Thursday, November 21, 2013

EOC: WEEK 8 - BRATZ DOLL's


“ Long story short, a former Mattel employee left the company and crafted one of the first serious threats to Barbie's dominance, the Bratz dolls. Mattel, of course, was none too happy because the designer was still employed by Mattel when he came up with the idea. Mattel felt it owned the idea and sued the designer in an effort to make that a reality.”

“Now, it appears the fight is finally over. And, like many long legal battles, the lawyers are the only ones coming out ahead.”

I believe that this war is, or was ridiculous. The creator may have created Bratz dolls while working for Barbie, but this doesn’t mean the idea came from Mattel. Unless the company was going over ideas to change the look of Barbie and this design was discussed, if not then the creator of Bratz dolls would still be the former employee. I believe it is horrible when I leading company gets scared of an upcoming company and tries to drive them out of business with Legal fees. Mattel most likely new they would not win, but was trying to get rid of the competition by taking the former employee to court.

EOC: WEEK 8 - 10 Questions


1 What type of corporation should a Visual effects and motion graphics professional set up? Sole proprietorships, partnerships, limited liability companies and corporations.
2 What paper work do I have to keep track of for my business, and what is the best way to maintain it?

3 What are my risks of getting sued, in the field of motion graghics?

4 Can I use personal assets in running my business? Also should I use personal assets?

5 What should I consider before taking on investors?

6  How can I protect the name of my business?

 7 What happens if my business grows rapidly or tanks suddenly? What legal action would I have to             take?’

 8 How do I make sure my business is compliant?

9   With laws and regulations, should I have a legal professional go over the paper work, if so what would be the cost?

10   How do I plan ahead for my family? What legal paper work would I have to fill out to transfer the business?

Thursday, November 14, 2013

EOC: WEEK 7 - 10 Nevada Business Attorneys


http://www.gregory-law.calls.net/wp-content/themes/gregorylaw/images/logo.png

Keith E Gregory   (702) 570-1219

 

Cooksey, Toolen, Gage, Duffy & Woog

A PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION

 

Byron J. Bahr                          (714) 431-1100/ (702) 949-3100

Michelle J. Berner                 (714) 431-1100/ (702) 949-3100

Steven E. Ernest                    (714) 431-1100/ (702) 949-3100

Kim P. Gage                            (714) 431-1100/ (702) 949-3100     

Paul K. Hoffman                    (714) 431-1100/ (702) 949-3100       

John H. Kim                            (714) 431-1100/ (702) 949-3100          

Randall P. Mroczynski          (714) 431-1100/ (702) 949-3100      

Robert A. Riether                  (714) 431-1100/ (702) 949-3100

Robert L. Toolen                    (714) 431-1100/ (702) 949-3100

Thursday, November 7, 2013

EOC: WEEK 6 - Supreme Court Prayer



I am not a big religious follower, but I still believe that everyone has a right to express there religious belief. I will state that it is not best to mix the government branches with religion, but the government   should still be help to high morals and standards.  This way the government, and its branches do not offend anyone, but they are still held to high expectations.

“The Supreme Court is wrestling with the appropriate role for religion in government in a case involving prayers at the start of a New York town's council meetings.

The justices engaged in a lively give-and-take Wednesday that highlighted the sensitive nature of offering religious invocations in public proceedings that don't appeal to everyone and of governments' efforts to police the practice

The court is weighing a federal appeals court ruling that said the Rochester suburb of Greece, N.Y., violated the Constitution because nearly every prayer in an 11-year span was overtly Christian.

Greece is being backed by the Obama administration and many social and religious conservative groups in arguing that the court settled this issue 30 years ago when it held that an opening prayer is part of the nation's fabric and not a violation of the First Amendment. Some of those groups want the court to go further and get rid of legal rules that tend to rein in religious expression in the public sphere.”

Thursday, October 31, 2013

EOC: WEEK 5 - Midterm




I believe there is no real way to create laws that keep up with the technology. This is because we have to take our time in creating the law for various reasons, and then after in is set in place new technology is out. The only thing they could do is  actually restrict technology from coming out until a law is in place, but that would  stop our progress as a nation.

By Shaun Chapson

 
Technology and the ways we use it will change the role of law and lawyers.

Courts and legislatures are struggling to keep up with the fast pace of technology. New laws and cases are quickly outdated. For example in 2007, the Ninth Circuit issued Perfect 10 v. Google, a copyright case with a cutting-edge description of how the Internet works. That description is now wrong and so is most of the basis for the holding.

Recently, a jury awarded Apple $1billion in a patent infringement case. The complaint was filed in April 2011. Since then, Apple has released new versions of the Macbook Pro, iMac, Macbook Air, iPad, iPhone, and at least two operating systems.

State legislatures have rushed bills into law to protect employees and job applicants from having to give employers their social media passwords. But even that took months. Neither Congress nor legislatures are capable of keeping up with how fast technology is moving. Most pending bills are older than the original iPad.

“By Heather Bussing”


Radical changes in information-gathering methods and information-sharing technologies have created loopholes that can render key federal data privacy protection laws ineffective, according to a Government Accountability Office security expert.

That assessment was contained in the written testimony of Gregory Wilshusen, the GAO's information security issues director, before a subcommittee of the Senate Committee of Homeland Security and Government Affairs.

The 22-page GAO statement "Federal Law Should Be Updated to Address Changing Technology Landscape" (PDF) focused on the government's data-handling systems across all agencies and specifically mentioned the 2006 breach of 26.5 million veterans' records by the Veterans Affairs Department as an example of security problems involving personally identifiable data.


The number of reported security incidents involving federal agencies has risen dramatically in recent years, to 42,887 in 2011 from 5,503 in fiscal 2005, according to the GAO. Among the 2011 incidents, 15,560 involved the unauthorized disclosure of personally identifiable information, Wilshusen said.

“By Joseph Conn”



 



Thursday, October 17, 2013

EOC: Week3 - Erin Brockovich




An earlier lawsuit based on Brockovich's investigation of PG&E's desert land records culminated with the company paying $333 million to some Hinkley townsfolk in 1996. That lawsuit served as the basis for the movie starring Julia Roberts that made a celebrity out of the formerly obscure legal assistant.

The rural residents and their attorneys said that community exposure to the carcinogen hexavalent chromium, or chromium-6 — in desert water allegedly tainted by PG&E in the 1950s and 1960s — led to widespread illness and deaths.
PG&E used chromium-infused water as a coolant at some of its natural gas compressor stations. It allegedly discharged that tainted water into local groundwater supplies.
Lawyers allegedly held the award money for nearly six months before it was dispersed. Hinkley residents received no explanation for the delay. They had lost Erin as an advocate: "suddenly, they couldn’t get through to anyone, not even Brockovich." Because of the secrecy imposed on the arbitration process, Sharp makes the case that it’s impossible to determine where interest on the award money went. Where’s the rest of our money? plaintiff Carol Smith asked. Many legitimate questions about the award disbursement remain unanswered. A report about Erin 
Brockovich the real person, not Julia Roberts, appeared in Entertainment Weekly (5/12/00). Several male acquaintance of Brockovich, one of whom was portrayed as a supportive, upstanding character in the film, allegedly demanded that Brockovich pay them off. Otherwise, they would supply the tabloids with a story that Brockovich and Ed Masry had had an affair and that Brockovich was an unfit mother. Both Brockovich and Masry cooperated in an FBI sting operation, which led to the men being arrested for extortion.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

WEEK1 - EOC: My Voice


Hello my name is Shaun Chapson, and my passion is breaking the rules of reality, and creative real life dreams.