Monday, August 23, 2010

"Facebook" list wins elections

A list composed by candidates that met through a Facebook group won the local elections at the beach town of El Condor in the Argentine Patagonia. The list, number 12 for the purposes of the election won the electoral contest against the incumbent, list number 7, getting almost 68% of the votes.
The list was formed by members of the Facebook group “Fanaticos del Balneario El Condor”, who through that group started to “talk” about the possibility of running for office to be the ones administrating the village. It is important to note that the two things the members of the list have in common are being fans of El Condor and Facebook, since as they clarify, regardless the political ideology of the candidates.
El Condor is a village by the sea in the Argentine Patagonia known for its extense beaches, the shallow sea and the practice of kite surfing. It also has the biggest colony of burrowing parrots in the world and it presents visitors with ample opportunities for both shore and boat fishing. 
The election had other IT particularity because one of the poll stations was set up using an electronic ballot box, which constitutes a novelty for the region.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Facebook’s new lawsuit

Paul D. Ceglia has filed a lawsuit in a New York Court alleging that he owns 84% of Facebook and, although Facebook is trying to dismiss it as a frivolous lawsuit, the Judge has found it to have enough entity to order a freeze in all asset transactions for Facebook. The issue arises from an allegation made by the plaintiff (claimant in England) that the current Facebook CEO, Zuckerberg, was paid U$S1000 to build the site, on which Ceglia kept 50% of the interest that grew 1% per day from January 1st 2004 until the day of completion, February 4th 2004. This implies that Ceglia owns 84% of the resulting site.
It is not the first time that Zuckerberg and Facebook  get involved into legal trouble originated in him taking either the idea, the code or, in this case, the whole company from somebody’s creativity (besides other cases for many other reasons). Settling this out of court will not help in convincing the more than 500 million users, most of whom are young, that rules are supposed to be complied with and that respecting others’ IP rights is needed...

Consumer Report also does not recommend iPhone 4

As explained in the previous post, it seems that Apple's disregard for costumers and the truth hit a wall with the facts about iPhone 4. The Cuppertino's compny blamed the carrier, then said that it was normal for many phones but Consumer Report tested them and concluded that it was not true: the problem is with the design of the phone and it is no joke...

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Disregard for the market and the Apple myth

Following a discussion that has years on the making, the company from Cupertino has given a new example that nerds and designers worship the company based on myths and snobbery more than on actual facts. It has been argued a zillion times that Apple products are better designed and built than Microsoft Windows based ones, and there has been always the argument that Microsoft represented the dark side of the force by always putting profits first while Apple was a more innovation and customer focused company. But has been any truth on that?
I have sustained for years that the only true part of the Apple myth is that in the beginning of the personal computer era it took a very bad business decision and that decision relegated it to the borders of the market, where there is a always a group of people that would defy rational analysis and claim that the product they are using is infinitely superior and the rest of the mortals are all idiots. Furthermore, there is a strong argument to support that today's information society and ubiquity of computers owe a lot to IBM and Microsoft opening of the PC and that it would have been much delayed if Apple's ideas of having the same manufacturer making the computer, the chip, the operative system and most of the software were prevailing ones. Just an example of how things could have been from the cost point of view, a Macbook Pro with Intel i5, 4GB RAM and 320 GB HD is U$S 1,799 plus tax when a Sonny VAIO with Intel i5, 4GB RAM and 500 GB HD is U$S799.99 plus tax (not being Sonny normally on the cheap side). In the same argument I also claimed that to know how consumer oriented a company was you needed to give it some important market share, some power, to see its behavior vis-a-vis its potential, smaller, competitors. That situation arrived with the iPod, where Apple had 73,8% of the market share in 2009 and showed how consumer friendly and pro-innovation Apple policies were. Prohibition to add your own apps, own digital format to ensure that you needed to buy from their store, ludicrously restrictive DRM, and the normal speech that their products were so good that if something did not work with them was because they were too advanced. A prime example of that is the Apple-Adobe saga, with Steve Jobs claiming between other things that Flash is an old technology and, therefore, Apple mobile devices don't support it. Without entering into the technical discussion and assuming, for the sake of the argument, that Steve Jobs is right, it ignores that fact that a lot of people actually uses Flash and it is so arrogant as to claim that because internal combustion engine is technologically old we shouldn't sell more petrol and we should force people to walk until they all can afford hydrogen-cell car. But what epitomizes the Apple myth of actual innovation and costumer care is the new iPhone 4.
It has been widely reported that the phone has a serious design flaw resulting from Apple's discovery that its users care more about good design than functionality (or even functioning) but they then will distort the facts to show how rational their choice has been. The story says that when you hold your new iPhone 4 in the normal way that you hold a normal mobile phone the signal strength drops substantially because in order to make it slimmer (and cooler) the phone antenna is the unprotected shinny part that cover the lower end of the phone, which you are touching when you hold it. Furthermore, if you are left-handed, holding it in a way that avoids touching the antenna would be quite impractical and "unnatural". What was the reply from the very innovative and consumer conscious company? ''Just avoid holding it in that way.''
Ars est celare artem

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Lack of technological neutrality as indirect discrimination

The situation could have happened in any European country and the potential buyer/victim be from almost any developing country or the US. After selecting something expensive to buy in a store and having the store attendant to confirm that the items is in stock (most of the times having the item brought to the counter), a valid credit card with sufficient credit limit is not accepted because not having the chip and PIN technology. Once the buyer explains that the policy of not swiping the cards refers to cards that have chip but does not apply to those where the chip is simply not part of the card, normally the attendant or the manager turns into "rude mode" and start to give ridiculous explanations that include phrases like "how do I know that the card is not a fake", not realizing that implying that the buyer is carrying a fake credit card is actually defamatory. But, can they do that?
One tends to think that the store can have any policy it wants regarding to which form of payment accepts and to whom it decides to sell its products, but that thought is oversimplistic and may not be necessarily correct.
Following strictly English contract law, it could be argued that the display of goods constitute an invitation to treat either when the goods are on a shop window (Fisher v Bell 1960) or on the shop's shelves (PSGB v Boots, 1953) and that the buyer makes the offer when requesting the goods (following the classic definition of offer of Carlill v Carbollic Smoke Ball, 1893), offer that the seller has the right to reject and it is normally accepted when the seller takes the payment from the buyer (as when one goes to a supermarket). In the situation in question, that would imply that when trying to pay with a "chipless" credit card the seller simply rejects the offer, but that conclusion has several problems of fact and law.
When a buyer tells the attendant that it wants to buy a particular item he or she makes the offer, which is accepted when the attendant confirms that the goods are in stock and invites the buyer to go to the counter and pay for them. In this situation, paying for the goods and receiving them are steps into the performance of the contract, which the buyer would be complying with by trying to pay with a means of payment established by implication in the same contract when the store displays the logo of the credit card in question. Accordingly, by refusing to take a valid credit card with enough limit to pay for the goods, it is the store the one breaching the contract it has with the buyer. Here it can be pointed out that even in the case of accepting that the store is breaching the contract the buyer only would get a remedy in common law in the case of suffering damages, which don't seem to exist. Still, there could be a case in equity to request specific performance, but is the criminal aspect of the situation the one that deserves further exploration.
When the store advertises a good it does so including a long list of terms that would be attached to the contract to be formed when agreement is reached with the buyer, one of them being that the buyer would be able to pay with a valid credit card that has enough limit belonging to one of the brands advertised on the store's entrance. Therefore, when the store says that its policy is to not accept valid credit or debit cards that have enough limit only because they don't have the chip and PIN technology, it is admitting that is engaging in a misleading commercial practice, as prohibited by the Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008 that incorporates into English law the EU Unfair Commercial Practices Directive. Furthermore, since there are consumers that would try to look for a different means of payment instead of simply rejecting the new deal that alters the original terms, it can also be argued that the store is engaging in misrepresentation, which could be both a tort or a crime according to England's Misrepresentation Act of 1967.
But the area that could probably subject the store to a stricter legal scrutiny is discrimination, since it can be easily argued that the store in question is discriminating customers for their national origins. The store would argue that it does not discriminate customers due to their national origin because they would sell to people of any nationality that have credit or debit cards with chip and PIN technology, but since the norm, with really few exceptions, is that you need to be resident of a country to obtain a credit or debit card, those who are residents of countries where the chip and PIN technology has not been deployed are, in fact, precluded from buying in those stores. That situation would fit squarely into indirect discrimination, which "involves the application of an apparently neutral provision, criterion or practice to everyone, but it has a disproportionate effect on some people".
Finally, there is the issue of the contract between the store and the credit card brand, which clearly the store is breaching by not accepting valid credit card with sufficient credit limits only due to the use of different technology.

Wednesday, April 07, 2010

Divorce by SMS in Arab countries and the validity of electronic documents


There has been some noise in the cyberspace referring to the so called “electronic divorce”, which seems is making waves in some places, like Jordan. The issue relates to husbands terminating their marriage via a SMS, and the “fashion” has pick up quickly. According to Islamic judges there were 450 divorces via SMS in Jordan in 2009.


Moral questions aside, the legal problems are various and permeate other civil relations beyond the Islamic world. Although according to some interpretations of Islamic law a husband can divorce his wife by openly telling her that he does not want to keep the marriage three times (the triple Talaq), there are issues about certainty of intention and the mental state of the one issuing the statement. Accordingly, many Islamic jurisdictions have introduced the need to document the wish of the husband, not forgetting that the practice usually includes a month between each Talaq in order to ensure that the husband has thought the matter properly and that he is not acting irrationally or under pressure, which brings us back to divorcing via SMS.


There are many, if not most, jurisdictions that recognize the validity of civil documents regardless the mean of transmission, as clearly exemplified by the EC Electronic Commerce Directive, which for commercial contracts says that they cannot be “deprived of legal effectiveness and validity on account of their having been made by electronic means”. It is true that the same Directive has a provision allowing member states to exclude from the previous requirements “contracts governed by family law”, but the practice has become to not deny validity to documents and expressions of intent solely based on them being in electronic form. Thus, the practice of divorcing via SMS only follows, and exacerbates, an existing trend.


The reactions from Jordan’s society have been varied, going from those that deny validity to divorcing via SMS, like the Jordanian Women Union, to those like the Ministry of Justice of Jordan that put forward a bill requiring probe that the text message has been sent by the husband and that he was not under pressure to send it.

The issue may seem esoteric or relevant to a particular area of the world, but the characteristics of electronic transactions around the globe would be completely changed if the rebuttable presumption that a message originates from the sender and that he/she has acted without pressure or duress is changed into the need of probing that ab initio...

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

GiKii goes back home

Andres has sent the information that the call for papers and registration is open for Gikii 5. This year it goes back to the city that saw its birth, Edinburgh, but a couple of months earlier, June. Described as "a workshop concerned with exploring the legal interaction between popular culture, speculative fiction, and new technologies" Gikii is a place in the space-time continuum that does not challenge the traditional view of what an academic conference is but it destroys it reducing it to mere intergalactic dust craving for some gravitational force in the form of a black gown to put it back together.
A plus, Edinburgh is really nice in June and you can explore the lenght of the Royal Mile looking for that obscure bottle that has not been chill-filtered and has a hand-written label...

Tuesday, March 02, 2010

Call for papers for the Argentine Symposium on Informatics and Law (SID)


39 JAIIO - 39 JORNADAS ARGENTINAS DE INFORMÁTICA -
30 de Agosto al 3 de Septiembre de 2010
Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires

SADIO, la Sociedad Argentina de Informática e Investigación Operativa organiza desde hace 38 años las JAIIO (Jornadas Argentinas de Informática e Investigación Operativa) integrando trabajos, investigaciones y actividades bajo un mismo evento. Las JAIIO constituyen uno de los eventos más importantes del sector informático nacional y regional, con presentaciones y exposiciones provenientes tanto de la academia como de la industria.

La organización de las JAIIO contempla un conjunto de simposios separados por área temática, entre las que se incluyen: ingeniería de software, inteligencia artificial, tecnología, agroinformática, high-performance computing, informática industrial, software libre, derecho, salud, sociedad de la información, y un concurso de trabajos estudiantiles. Luego de varios años, las JAIIO vuelven a tener sede en la Ciudad de Buenos Aires.

SID 2010 - SIMPOSIO ARGENTINO DE INFORMÁTICA Y DERECHO
30 y 31 de Agosto de 2010

Mucho tiempo ha pasado desde 1961, en que se iniciaron las JAIIO. El mundo fue cambiando y la presencia de la tecnología en general y de la informática en particular se fue incorporando en la vida de amplios segmentos sociales.
En este devenir de las JAIIO, en el 2001 nace el Primer Simposio Argentino de Informática y Derecho (SID), en cuyo seno se empieza a discutir, en la Argentina, la incipiente pero necesaria relación entre la informática y el derecho.
Mucho se ha avanzado desde entonces en la relación entre Derecho e Informática, pero son cada vez más las cuestiones que, en razón del desarrollo tecnológico, la realidad nos propone y es cada vez más necesaria la búsqueda de la excelencia, la creatividad, y el esfuerzo compartido para avanzar en un único y superior sentido: el mejoramiento de la sociedad. De ahí la permanente actualidad, vigencia y crecimiento del SID.
Con el mismo espíritu pionero del primer día, la comunidad académico-científica de "Informática y Derecho" de Latinoamérica, se reúne en Buenos Aires, en torno al SID 2010, para compartir, aprender, debatir y proponer.

CHAIRS DEL SIMPOSIO
-Prof. Abog. Noemí Olivera, GECSI, Facultad de Ciencias Jurídicas y Sociales, Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Argentina
-Prof. Dr. Aires José Rover, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brasil

COMITÉ ACADÉMICO DEL SIMPOSIO
-Aída Noblia (AEU, Uruguay)
-Ana Haydee Di Iorio (Fasta, Argentina)
-Araceli N. Proto (CIC FI.UBA, Argentina)
-Ariel Vercelli (UNQ, Argentina)
-Bibiana Luz Clara (Fasta, Argentina)
-Carlos E. Bisso (UNLP, Argentina)
-Carola Canelo (Universidad de Chile, Chile)
-Clara Smith (UNLP, Argentina)
-Claudio Augusto Delrieux (UNPA, Argentina)
-Erick Iriarte Ahon (ALFA-REDI, Perú)
-Fernando Barrio (UNRN, Argentina)
-Fernando Galindo (Universidad de Zaragoza, España)
-Fernando Greco (Ministerio Público de la Provincia de Buenos Aires)
-Gustavo Presman (USAL, Argentina)
-Horacio Fernández Delpech (Presidente ADIAR, Argentina)
-Hugo Cesar Hoeschl (IJURIS, Florianópolis, SC ? Brasil)
-José Miguel Busquets (Universidad de la República, Uruguay)
-Juan Carlos Ponz (UNLP-CALP, Argentina)
-Leopoldo Sebastián Gómez (Poder Judicial Neuquén, Argentina)
-Marcelo Riquert (UNMdP, Argentina)
-María de las Nieves Cenicacelaya (UNLP, Argentina)
-María Florencia Franchini (UNLP, Argentina)
-María Laura Spina (UNL, Argentina)
-Nora Chaponick (INFOLEG, Argentina)
-Orides Mezzaroba (Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brasil)
-Ramón Brenna (UBA, Argentina)
-Rita Gajate (UNLP, Argentina)
-Ricardo Sebastián Piana (UNLP, Argentina)
-Roberto N. Bugallo (UBA-UNCPBA-UNLP)
-Tania Cristina D'Agostini Bueno (Universidade Federal de Santa, Catarina, Brasil)


CALL FOR PAPERS SID 2010
El Comité Académico del Simposio Argentino de Informática y Derecho convoca a los autores interesados a presentar sus trabajos, en las siguientes modalidades:
-Investigaciones que contengan aportes novedosos y debidamente sustentados y que no estén siendo presentados en otras conferencias. (1)
-Prestaciones de casos reales que demuestren impactos significativos, positivos o no, en la gestión informática del derecho.

En ambas modalidades se deberá hacer hincapié en la generación y transmisión de conocimiento que pueda ser apropiado por otros.
(1) En caso que el trabajo sea afín a más de un simposio de las 39 JAIIO, presentarlo indicando los simposios a los que considera puede ajustarse para su evaluación conjunta.

TEMÁTICAS DE LOS TRABAJOS
Los trabajos a presentar deben estar directamente relacionados con, por lo menos, alguna de las siguientes temáticas, sean trabajos disciplinares de Derecho o Informática o interdisciplinarios:
-El Derecho en la Sociedad de la Información.
-El Derecho Informático.
- La privacidad en entornos digitales.
-La propiedad intelectual en la Sociedad de la Información.
-Teletrabajo.
-Comercio electrónico.
-Derechos del Consumidor de productos y/o servicios informáticos.
-Correo electrónico.
-Firma Digital.
-Factura electrónica.
-E-banking: Modelos, problemas, operatorias, seguridad.
-Delitos Informáticos.
-Pericias informáticas.
-Jurisdicción y competencia en la red.
-Resolución de conflictos en el entorno electrónico.
-Gobierno electrónico.
-Democracia electrónica.
-Redes sociales.
-Archivos digitales.
-Informática jurídica.
-Seguridad informática.
-Ontología aplicada al derecho.
-Inteligencia Artificial y Derecho.

PRESENTACIÓN DE LOS TRABAJOS
-Las instrucciones detalladas para la presentación de trabajos serán publicadas a la brevedad en el sitio web del simposio
-Los autores deberán indicar si consideran que sus trabajos pueden ser compartidos con otros simposios.
-Los autores de trabajos aprobados podrán ser invitados a exponer los mismos durante el desarrollo del Simposio.
-Los trabajos deberán tener un máximo de 15 páginas en papel A4 y deben incluir un abstract de hasta 200 palabras, en español o portugués y en inglés El formato de los trabajos es .pdf, cuya plantilla puede descargarse de http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs/lncs+authors?SGWID=0-40209-0-0-0
. Se recomienda muy especialmente respetar el formato especificado.
-Los artículos deberán estar escritos en: castellano, portugués o inglés.
-Al menos uno de los autores de los trabajos aprobados deberá estar registrado en la conferencia con anterioridad a la fecha limite para la presentación definitiva de trabajos (camera ready) a fin de que el mismo sea considerado para su publicación.

FECHAS IMPORTANTES
Fecha límite para la recepción de trabajos: 03 de mayo de 2010 Notificación a los autores: 14 de junio de 2010 Fecha límite para la presentación definitiva de trabajos (camera
ready): 28 de Junio 2010
Inicio de las 39Jaiio: 30 de agosto