I Don’t Believe in Imaginary Property writes “A US District Court in the Southern District of California has found the Copyright Remedy Clarification Act to be unconstitutional. That act is what removes the sovereign immunity for infringement that state workers have in their official capacity, something many argued would jeopardize universities with liability for faculty infringement, not to mention other say agencies. In a rather dense legal ruling (PDF), the Court found that the Clarification Act wasn’t a valid exercise of congressional power under the 14th Amendment. For those of you who have totally no idea what I just said, I recommend either being glad that a small piece of copyright law may soon bite the dust, or hoping that NYCL will explain this better.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.











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