2010

A&A: Where can I legally hand out flyers for my non-profit?

Q: I cannot find the answer to this legal question anywhere, or if I found something similar, the question is about a religious group or a signature gatherer for political purposes which might have an exemption or an inherent right to be soliciting. I work for a 501c3 part time and I would like to hand out flyers for our nonprofit. I would not be accepting any money, but rather talking to people at shopping

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A&A: City rules complaintant names are always withheld

Q: I have requested the name of a complainant against me in a Building Code Enforcement case. There have been anonymous harassment events in my neighborhood that the complaint may be linked to. The agency declined to release the name, citing the 6255 catch-all provision in the city regulation that says the public interest clearly outweighs the release of complainant names in all cases (City of San Jose v. Superior Ct. 74 Cal.App.4th 1008). I

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Net Neutrality primer draws a picture of pay-per-click future

When Verizon offered an Android-platform phone that only allowed the Bing search engine, locking out Google and all others, web designer Michael Ciarlo became an activist for Net Neutrality. His simple primer at TheOpenInter.Net should help to bring the geeky subject into focus for the rest of us. from Why I Created TheOpenInter.net By Michael Ciarlo “I created TheOpenInter.net to depict a time in the future when ISPs control the Internet and all data is

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UK Guardian gives bloggers tool to freely repost entire articles

As the copyright Scrooges at Righthaven add newspaper giant Media News to their client list and start suing for reuse of graphics, the UK Guardian has delivered a gift to WordPress bloggers–and by extension all who are concerned with the free exchange of information and the future of  journalism. The plugin is free, the content is free: “The catch? The bloggers must publish article in full without any modifications, and along with the content comes

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Free speech: Texas cheerleader wants Supreme Court to decide if required to cheer for abuser

San Francisco Chronicle December 23, 2010 By Bob Egelko A Texas high school cheerleader kicked off the squad for refusing to cheer for a player she said raped her has asked the Supreme Court to reinstate her suit against the school district. She is asking the Court to reverse federal court rulings that ordered her to reimburse the school district for over $45,000 in legal costs. Click here for the full story.  -db

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