At 10 years of age, Taylor Wilson built his first bomb. At 14, he made a nuclear reactor. Now, he’s 17 …
Read more about the young fusioneer, who will probably one day build the world’s very first personal nuclear fusion reactor, over at mental_floss. [Source]
Debris covers the floor of the Miller's Mart food store in Mineral, Va. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)
Many of you Geeks felt the rumbling around 2pm Eastern time yesterday, a magnitude 5.8 earthquake centered just outside of Mineral, VA. (The [GAS] staff didn’t feel a thing, until the Internets exploded with reports and our speakers started vibrating with incoming media notifications.) If you’re anywhere on the East Coast and you felt the tremors, you can help geologists understand the seismic event better by reporting your experience to the USGS. Scientific American‘s Steve Mirsky has the rundown:
[Y]ou can help researchers learn more about the quake. If you were in any of the affected areas—from Georgia to Toronto and west to Ohio—go to the website of the United States Geological Survey, the USGS. Go to their earthquake page, earthquake.usgs.gov. There you’ll see an item called Did You Feel It?, where you can share your location and your estimate of the strength of the shaking. If like me you didn’t feel anything, enter that too—it’s all valuable.
Your info will help create a Community Internet Intensity Map that can provide important data about the scope of the quake and contribute to ongoing earthquake research. That’s earthquake.usgs.gov
MrJibaku’s son decided that he wanted to sleep till 9:30AM. When he asked him to get out of bed he told him ‘no.’ No one tells MrJibaku “no,” especially when they are four years old.
So what did MrJibaku do? He woke the sleepy kid up … DOOM-style!
MIT student Christian Reed searched high and low on the Web, but couldn’t find any instruction to make a grappling hook launcher, so he did what any self-respecting geek would do: he designed his own.
Behold, the ultimate grappling hook launcher! [Source | Via]
The word “distribution” scores 15 points in Scrabble. But in the court system it could score almost $2 million.
That’s certainly the hope of the Recording Industry Association of America, which wants yet another round in its ongoing battle with Jammie Thomas-Rasset, and one that may have a genuine effect on the legal situation rather than being little more than a random number generator.
For those who haven’t followed the case, or have simply lost track:
Thomas-Rasset shared 24 songs through peer-to-peer filesharing service Kazaa. When fingered by the RIAA she refused to make an out of court settlement and was taken to a civil trial in 2007.
She was found guilty and statutory damages allowed the jury discretion to pick an amount between $750 and $150,000 per song. They settled on $9,250 a song, totaling $222,000.
This verdict was thrown out because the judge had told the jury that simply making the songs available was enough to constitute distribution, an instruction that at the time was at best legally questionable.
In a retrial, the new jury agreed Thomas-Rasset was guilty of willful copyright infringement. It settled on damages of $80,000 per song, making an eye-watering $1.92 million total.
In January last year, a judge reduced the damages to a total of $54,000 (three times the lowest allowable amount), ruling the $1.92 million award was excessive.
Thomas-Rasset and the record industry tried but failed to negotiate a settlement figure before the jury verdict took effect. Eventually court officials ordered a third trial, this time taking the guilt as determined and simply asking a new jury to come up with a new figure. It selected $62,500 per song, totaling $1.5 million.
Thomas-Rasset’s lawyers complained this violated due process as there was no clear connection between the damages and the actual loss caused to the record companies. The court agreed and again reduced the award to $54,000.
The RIAA has now taken the case to an appeals court and asking it to look at two arguments. Firstly, the RIAA believes that making a file available on a filesharing service counts as distribution even if you don’t prove somebody else received the file. Secondly, it believes that because copyright law allows for a huge range of penalties at the discretion of juries, then it can’t be possible for a resulting award to breach due process.
A few things seem very clear here. The RIAA is never going to collect any substantial sum from Thomas-Rasset: at the very most they’ll force her into bankruptcy, and you can bet the lawyers will be first in line to take whatever cash comes out of that.
From a legal perspective, somebody’s eventually going to have to make a definitive ruling on whether making a file available counts as distribution. That could spell a huge difference in the figures that come out of this and other ongoing cases, though it shouldn’t make much change to today’s filesharers: if you know you have to prove a third party received a file, it’s not that much more of a burden to those seeking legal action.
Meanwhile the jury damage issue looks destined for the Supreme Court. At the moment you have a piece of legislation that specifically allows juries to name their price without having to justify it, along with a legal principle that punitive damages should be reasonable and at least use the actual damage caused as a starting point to determine the level of “punishment”. If that incompatibility leads to the law being ruled unconstitutional, the record industry could regret pursuing the Thomas-Rasset case so far.
Got a brutal exam coming up that has got you stressed out? At least youdon’t live in Exam Ville, Seoul, South Korea, where 20,000 people study around the clock for law school entrance tests, civil service exams and other hellish tests cooked up by man.
Read this and instantly feel better:
When he was 35, Park Jin-hun quit his job, left his family and moved to Exam Village.
Pursuing his dream of practicing law, the salaryman told his wife he would see her and their young son only once a month until he passed the bar. He gave himself two years maximum.
Five years in a row, he failed the exam, each time resolving to stick it out for one more attempt. He spent his days in neurotic study rooms that demanded total silence (no paper rustling, please!), too consumed to think of anything but the intricacies of South Korean law. Sometimes he thought he was going mad.
With each failure, he ratcheted up his study hours and became increasingly antisocial, driven by fear of failure. At night in bed, he dreamed of studying.
He had become a prisoner of Exam Village, an area of Seoul where20,000 people of all ages and backgrounds lead monkish lives — cramming nearly round the clock for law school entrance tests, civil service exams and other trials of knowledge and memorization, living on family loans, cafeteria meals and too little sleep.
In hyper-competitive South Korea, Exam Village is both an intellectual isolation chamber and an emotional pressure cooker, the center of a dizzying array of preparation courses and private study rooms, where the only thing that counts is a passing grade.
Lawyers here brag of surviving not law school but their sentences in Exam Village, or gosichon. Years later, the name still makes many shiver.
This is some of the best cosplay we’ve seen in a long, long time. Akuriko’s Zelda is spot-on, and the location shots? Crazy.
Akuriko has beautifully cosplayed as Zelda from the legendary Nintendo series of games. A hardcore cosplayer, Akuriko has even cosplayed as Saria and Rainbow Brite.