United States: Your Life In Photos: Privacy And A New Kind Of Camera - Duane Morris LLP
What if you could capture your entire life in photos? The New York Times reported that a Swedish company Memoto has developed a wearable camera that accomplishes just that.
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United States: Street Photography Runs Into New York Laws On The Right To Privacy: When Is A Photograph Of A Person "Art" Protected By The First Amendment To The U.S. Constitution? - Carter Ledyard & Milburn
Street photography has a long and storied history and indeed some of the iconic photographs of the last 100 years were candid images of strangers taken by photographers roaming the streets of a city looking for a story, or the essence of the human condition or even art.
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Found more than 1 month ago on channel
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Facebook proposes to end voting on privacy issues
NEW YORK -- Facebook is proposing to end its practice of letting users vote on changes to its privacy policies. The company says it will continue to let users comment on proposed updates....
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Secret campaign donations -- so what?
Thursday, October 18, 2012 - 10:48 Joe Raedle/Getty Images Nonprofit social welfare organizations may become more potent political donors than super PACs. And they don't have to disclose who gave money. Campaign finance regulation is an endless game of Whac-A-Mole. There’s always something popping up to respond to new rules , from soft money to 527 groups to super PACs. This year, the scrutinized group pouring tens of millions into races is the 501(c)(4). That clunky IRS alphanumeric refers to nonprofit social welfare organizations. Because of a loophole, they can also finance political activity. Their donors can give as much as they want, with no public disclosure. Our reporting on campaign finance with PBS's Frontline got us thinking about a provocative question about anonymous donations. What’s the big problem with them, anyway? Tackling the question is tricky because it’s so rarely asked. There are fierce arguments about campaign finance, of course, but they’re largely about ...
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Twitter CEO Dick Costolo on Jack Dorsey, ad revenue, going public
Friday, October 12, 2012 - 03:00 Justin Sullivan/Getty Images Twitter CEO Dick Costolo. Corner Office Interview: Biz Stone and Evan Williams Twitter unveils advertising platform Twitter and your privacy Twitter may block tweets in certain countries Listen: Twitter solves mobile ad riddle Twitter CEO Dick Costolo rarely gives interviews. But just a week after the Silicon Valley executive made headlines in The New York Times for alleging that Twitter founder Jack Dorsey’s role in the company was diminished, Marketplace Morning Report host Jeremy Hobson got more than 140 characters worth of answers from Costolo in a one-on-one interview. He answers questions about Dorsey’s current involvement with the company, Twitter's position on censorship, the company's advertising business, and he responds to rumors about Twitters plans to go public. Jeremy Hobson: It was created in 2006, it is the home of 140 character tweets and it now has hundreds of millions of users. I am talking, of course, about ...
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