Las Vegas Sun

April 24, 2024

User profile
scandalrag

Joined
July 7, 2009

Contact scandalrag (log-in required)

Recent Comments

Total Comments: 30 (view all)

Rock is right for once. You know the easiest way to lose a juisdiction fight: go to the jurisdiction to fight it. If you admit the court has jurisdiction for a motion hearing, you basically admit it has it for the trial. You have a much better chance of winning by not answering the suit, then filing against personal jurisdiction when the plaintiff goes to your jurisdition to have the default judgment enforced.

(Suggest removal) 3/29/11 at 9:18 a.m.

Sgt. Rock, why do you think it is wrong for anyone but Righthaven to stand up for a principle? If copyright is a sacred trust that must be defended to the utmost on every occasion, isn't fair use also a legal principle to be defended with equal vigor?

In 11 years of media law, I have never seen the type of arrogance coupled with incompetence that Gibson and Margano have shown. In order to lose these cases on summary judgment, the facts were viewed in the light most favorable to Righthaven and it was still found to be fair use. Unlike Mr. Green, I don't think this erodes copyright protection very much given the narrow window of Non-Profit web use but this still is an overwhelming loss for Righthaven given their litigation strategy.

Your little litigation factory should be glad Mr. Hill's lawyers show the restraint they do, because they are definitely working Pro Bono. A good attorney represents his cases Pro Bono with MORE vigor than his paid clients because these cases tend to be issues he really believes in. Pro Bono attorneys tend to use a carpet bomb approach because they need to build up service hours. You keep spouting they filed an overly long 52 page motion, whereas any attorney worth a damn is wondering why they only produced 52 pages when they could have produced five times that and gotten ahead on next year's PB hours as well.

Offer Righthaven $1200? I'd offer to settle for $25K cash from Litigation, LLC or treat Righthaven to a level of personal and professional discovery guaranteed to make the Exxon Valdez hearings seem like traffic court. When you make quick settlements your business, you make prolonging litigation the best possible defense.

(Suggest removal) 3/22/11 at 12:04 p.m.

I am surprised this attorney has not tried to pierce the corporate veil of Righthaven and sued Gibson personnally. If he can get a ruling that Righthaven exists solely to file lawsuits and not to collect royalties then it is champertous and doesn't serve a lawful purpose. As such, Righthaven would not serve to limit the liabilities of its owners. As long as Brian Hill's attorneys are making the champerty argument, they should take it all the way to its full, most expensive conclusion.

(Suggest removal) 3/22/11 at 8:49 a.m.

Cignettis, Good to know you aren't so overcome by politics that you talk about things you know nothing about. Li-anode batteries are non-toxic and nearly completely recyclable (some of the plastics are left over). They are, however, so flammable that they are not allowed in the cargo hold of commercial ariliners. You can eat one, just don't let it short circuit or you will die a horrible flaming death.

(Suggest removal) 2/4/11 at 8:28 a.m.

Iamwinkler, You are right about the necessity of filing an adversary proceding but you forget that outside Nevada, credits extended for gambling are not considered to be valid and markers are not negotiable instuments until presentment when they are treated as bank drafts. So while Caesars clearly has a criminal case in NV, under CA bankruptcy law, they probably do not a valid claim.

(Suggest removal) 1/11/11 at 7:54 a.m.

(view all 30)

Items submitted by scandalrag

  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Stories/Blogs

scandalrag has not submitted any photos to Las Vegas Sun

scandalrag has not submitted any videos to Las Vegas Sun

scandalrag has not submitted any stories to Las Vegas Sun