, insisting that if they can do that, no one will ever buy a book again.
Now many public libraries want to lend e-books, not simply to patrons who come in to download, but to anybody with a reading device, a library card and an Internet connection. In this new reality, the only incentive to buy, rather than borrow, an e-book is the fact that the lent copy vanishes after a couple of weeks. As a result, many publishers currently refuse to sell e-books to public libraries.
One might also say "in this new reality," libraries are helping people access the wealth of information contained in books, just as they've always done. Who knew Scott Turow was so anti-library? It's kind of silly that maximalists and luddites keep jumping back to this trope. The idea that if you can get something for free, no one will ever pay for it. That's never been true and will never be true. All of the works that people pay for and download to their Kindles are already available for free on unauthorized sites. But tons of people pay. All of the music that people pay for and download to their iPods is already available for free on unauthorized sites. But tons of people pay. People will pay all the time for things they can get for free. Just check out the bottled water industry.

Turow then jumps back to attacking his other technological nemesis, Amazon, based on random speculation about a patent the company received:
An even more nightmarish version of the same problem emerged last month with the news that Amazon had a patent to resell e-books. Such a scheme will likely be ruled illegal. But if it is not, sales of new e-books will nose-dive, because an e-book, unlike a paper book, suffers no wear with each reading. Why would anyone ever buy a new book again?
Well, there's that trope again. Also, this ignores the ReDigi ruling, which has already said this is illegal, though that will be appealed. But, again, lots of people will still buy new ebooks, because they like to support authors. Also, it's likely that smart authors will embrace new and interesting business models in which this kind of thing isn't a problem. They can use Kickstarter to "pre-sell" the books and get support from fans. They can offer special benefits for fans who buy new books (such as membership in a fan club with other fans of that author). They can provide early previews or discounts on future or past works to those who buy first run copies of their new works. The list goes on and on -- and those are just the ones I came up with in the 30 seconds I spent thinking about it. Give me a full day to work on it, and the list would be in the dozens. But Turow, bizarrely, assumes that no one could possibly come up with any other reason.

And, from there, we go off onto a totally wacky tangent about Russia.
Last October, I visited Moscow and met with a group of authors who described the sad fate of writing as a livelihood in Russia. There is only a handful of publishers left, while e-publishing is savaged by instantaneous piracy that goes almost completely unpoliced. As a result, in the country of Tolstoy and Chekhov, few Russians, let alone Westerners, can name a contemporary Russian author whose work regularly affects the national conversation.
Note that he names Tolstoy and Chekhov -- two authors who both died more than a century ago. Could Turow easily name for us a Russian author from the 1940s who regularly affected the national conversation? How about the 1960s? 1980s? 1990s? No? Perhaps the problem isn't ebooks and piracy.

Meanwhile, as it so happens, not too long ago, we wrote a report on the content markets in various countries, including Russia. Turow might find it helpful, since he seems to be at a loss for actual data and facts in so many of his public statements on these issues. He can get a copy of The Sky is Rising 2 if he'd like. We offer it for free (the horror!). In it, he'd discover that the Russian book business is on the upswing. In the past fifteen years, the number of books published has increased by an impressive 266%, from just 33,623 in 1995 to 122,915 in 2011. That rate of growth exceeded all of the other countries we studied in Europe. It is true that the Russian market saw a decline in book revenue between 2008 and 2011 as the worldwide recession had an impact, but it has also recently seen the absolutely massive growth in the sale of ebook readers. As we've seen elsewhere, growth in ebook readers almost always acts as a leading indicator for later growth in ebook sales, because most readers connect easily to various authorized ebook stores, and the convenience factor leads to sales. One of the issues in Russia has been that many of the established players have been exceptionally slow in offering up authorized copies in the Russian market. If there are no authorized copies to buy, it shouldn't be a huge surprise to find out that people seek out alternatives.

It should be noted that when famed author Paulo Coelho decided to pirate his own book in Russia, it was because his publisher refused to offer a Russian translation. And what Coelho discovered was that sales of his book jumped from around 1,000 books to over 100,000 books because of his own decision to seed an unauthorized Russian translation. At the very least, this suggests that "piracy" isn't the problem and that, if handled well, authors can absolutely get people to buy, even when free works are available.

Scott Turow is clearly a smart individual. He's a fantastic author, whose books I've enjoyed for years. But it boggles my mind that he's so anti-technology based on ridiculous and ignorant claims, and that despite being called out on his ignorant statements for years, he chooses not to learn, but instead doubles down on those same ignorant statements by saying even more. It's doubly confusing that the NY Times sullies its own good name by allowing such obviously false statements to be published under its masthead.

Finally, the 8,000 or so authors (a mere fraction of the number of actual authors out there) who make up the Authors Guild are not served well by having someone as technologically reactionary as Turow leading them. It seems they'd be much better served by having a visionary leader who looks at ways to embrace new opportunities and who has realized that they can help to better promote, to connect with fans and to monetize their works. Having someone just yell about general progress, and try to ignorantly shoo the "kids" off his lawn over and over again, does them no favors.

NASA-funded fusion rocket could shoot humans to Mars in 30 days

     

NASA-funded fusion rocket could shoot humans to Mars in 30 days

University of Washington's fusion power test lab

A research group at the University of Washington, funded by NASA, is about to build a fusion-powered rocket. This rocket, if it can be successfully built, could propel a manned spacecraft to Mars in just 30 days — compared to NASA’s estimate of four years for a Martian round trip using current technology.
The UW team, led by John Slough, have spent the last few years developing and testing each of the various stages of a fusion rocket. Now it is time to bring these isolated tests together to produce an actual fusion rocket. To succeed, Slough and co will need to create a fusion process that generates more power than it requires to get the fusion reaction started — a caveat that, despite billions of dollars of research, has eluded some of the world’s finest scientists for more than 60 years. Fusion is an ideal method of rocket propulsion, as fusion fuel has immense energy density — something on the scale of 7 million times more dense than conventional rocket fuel. The weight (and expense) of fuel is one of the biggest barriers to space travel.

A concept fusion rocket, on its way to Mars
A concept fusion rocket, on its way to Mars
The UW fusion rocket design is mechanically simple and also ingenious. In essence, there’s a pellet of deuterium-tritium (hydrogen isotopes; the usual fuel used with fusion), and some large metal rings made of lithium. When the pellet is in the right place, flowing through the combustion chamber towards the exhaust, a huge magnetic field is triggered, causing the metal rings to slam closed around the pellet of fuel. These rings then implode with such pressure that the fuel compresses into fusion — much in the same way that a car compresses diesel into combustion. The fusion causes a massive explosion, ejecting the metal rings out of the rocket at 67,000 mph (108,000 kmh), generating thrust. This reaction would be repeated every 10 seconds, eventually accelerating the rocket to somewhere around 200,000 miles per hour — about 10 times the speed of Curiosity as it hurtled through space from Earth to Mars.
That’s the theory, anyway. So far, as far as we can tell, the scientists haven’t actually created fusion yet; they’ve tested the imploding metal rings, but they haven’t inserted the deuterium-tritium fuel and propelled a super-heated ionized lump of metal at 67,000 mph out the back of a rocket. That’s the next and very large step.
To be considered a success, the UW fusion rocket must fulfill two criteria: It must work reliably, and it must be capable of generating more thermal energy than the electrical energy required to start the fusion reaction. It is this second factor that has so far proved impossible to fulfill, despite dozens of attempts and billions of research and development dollars. Basically, it’s easy enough to start a fusion reaction — you just need a very strong magnetic field, lasers, or a nuclear bomb — but it’s very hard to continue the reaction after that. Fusion releases a vast amount of thermal energy — but you need to be able to convert enough of that thermal energy into electrical energy, to continue the reaction.
The target chamber at the National Igniftion Facility, where 192 lasers combine to create fusion
The target chamber at the National Igniftion Facility, where 192 lasers combine to create fusion
Currently our best hopes for sustainable fusion are the ITER — a $20 billion fusion reactor project backed by most of the world’s big players — and California’s National Ignition Facility (pictured above). It isn’t entirely clear how the University of Washington design allows for continuous fusion, but presumably they do have a plan. You shouldn’t get your hopes up, though: Almost everyone agrees that sustainable fusion power is still at least 20 years away — and might always be. Here’s hoping, though: Unless we come up with a faster method of space travel, it’ll take us around 200,000 years to reach the nearest Earth-like planet.

Fascism Is Not "That Which Hurts My Feelings"

Law, Politics & Current Events
American social and political culture has shifted rather abruptly towards support for same-sex marriage. Many opponents of same-sex marriage have shifted their rhetoric with it. They have changed focus from increasingly unpersuasive primary arguments (such as appeals to religious norms) to arguments that same sex marriage will have unintended consequences threatening the rights of others. They argue that legalizing same-sex marriage will have the effect of oppressing people who wish to exercise First Amendment rights to dissent from it, whether by speech or association.
Here's the problem: in doing so, some opponents of same sex marriage ("SSM" from here on out, because I am lazy) are promoting ignorance and confusion about basic rights by conflating government action, private action, suppression, and response speech. Ignorance — and I know I am going out on a limb here — is bad.

Consider this Bob Unruh column at WorldNetDaily. Now, I realize that some will say I am setting up a strawman by treating WND as an example of anything other than WND. But the Unruh column has a rather comprehensive list of links to stories that SSM opponents actually cite, and a representative sample of what I see as the willful jumbling of speech and action.
Unruh advocates the use of the term "homofascism" to counter the term "homophobia":
Hunt for the word “homophobia” – purportedly a fear of homosexuality – and Merriam-Webster, the ADL, Wikipedia, Oxford Dictionary, The Free Dictionary, the Reference Dictionary and others are ready to provide help.
But look for “homofascism” – the use of homosexuality to bludgeon and batter the religious rights of Christians and others – and the logical resources are silent, leaving it to blogs and others to define.
(As an aside, I've always understood the suffix "-phobia" to encompass both fear — which foes of SSM disavow — and strong dislike or aversion. Most dictionaries seem to support that meaning. I've always thought the argument "I'm not homophobic because I'm not afraid of homosexuals" to be rather dim and dishonest.)
Unruh goes on to offer a long list of links "that show abuse of Christians’ rights" culled from a site called "Defend the Family." The problem with the list is that it collects, homogenizes, and labels as "fascism" a wide variety of legal and social phenomena. Some items on the list are genuine examples of conflicts between the government and the individual — like application of anti-discrimination laws to SSM issues. Others are individual incidents of alleged viewpoint-based violence or threats. But Unruh and his sources mix those incidents with examples of clear protected speech by supporters of SSM and gay rights.
Unruh cites an instance "when a homosexual activist demands a lawyer not be hired because of past support for traditional marriage." But the underlying news story reveals a rather mundane political battle over a candidate's past affiliations. Is Unruh suggesting that SSM opponents would not oppose politicians who have backed organizations that they dislike? Unruh calls out examples of boycotts by gay rights groups. But boycotts are classic examples of protected speech, not fascism. Is Unruh really decrying all boycotts? If so, does he decry them when groups like the Family Research Council and Concerned Women for America employ them in an attempt to enforce anti-gay dogma? Unruh includes instances of gays complaining to the government about treatment by the government's agents in his list of fascism, even though such complaints are classic petitioning activity. Unruh complains about expressions of skepticism about a story of unfair censorship of a Christian, calling it "an LGBT publication desperately and through the use of unrelated arguments trying to convince people that they’re not getting the whole story and that the student harassed the teacher for the teacher being homosexual." But fascism is not characterized by a blogger asking skeptical questions about a news story. The list complains about pressure and rhetoric brought to bear against companies opposing SSM — but does Unruh really think that citizens bringing pressure and rhetoric to bear is fascist? Is it fascist when anti-gay and anti-SSM citizens do it?
Like many abrupt social changes, SSM and associated recognition of the rights of gay Americans will trigger some conflicts between statutory and constitutional rights. Those conflicts involve freedom of association (as when religious student groups wish to maintain religious qualifications for leadership) and freedom of expression (as when an artist's personal views conflict with the anti-discrimination laws of her state.) These conflicts are best discussed openly and honestly with an eye on the actual legal principles presented.
SSM and gay rights also triggers much mere disagreement, rhetoric, and social consequences for proponents of both sides. That is not a conflict of constitutional dimensions. Nor is it anything like fascism. That's the marketplace of ideas, functioning as intended. By mixing up government action and private speech, Unruh and WND are indulging in the trope that speech is tyranny — as WND has done before. But speech is not tyranny. Speech is what we have instead of tyranny. When you speak, and your fellow citizens disagree with you, that disagreement may take the form of condemnation and ridicule. But that's their free speech and does not impede yours. Suggesting otherwise — suggesting that condemning homophobia is comparable to threats or violence or government action — willfully promotes ignorance about basic civic principles.
We should condemn, investigate, and prosecute true threats and political violence. We should think carefully about the ongoing conflict between anti-discrimination laws and freedom of speech and association — a conflict that won't go away if we pretend it doesn't exist. But we shouldn't take anyone seriously if they suggest that being called a bigot is like being a victim of fascism.

FAITH UNDER FIRE

Fed-up Christians out to defeat 'homofascism'

Oklahoma campaign seeks to restore protections of 1st Amendment to people of faith

author-image Bob Unruh About | Email | Archive
Bob Unruh joined WND in 2006 after nearly three decades with the Associated Press, as well as several Upper Midwest newspapers, where he covered everything from legislative battles and sports to tornadoes and homicidal survivalists. He is also a photographer whose scenic work has been used commercially.

Hunt for the word “homophobia” – purportedly a fear of homosexuality – and Merriam-Webster, the ADL, Wikipedia, Oxford Dictionary, The Free Dictionary, the Reference Dictionary and others are ready to provide help.
But look for “homofascism” – the use of homosexuality to bludgeon and batter the religious rights of Christians and others – and the logical resources are silent, leaving it to blogs and others to define.

For example, at DefendProclaimtheFaith.org, a blogger wrote, “In light of all the information that I already posted and current information in this digest, I believe I may have coined a phrase. I am no longer titling the information as homosexual but homofascism. … I am going to use it because it fits this movement.”
It’s not hard to recognize. It’s when:
Rev. Scott Lively, who works with Defend the Family, now also has begun working with pastors and churches in Oklahoma City, under the banner of Oklahomans for the 1st Amendment, to take back Christians’ rights to believe, live and express their biblical beliefs.
Essentially, the goal of the program is to affirm that the First Amendment right to freedom of speech and religion trumps laws set up to promote homosexuality by setting aside quotas for hiring and such.
Lively told WND the effort was launched in Oklahoma for a number of reasons, including that the state is fairly conservative and the special “rights” for homosexuals still are a mostly new idea there.
“The idea is to accomplish somewhere in the nation an amendment of sexual orientation regulations … as an example to the rest of the nation,” he said.
The idea, with variations, could be applied to governments, corporations, or anything else.
He said such “gay” set-asides are sold to the public as a shield against attacks on homosexuals, but the homosexuals use the special provisions as a sword to attack the rights of Christians.
The campaign’s goal is simply to return that status to being a shield, he said.
The Oklahoma group’s members say they “believe in the supremacy of the First Amendment for freedom of speech, the freedom of the press, the right to assemble peacefully as the people desire, and the right to petition the government to make things right if it has caused them harm.”
They “believe these rights have been given by God and not by the state – thus, the state has no authority to take these rights.”
Their request?
“That any non-discrimination ordinance in any city regulations include the following statement: ‘In no circumstances shall sexual orientation regulations supersede the First Amendment rights of individuals, churches and religious organizations to freedom of speech and the free exercise of religion.”
Its website includes a petition.
Lively said in an open society such as that in the United States, “We as people have to be willing to put up with other people’s speech … Others have been willing to do that – except the ‘gays.’”
Obtaining a foothold in one location, he said, will allow a springboard effect to other cities, counties and states.
Lively’s long list of other incidents that show abuse of Christians’ rights:
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2013/04/fed-up-christiansbrout-to-defeathomofascism/#D01epE7eIof6s6xw.99