Apple Wins Against Bloggers 672
linuxwrangler writes "Saying that no one has the right to publish information that could have been provided only by someone breaking the law, judge James Kleinberg ruled that online reporters for Apple Insider and PowerPage must reveal their sources. No word yet on an appeal."
A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:4, Insightful)
This judge has clearly shown that he has a grasp of the fundamental issues surrounding this case, and has realized that this is not a case about whether online sites are "journalists" or about the "right to blog". It's about when it's about when the dissemination of information in the public interest clearly overrides any other legal concerns or contracts and entitles journalists to not reveal their sources - and when it clearly doesn't.
And if you're not going to RTFA, here is some of the jugde's ruling:
"Unlike the whistleblower who discloses a health, safety or welfare hazard affecting all, or the government employee who reveals mismanagement or worse by our public officials, [the enthusiast sites] are doing nothing more than feeding the public's insatiable desire for information.[1]
[...]
Defining what is a 'journalist' has become more complicated as the variety of media has expanded. But even if the movants are journalists, this is not the equivalent of a free pass.
[...]
The journalist's privilege is not absolute. For example, journalists cannot refuse to disclose information when it relates to a crime.
[...]
[The information about Apple's unreleased products] is stolen property, just as any physical item, such as a laptop computer containing the same information on its hard drive [or not] would be. The bottom line is there is no exception or exemption in either the [Uniform Trade Secrets Act] or the Penal Code for journalists--however defined--or anyone else.
[...]
The public has had, and continues to have, a profound interest in gossip about Apple. Therefore, it is not surprising that hundreds of thousands of 'hits' on a Web site about Apple have and will happen. But an interested public is not the same as the public interest."
Note that the judge did not say that Think Secret and other online sites weren't journalists; indeed, he tacitly acknowledged that they, and many others, may in fact be "journalists". But that fact is, correctly, irrelevant. In other words, online sites or bloggers may in fact be journalists; this isn't about "the right to blog". However, being a "journalist" does not automatically mean the mechanisms of obtaining information, the information itself, and the sources of the information are automatically protected by journalist shield laws and exempt from discovery, especially when otherwise applicable laws (such as the UTSA) may have been violated. In other words, when a crime may have been committed (and the burden of whether or not this information constitutes a "trade secret" still rests on Apple, even after this ruling).
Further, the judge makes no distinction between online publications and mainstream newspapers, simply a distinction that any and all information gathering mechanisms are not necessarily protected if other laws are violated. The assertion on the part of some that "these subpoenas wouldn't exist if it was the New York Times or salon.com" is baseless at best.
No doubt someone will find issue with what is or isn't "public interest" and the fact that the courts (i.e. the "government") must make such a determination and is simply shifting the importance of whether someone can be considered a "journalist" to another consideration, essentially allowing the government to decide what is "acceptable" to be leaked and what isn't, and will make arguments that this will make it easier for corporations and/or the government to hide abuses, stop whistleblowers, etc. However, all of these arguments are red herrings. The court clearly acknowledged that sources information in the clear public interest must indeed be protected. Further note that the court DID NOT rule on the merits of Apple's claim itself, i.e., that the information was in fact a trade secret: "The order of this court does not go beyond the questions necessary t
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Informative)
(Yes, I'm being a little sarcastic there.)
Or shall we stay on topic here?
And to directly answer your question, yes, Novak should reveal his source if there is ever any court action that compels him to do so. (Disclaimer: I am not familiar wi
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:2, Interesting)
Does this mean that Jeff Gannon aka James Guckert was just as much of a "journalist" as anyone else in the White House Press room?
The difference between Gannon and a "real" journalist is that Gannon tells you his bias up front.
Let's not pretend that journalists are magic beings. They had their chance and these past few years demonstrated that they aren't as ethically pure as they claim.
Since there is a BLOGGER in the White House now, and apparently anyone with a web site is a journalist, doesn't thi
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Insightful)
And pray tell, if this is true then how does Judith "front page WMD stories for 2 years at the NYTimes" Miller still have a job? Novak still has his column and TV spots.
Your rule only applies if you go against a certain party's agenda. If you're a biased journalist doing said party's agenda, you're golden.
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:2)
Not that Novak shouldn't be put in jail for being a douche. I'm just saying...
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:4, Informative)
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Informative)
Unfortunately, the problem is that the Valerie Plame story:
a) Does not involve nepotism. Valerie and her husband were both very clear that she had not been involved in any way with his selection, and reliable sources at the CIA confirmed this. Wilson was qualified.
b) Does not involve poor-quality research. Plame and her husband's research on the Niger Yellowcake documents was one of the few shining high points in the events surrounding Dubya's bullheaded rush to war. The two of them confirmed that the d
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:5, Informative)
In short, these reporters were used to do someone's dirty work. They must have known this, but they still protect the person or persons who used them, possibly even to the extent of going to jail.
Here's an example of the difficulty in allowing the reporters to keep secrets. Suppose that I happen to know that a friend of mine is a spy and I tell anyone this fact, then I can go to prison for 10 years. But (by the reporters reasoning) if I tell a journalist, he can publish that information with impunity and doesn't even have to say where he got the information. Doesn't that seem wrong somehow?
In any case, how does it serve the interests of the country to publish the name of an American spy? The idea of shielding journalists is so that they are free to communicate freely and to report on scandals that need to be exposed to public scrutiny. In this case, the sources that the reporters are protecting were not whistleblowers with knowledge of a scandal. Indeed, the sources ARE the scandal. They are not brave tellers of truth, determined to get a dastardly plot out in the public eye - they are nothing but craven scoundrels bent on settling a score. I would have thought that real journalists would hate being used in this fashion. I know I would.
Wouldn't it serve the best interests of the press to expose these people rather than protect them?
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Insightful)
It would serve the best interests of the public, yes, but it would mean these two reporters would effectively destroy their careers because no confidential source would ever trust them again, therefor they would never get any confidential information which is what most good journalists live for. There isn't much demand for journalists who only write about things that are already public knowledge.
I'm inclin
Re:Yes, he's already held in contempt of court. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:4, Interesting)
Although my feelings on the matter are irrellevant... the judge made his decision, I only hope that the consequences for the precedent aren't unmanageable.
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Insightful)
The only way for that not to be true is if Apple itself had authorized the release, which clearly they did not.
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Interesting)
Then not only is the magazine liable (yes, you are liable if you should have known or guessed that the information is protected as a trade secret), but the person upstream of them is liable. As is the original source. Everyone in the chain between the original source and the magazine is liable.
Receiving trade secret information functions nearly exactly like receiving stolen goods - if you get some, even if you did so in good faith, you are at fault. Doe
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:5, Insightful)
The relevant question is, does Apple have a right to discover the identities of the violator(s)?
I believe that they do. Declan McCullagh's article (news.com) on the topic is indicative of the false assumptions made by many people as concerns this case. As the judge correctly surmised, an "interested public" does not equate with "the public interest". The Watergate scandal involved criminal acts that clearly reached to highest levels of government. Apple v. Doe involves a tort committed against a corporation inclear violation of prior agreements. The two are not equivalent.
Freedom of speech and freedom of the press do not, and should not, extend to an ability to withhold the identities of persons who have committed an illegal act. The same would be true even if we were discussing the attorney/client privilege. An attorney who is privy to physical edvidence that his client is guilty can be lawfully compelled to reveal that information.
This is not about corporate interests v. the public interest.
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Informative)
You're not. Let me explain a little for you. I just harshed out in another post, so I'll try to keep this more amicable.
If you were involved, even tangentially, in a transaction that was either unlawful (the breaking of a contract, for instance) or illegal (the dissemination of trade secrets, for example), even if you bore no guilt whatsoever, you would still be required to make te
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
You're wrong in a million ways, but the most important one is this. This particular expression of speech does not in any way present a clear and present danger to life and limb and consequently, it not only "ought" to be protected, it is protected according to the Supreme Court of the United States of America. Threatening someone's profit margin is not the same thing as threatening their safety.
The speech IS protected. No one is going to throw the proprietors of Think Secret, PowerPage, or AppleInsider in jail over their speech.
What is NOT protected are their sources, who are breaking currently in force, legally binding confidentiality agreements to reveal the information, and the fact that the web sites, by publishing said information, are also in violation of the Uniform Trade Secrets Act, versions of which have been adopted by 45 states including California.
This is not about speech. This is not about the right to blog. And if you think it's about the employees' right to "speak" about topics covered under confidentiality agreement, apparently someone forgot to tell them, and you, that they don't have to work there if they have that little respect for good-faith agreements with their own employer.
Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong (Score:5, Informative)
From the Judge's opinion [eff.net], posted on the EFF's site:
In short, Apple had strong enough evidence that this information wasn't just accidently leaked to convince the court that trade secret laws had been violated and for the subpeonas to go forward.
Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong (Score:3, Informative)
Do you have any idea how serious perjury is? The punishment of perjury is SEVERE, much worse than just refusing to testify and being held in contempt of court.
So what are the chances of not getting caught? Well, you're basically putting your life into the hands of someone you know does not respect agreements or signed contracts.
Oh, and there's no statute of limitations on Perjury. If the truth comes out in ten or twenty years, you can still be pros
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Offtopic...? (Score:3, Interesting)
mmmm.... Well, Think Secret is somewhat of an accessory-after-the-fact. If an NDA was violated - and Apple did show that the leaked information was both very detailed and clearly marked confidential - then a crime has been committed. If a crime has been committed then the (alleged) victim has a right to pursue the criminal through the courts. Even a New York Times or Washington Post reporter would have been required to turn over their source if this fact pattern had
Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong (Score:2)
You're sure having a better day then Apple!
What is NOT protected are their sources, who are breaking currently in force, legally binding confidentiality agreements to reveal the information
Apple sure hasn't been able to figure out the source of this stuff except for a bludgeon-style court proceeding! But presumably, in order to state that as fact, YOU must know who the source(s) is/are? Why don't you just tell Apple, then, and get the whole mess over with?
Unless, of course, it's you?
and the fact
Re:-1, Flamebait, Astorturfing, and Wrong (Score:3, Interesting)
No, and I suspect it never has actually happened as such. The phrase itself comes from a Supreme Court ruling (Schenck v. US, 1919) concerning the publication of Socialist propaganda during World War I.
If I remember correctly, many parts of the ruling have been overturned or supersceded, but the particular principle, that free speech is not absolute, still stands.
In fact, I'd say that speech is more protected now than it was at th
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:2)
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Informative)
1. One would assume that one finding "trade secrets" and the UTSA unconstitutional wasn't all that keen on intellectual property in the first place, and most certainly would dismiss that it
My Best Interest (Score:3, Funny)
Gosh, I feel so sorry that the rumor mongers secrets will be revealed when they didn't want them to be, but it's all in my best interest of making money!
Hmm, where have I heard that argument before.
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:2)
Meaning, that from now on websites and the like will destroy incoming emails after they have been read and disclaimers will accompany all of their announcements like "An anonymous source claims..." about any upcoming advances.
The outlet itself will be able to avoid direct lawsuits because they have given notice that what they have published is speculation and they haven't claimed it to be factual. When they are subpoena'd for records they can honestly say "Your hon
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Insightful)
You're rolling a whole lot under one umbrella there. Physical property is different from so-called intellectual property, is different from ethics and deception.
Apple is trying to create a
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:2, Funny)
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:2, Funny)
No, I believe this [slashdot.org] is the very insightful first post.
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Insightful)
I have never heard such nonsense! Find a judge or lawyer who has never broken the law!
The law is a complete and corrupt disaster.
It is a tool of the rich and powerful (don't believe me? See if you can afford a lawyer! The law isn't made for you, you can't really afford it!)
To add insult to injury, the legal system is so complex that even lawyers don't understand it all. One lawyer can't help you with all your possible problems. In theory to avoid ge
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:3, Informative)
Dumbass, not for a CIVIL case they dont. And trade secret *IS* a civil case.
B.
Re:FUCK YOUR WHORE OF A MOTHER (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Yeah, its great (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Yeah, its great (Score:3, Insightful)
"I think it's telling that Apple chose to file suit in California, the very same state that Richard Nixon is buried in."
"I think it's telling that Apple's complaint was printed on paper, the very same material that Hitler used to wipe his ass!"
Well, guess what, Sparky
Re:Yeah, its great (Score:5, Insightful)
As the judge wrote, an interested public is NOT the same as a public interest.
Re:Yeah, its great (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Yeah, its great (Score:3, Funny)
You're not doing very well tonight with your commenting. Maybe it would be a good idea for you to take a little time off, maybe go have some pie.
You'll get your groove back, I'm sure of it.
Re:Yeah, its great (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah. That, and the small issue that they might have broken a law doing so.
What property right justifies the application of restrictions imposed by an agreement on someone that never signed that agreement?
The fact that the UTSA says that revealing information that can reasonably be believed to have been obtained as the result of the breach of a binding c
Re:Yeah, its great (Score:2)
If so, then its a dumb law that could easily be used to suppress legitimate journalism (and has been [imdb.com] in the past).
Do you understand that the person who signs a contract is the one who should
Re:Yeah, its great (Score:2)
Now obviously this was a high-level leak, and Apple has to follow up on it, but I'm quite skeptical of the "NDAs Ueber Alles" mentality displayed by yourself and the Apple defenders here. The reality is these agreements
Re:Yeah, its great (Score:2)
If someone tells you something that they shouldn't have told you (because they would be violating their NDA), but fails to tell you that they are violating their NDA, does that make you a criminal for reporting it?
Re:Yeah, its great (Score:3, Insightful)
1) actively soliciting people to break their non-disclosure contracts
2) publishing information which you actually know to be protected by a non-disclosure contract covering the person who gave you the information
There is no property right at stake here. The first place you start is tortious interference with a contractual duty. Then you get into trade secrets and it gets a bit more complicated.
This is a terrible day for anyone who thinks that being a "journalist"
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:2, Informative)
Re:A refreshing victory for common sense (Score:2)
And those people "banging down Apple's door" tend to the exact people who read the rumor sites anyway.
Re:A refreshing victory for corporate synchophants (Score:3, Insightful)
You seem to be under the mistaken impression that an individual is incapable of breaking the law, or is at least "less able" to break the law than a corporation.
Also, Think Secret (I'm not sure about the others) is operated by The dePlume Organization [deplume.com], a limited-liabilty corporation.
The 'free speech' issue isn't' about wether or not you can go blabbing your companies trade secrets
What to think... (Score:5, Insightful)
Linux (Score:2)
Sources (Score:5, Funny)
I heard it on Slashdot.org
There was this guy, I think he was call Anthony Coward or something, and he was telling me all about the fab new stuff.
Re:Sources (Score:2)
>I heard it on Slashdot.org
>There was this guy, I think he was call Anthony Coward or something, and he was telling me all about the fab new stuff.
Oh, no you don't. No fuckin' way. Not again. One fuckin' joint and I'm unemployed, but you go on national TV and become a celebrity. Don't you dare sell me out, Ellen, or it's over like Carly and Capellas!
- The Dell Dude.
(And it wasn't even really fab new stuff.)
Re:Sources (Score:5, Funny)
Psst. Did you hear about this new gizmo running a stripped down version of OS X [powerpage.org]?
Apple is evil? (Score:2, Funny)
What were they thinking. (Score:5, Insightful)
Leaking a press release early is not Espionage. (Score:2, Insightful)
Leaking a press release early is just more press. It is a farce and I would boycott apple if I was actually in the habit of buying their products in the first place.
Re:What were they thinking. (Score:3, Insightful)
The ruling means that I cannot go to a journalist with suspicions that my current employer may use illegal methods. It probably means that I cannot go to a journalist even if I am absolutely certain my employer uses illegal methods, because it would be illegal of me to disclose that my company behaves illegally. On the other hand, it is illegal not to denounce criminals... Oh, well, I g
Appeal (Score:5, Informative)
No word yet on an appeal.
From the article:
He said the trio would appeal the judge's ruling.
Oi, this is getting bad. I mean, do the submitter read the articles they submit?
Shameless link peddling (Score:5, Informative)
Sorry for being such a shameless pimp, but I really think people who are interested in this Apple story would be interested in this article.
(I got the link from MacSlash last weekend.)
Re:Shameless link peddling (Score:3, Insightful)
Child pornographers in prison everywhere would beg to differ.
not a judgment on Apple's claims! (Score:5, Interesting)
"The order of this court does not go beyond the questions necessary to determine this motion seeking a protective order against that single subpoena, and it cannot and should not be read or interpreted more broadly," the judge said. "The court makes no finding as to the ultimate merits of Apple's claims, or any defenses to those claims. Those issues remain for another day."
This spells the end of the magazine (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This spells the end of the magazine (Score:5, Interesting)
Those sites just take all the sizzle out of Apple's announcements, leaving people unnecessarily disappointed and let down. Good riddance to them.
Re:This spells the end of the magazine (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This spells the end of the magazine (Score:2)
And yet, on the other hand... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And yet, on the other hand... (Score:4, Insightful)
What you seem to be confused about is that companies, like people have rights which have to be considered.
Re:And yet, on the other hand... (Score:2)
You make a good point, but miss mine. Apple had every right to protect its trade secrets. I see nothing wrong with what they did, and if insiders violated NDAs, they deserve what they get.
Granted, the Pentagon Papers shouldn't have been classified Top Secret, because they didn't qualify, but that's what they were. Whoever leaked them broke the law in doing so, and the newspaper had no right to pos
Re:And yet, on the other hand... (Score:4, Informative)
In other words, the papers did NOT break the law, since they fell under what is commonly called a "whistleblower" exemption.
Re:And yet, on the other hand... (Score:2)
No "whistleblower" exemption existed in law in 1971 when the papers were published. That came a decade later.
Re:And yet, on the other hand... (Score:2)
So we have nothing to protect us against corporate abuses? We aren't allowed to keep corporations accountable via v free and open press? It's funny but I don't recall seeing any qualification on the first amendment stating its intent in my copy of the Constitution.
Re:And yet, on the other hand... (Score:5, Interesting)
No, they don't. The Constitution does not protect the right of a corporation to do anything. There is no fundamental right to make money, to go into business, or anything similar. Witness false advertising laws, which are wholly consistant with free press and free speech. The myth of corporate "rights" is a recent one, and somewhat devestating. Even if you feel that corporations should have rights, there is no fundamental document stating explicitly which rights they do have. This means that any judge ruling on the topic has to navigate solely through precidence, and may override it at whim. Objectively evaluating the standards by which a corporation should be held is damn near impossible.
So, in short, no. Corporations do not presently have rights, but have a set of a sort of "virtual rights," which exist only in court precedent, and in convention. There is no formalism for corporate rights.
As a side note, if you believe that corporate abuse is any less deadly in today's world than government abuse, or even that they aren't in many ways the same thing, I have a nice bridge to sell you.
Did you get the memo? (Score:2)
Re:And yet, on the other hand... (Score:2)
The judge addressed this distinction directly in his ruling (quoting from daveschroeder [slashdot.org] who quoted the ruling above [slashdot.org]):
Good! (Score:4, Insightful)
The people that published this material are accessories to a crime and should also be treated as criminals.
This isn't about free speech, this is about a crime.
It's really amazing (Score:2)
Re:Good! (Score:3, Insightful)
Like those here on Slashdot who published copies of DeCSS in violation of the DMCA?
Re:Good! (Score:5, Insightful)
The Rule of Law (Score:5, Insightful)
It's about time Robert Novak was thrown in jail for outing Valerie Plame!
Oh - we're just talking about Apple insiders? Who gives a fuck?
Here in Brazil... (Score:2, Troll)
How there could be a free press with they are obligated to reveal their sources? Who in his right mind would step up to speak against anything if you are going to be prosecuted (or silenced in any other way)?
Thats plain wrong!
either way (Score:2, Interesting)
Over the last couple of weeks, though, the feeling started to fade. It's completely gone now.
Apple is just another company.
You'd think after the cancer scare Jobs would have mellowed out.
now we'll find out (Score:2)
Everything breaks the law now days (Score:3, Insightful)
Naturally these days everything and anything breaks the law, and it comes down to who haves the most money.
you are all freaking me out horribly (Score:3)
I can't help but wonder "If it have been CNN..." (Score:5, Interesting)
I had just told him there was no way he could put me on the air. Intel was at that time reeling from the consequences from the fiasco that was the math flaw in the Pentium processor.
What I had in my possession made that math flaw look like a minor hang nail.
I had trade secret documents from Intel, legally released to me under non-disclosure agreement (since expired, so now the tale can be told).
The contents of those documents revealed flaws in Intel 486 processors that basically rendered them "Unsafe at any speed".
Countless users were suffering crashes, data loss, God alone only knew what forms and totals of lost productivity, revenue, opportunities were being wracked up daily due to the serious flaws. And even Microsoft was being unfairly painted with creating even less reliable software than they genuinely deserved to be excoriated for (the infamous BSOD's weren't always their fault...)
Steve was trying to convince me that "the public good" out weighed my honoring Intel's non-disclosure agreement.
He told me that I could mail the documents to him and that "CNN protects its sources."
Here it is 10 years later and I wonder, how many folks would agree with Steve and how many will support my decision to not hold Intel accountable for their abuses of the public trust.
The simple math flaw had reportly cost Intel $600 million for a few million chips shipped. The cost of a recall for the far more serious flaws in the 100's of millions of 486 processors shipped could very well have bankrupted Intel, many 486 chips were soldered to their boards.
Or at the very least have damaged their reputation so badly they would have had a very hard time regaining the public's trust.
I just wanted to say, the Judge today served up a nice fat juicy sound bite for the press to report. But he's wrong. The right of large corporations to protect their trade secrets is not absolute.
I also can't help but wonder what the Judge in today's case would have had to say to CNN if I had been at risk in breaking my non-disclosure agreement with Intel?
Apple has their problems, and if enough customers are persistent enough they generally own up to them and take responsibility for making things right. And today's ruling didn't cover the kinds of information being disclosed that I had from Intel.
But if Apple rides success with their iPod's upwards and loses the ability to take responsibility, I hope today's ruling doesn't come back to bite us in the ass.
Yeah I know, sounds great coming from the guy that covered Intel's ass when he had the chance.
But for a moment, just a moment there, I was tempted to mail those documents.
What motivated me to silence wasn't a fear of CNN being forced to turn me over. No, it was the advice I got from the local Intel distributor: if anything about the 486 showed up on CNN, Intel would act like I had released it to CNN, whether Intel could prove it or not.
Turns out, the company I worked for had already gone to Intel and covered their asses... (and Intel paid them off very nicely too)
After today's ruling, I wouldn't even be tempted.
Bravo Judge, on this day that will live on in infamy for the actions of a few in Spain this date 3/11/4, you have indeed struck a blow to protect truth, justice and the American way.
Re:I can't help but wonder "If it have been CNN... (Score:3, Informative)
Trade Secrets and You! (Score:5, Informative)
Trade secrets are inventions,(new products) and revisions to existing products, if there are more things that might fall under the definition, they don't really matter in this case so don't flame me for omitting a few. If a company invents something(ipod) or revises a currently shipping company product(new g5 powerbook, new powermacs, etc) they are allowed to issue NDAs to their employees to keep their traps shut about them with good reason. If company x finds out about the new products before Apple in this case is ready to release it, and company x copies product and releases at the same time before patents have been issued, then Apple is screwed and loses revenue because of it.
As you may or may not know, under capitalism companies generally invent and innovate new products so that they themselves can gain the revenue from their research. With no trade secrets or NDAs there is no longer an incentive to do research as a company and capitalism fails.
With that out of the way, the judge was right to back Apple, if he hadn't many other companies would be severely put in a pickle fiscally by employees leaking detailed specs to other companies. Our economy would be in shambles, and you would all be out of jobs. Granted there is a bit of a slippery slope implied there but thats the fundamental logic behind the case.
The fact that people are upset about Apple getting a big boost in this stage of the case is absolutely astonishing to me. Freedom woohoo and all but there are limits to every freedom, press, speech, right to arms, every single one of them. The websites in question and the sources should be punished, for different reasons, the sources for breech of contract and the websites for publishing information they knew to be acquired in an illegal manner.
Re:Viva La Revolution (Score:5, Informative)
This helps to ensure that the legal system cannot simply apply the letter of the law and steamroll over everyone. It also helps to prevent people from using laws to shield illegal activity.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Giambi (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Constitution vs. Judge (Score:3, Interesting)
If the top secret info
Business plans are NOT speech ... (Score:3, Insightful)
These are business plans, schematics, insider corporate strategy NOT speech - these items are CAD drawings, supplier contracts
Re:Zeig Heil apple! (Score:3, Interesting)
I think there is more to it than that. I honestly don't think that in this instance any thunder was stolen and any harm was done.
What I think Apple is trying to do is weed out their "mole" before next time when it may really matter. if a secret is let loose far enough in advance it could give competitors a chance to piece together a competing product for release at the same time. This could have serious
Re:Oh, really? (Score:3, Informative)
Oh, please. Just because you were not interested in such cases prior to the Apple vs bloggers trial, it doesn't mean such cases did not exist! Check this link [post-gazette.com]. If you don't bother to click on it, here's a brief quote: "Three times this summer, judges have held journalists in contempt of court for refusing to name their anonymous sources (...)