![]() ![]() Mint copies of the standard one-band U.K. PEPPER’S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND (Parlophone PMC 7027) 1969 $340 There was also the Let It Be album in there! A copy with an Apple promotional poster sold on eBay for a whopping $2,400 in 2006, although in these times of economic hardship, one has not sold that high since!Ģ5. It is hard to find mint copies of the box as it was delicate and prone to damage, although it did a good job of protecting the 160-page “Get Back” book inside, which is chock full of photos from the film and recording session. via mail order and never commercially sold in record shops. This box set was only available in the U.K. Mint copies of this album in mono/stereo fetch around $85/$170, but there are some copies pressed in 1965 that contain a printing error on the label of Side 1 that lists Track 2 as “I’m A Losser” rather than “I’m A Loser.” There are also some copies that feature the song credit “Northern Ssongs” for the track “Eight Days A Week.” Someone at Parlopone obviously had reallllly poor proooofing skills… BEATLES FOR SALE (Parlophone PCS 3062) 1964 $290 Second pressing with “Dominion, Belinda” publishing credit for the track “Money” is worth $200.Ģ8. audience so enthusiastic about the band that a new word was coined - “Beatle mania.” Albums were played to death, so finding a mint copy of one of the smaller number of stereo copies pressed with a “Jobete” publishing credit for “Money” is very hard indeed. The Beatles’ second album issued in 1963 sold by the millions to a U.K. WITH THE BEATLES (Parlophone PCS 3045) 1963 $270 If all this seems like so many self-proclaimed "textualists" dancing on the head of a pin, just keep in mind that there are 23 remaining cases to be decided in the next three weeks - at least a half dozen of them on major subjects with pins much larger than this one.29. And an employee who is entitled to pull a fire alarm in the event of a fire is not entitled to pull the alarm to delay a meeting for which he is unprepared. A valet who obtains a car from a restaurant patron is, to use the term in the statute, "entitled" to access the car in order to park it, but not to take a joyride. ![]() To illustrate his point, Thomas had a different set of "real-world" examples. And without that valid purpose, he was forbidden to use the computer to obtain the information." "Everyone agrees that he obtained it for personal gain, not for a valid law enforcement purpose. "In my view, the answer is yes," said Thomas, adding that under the terms of the statute, Van Buren was not "entitled" to access the information from the computer. "The question here is straightforward: Would an ordinary reader of the English language understand Van Buren to have "exceed authorized access" to the database when he used it under circumstances that were expressly forbidden? Writing for the dissenters, Thomas accused the majority of, in essence, being deliberately obtuse. Writing for the majority, Barrett said the government's interpretation of the statute would "attach criminal penalties to a breathtaking amount of commonplace computer activity." She asserted it would allow the government to prosecute someone for embellishing an online dating profile, or using a pseudonym on Facebook it would, she maintained, allow prosecution even of someone who sends a personal email or reads the news using her work computer. Law 'Frightened To Death': Cheerleader Speech Case Gives Supreme Court Pause Suffice to say that much of the high court debate on the question turned on the meaning of the word "so." To say more than that would be a waste of the reader's time. Van Buren appealed to the Supreme Court contending that the clause in the CFAA that makes it a crime to "exceed authorized access" to law enforcement computer data does not apply to those who are authorized to have access but misuse that access, like him. He was subsequently convicted and sentenced to 18 months in prison for violating the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Van Buren did as asked, obtaining the information from his police car computer - information that had been planted there by the FBI. In return, Albo promised to pay Van Buren $5,000. Albo, claiming that he wanted to make sure that a woman he met at a local strip club was not an undercover officer, asked Van Buren to search the state law enforcement computer database for a license plate he said belonged to her. The taped conversation then made its way to the FBI, which devised something of a sting operation. Unbeknownst to Van Buren, though, Albo recorded the conversation and took the recording to the local sheriff, claiming that Van Buren had tried to "shake him down" for cash. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |