Jet Grind Radio!
Banned
Holy hell, wow. I haven't been following this thread too much. Just the initial reveal, and then the whole "found in a bar" thing. But, damn. Shit's crazy now.
Andrex said::lol Not that I'm buying this concept, but any "lost revenue" would be made up in eventual 4G iPhone sales.
that's not the bottom line since it'll be virtually impossible to gauge whether this drop is due to deferred purchases considering the likely record sales this device will have.CharlieDigital said:You can roll in whomever you want, but the bottom line is that this is a multi-million dollar hit to the industry of lost revenue. Apple and AT&T included.
But it wasn't receipt of information, it was the purchase of stolen property. Seems like there would be a distinction there.Red Mercury said:From - EFF Lawyer: Seizure of Gizmodo Editors Computers Violates State and Federal Law
So, if I'm reading this right - even if a felony was comitted, (i.e. purchasing a 'stolen' phone), Gizmodo is in the clear since it was done to break the story in the first place. Or at least, the Warrant isn't legal?
I mean, I'm not a big fan of Gizmodo after reading everything here, but it seems like the case might not be so cut and dried as everyone is making it out to be.
It all goes down to the legal argument of whether the phone qualifies as "information" or something is. This is why even the EFF parses it by emphasizing the "information" argument.Red Mercury said:From - EFF Lawyer: Seizure of Gizmodo Editors Computers Violates State and Federal Law
So, if I'm reading this right - even if a felony was comitted, (i.e. purchasing a 'stolen' phone), Gizmodo is in the clear since it was done to break the story in the first place. Or at least, the Warrant isn't legal?
I mean, I'm not a big fan of Gizmodo after reading everything here, but it seems like the case might not be so cut and dried as everyone is making it out to be.
LCfiner said:It's obviously not just an iPhone because gizmodo paid five grand for it and the reveal of the unit on their website got over two million hits.
It was big news and now that the story of how they got it is becoming more clear, it seems like some laws were broken in obtaining it. It's not rocket science.
scorcho said:that's not the bottom line since it'll be virtually impossible to gauge whether this drop is due to deferred purchases considering the likely record sales this device will have.
it's just as easy to argue that device will hit HTC/Palm/RIM/etc. as hard as Apple now, but without the luxury of sales actually being postponed instead of outright lost.
scotcheggz said:I know all of that, but when you step back, look at it honestly, can't you see that this is all just a little bit sad for all parties involved?
Apple going all sci-ops, gizmodo paying 5K, 2 million views... I just feel it is all a bit too much of a lather over something that is essentially just a bit of tech that a lot of people are already familiar with, with a few revisions. On one hand I understand all this jazz, on the other I'm completely at a loss.
I agree with your analysis.Red Mercury said:From - EFF Lawyer: Seizure of Gizmodo Editors Computers Violates State and Federal Law
So, if I'm reading this right - even if a felony was comitted, (i.e. purchasing a 'stolen' phone), Gizmodo is in the clear since it was done to break the story in the first place. Or at least, the Warrant isn't legal?
I mean, I'm not a big fan of Gizmodo after reading everything here, but it seems like the case might not be so cut and dried as everyone is making it out to be.
On Monday it was a big tech story. That's it. It would have died out by now if no other details had come out.scotcheggz said:I know all of that, but when you step back, look at it honestly, can't you see that this is all just a little bit sad for all parties involved?
Apple going all sci-ops, gizmodo paying 5K, 2 million views... I just feel it is all a bit too much of a lather over something that is essentially just a bit of tech that a lot of people are already familiar with, with a few revisions. On one hand I understand all this jazz, on the other I'm completely at a loss.
Gary Whitta said:But it wasn't receipt of information, it was the purchase of stolen property. Seems like there would be a distinction there.
numble said:It all goes down to the legal argument of whether the phone qualifies as "information" or something is. This is why even the EFF parses it by emphasizing the "information" argument.
According to the San Mateo DA, they're investigating that legal claim before delving into the seized materials.
I just spoke to Stephen Wagstaffe, Chief Deputy at San Mateo County District Attorneys Office, who told me that nobody has yet been charged in the case, and at this point it is just an investigation. He says the investigation is looking at any hand that touched or had something to do with this phone but that the investigation is not currently targeting either Gawker or the person who originally found the phone rather, police are collecting every fact they can to present to the DA, who will then make a decision.
With respect to the removal of Chens property, Wagstaffe says that the prosecutor on the case felt that the shield protection laws did not apply, so the raid was executed. However, after Gizmodos attorneys suggested some reasons why they believe Chen should be protected, the investigation has come to a bit of a pause. The DA will now reevaluate whether those shield laws do apply, and will not begin going through Chens possessions until theyve reached a decision in the next few days (he says theyre in no hurry).
When I asked if it was typical for the DA to evaluate the relevance of these shield laws after removing evidence, Wagstaffe did concede that it was unusual. Which makes the situation extremely odd it should have been readily apparent that Gawker would defend its actions using this shield law defense, why put the brakes on after the fact?
Californias shield laws protect journalists from having to turn over their sources and unpublished information theyve collected as part of their reporting. However, Gizmodo could be found to have committed a crime when they paid the phones finder for the device.
SnakeXs said:One of the largest products of the year, the biggest "leak" in Apple history, and a huge scandal... and it surprises you?
Apple, serious business.scotcheggz said:It doesn't surprise me at all. You said it yourself though, it's a product. It might be a big one, but it's just a product. It is essentially unimportant.
Oh who the fuck am i kidding.
scotcheggz said:It doesn't surprise me at all. You said it yourself though, it's a product. It might be a big one, but it's just a product. It is essentially unimportant.
Oh who the fuck am i kidding.
scorcho said:because even focusing on a macro, industry-wide level sales lost now will be made up the next quarter. it's self-contained. it doesn't follow that someone not buying a 3Gs because of the looming v4 iPhone will buy a Pony instead, and forget about buying a smartphone because of the sunk cost in maintaining said Pony.
tobor: how so? at this point the case seems hinged more on stolen property and trade secrets than lost revenue.
KHarvey16 said:You didn't happen to realize you were on the internet, posting on a forum of thousands of members dedicated to VIDEO GAMES, did you?
Dacvak said:WHAT IS GOING ON.
I look away for one second, and Apple has the police raid some dude's house, and tubgirl hits Kotaku or something? Can some kind gent summarize this thread?
Red Mercury said:From - EFF Lawyer: Seizure of Gizmodo Editors Computers Violates State and Federal Law
So, if I'm reading this right - even if a felony was comitted, (i.e. purchasing a 'stolen' phone), Gizmodo is in the clear since it was done to break the story in the first place. Or at least, the Warrant isn't legal?
I mean, I'm not a big fan of Gizmodo after reading everything here, but it seems like the case might not be so cut and dried as everyone is making it out to be.
wenis said:California is turning into an Apple state. I hear Jobs made a call to the governor and we are getting the state flag changed soon. This is all hush hush, but I have a prototype of the flag saved on my PC...
It's just a prototype so obviously it's going to change at some point.
http://i43.tinypic.com/eao64m.jpg[/MG][/QUOTE]
What the hell, man? I left that at the bar, and I was trying to find it.
Jet Grind Radio! said:What the hell, man? I left that at the bar, and I was trying to find it.
True. But the guy who found it could've left it with the bar he was at, or even just kept it for himself. Both those would've been a reasonable end to this. But he sold it for thousands and he and the website crossed a huge line.PSGames said:This is so dumb. None of this would have happened if Apple hadn't lost the damn phone in the first place. Gizmodo is not in any way responsible for any lost sales.
they have a specific objective in every matterRyanDG said:I'm no legal expert, but I think EFF may be over-reaching here (god bless them for protecting my privacy rights online, but they have a specific objective in this matter).
Why so?teiresias said:I may find Apple annoying from purely technical perspectives at points, but I find Gizmodo and Denton utterly reprehensible, so I'm all for them being taken down and Gizmodo expunged from the internet. God speed Apple, God speed.
They the ny post of internets.Sir Fragula said:Why so?
wenis said:I have a prototype of the flag saved on my PC...[/IMG]
PSGames said:This is so dumb. None of this would have happened if Apple hadn't lost the damn phone in the first place. Gizmodo is not in any way responsible for any lost sales.
PSGames said:This is so dumb. None of this would have happened if Apple hadn't lost the damn phone in the first place. Gizmodo is not in any way responsible for any lost sales.
Anti Green said:The thing is that it's not a box of government documents detailing some secret plot to do something that's against the will of the people that Gizmodo paid to publish. They purchased a stolen device (and how could they not know that it was stolen) and published a story about it. That's got to be violating Apple's right to keep trade secrets.
Or if the person who found it returned it to Apple.PSGames said:This is so dumb. None of this would have happened if Apple hadn't lost the damn phone in the first place. Gizmodo is not in any way responsible for any lost sales.
The thing with the journalist clause it that it's there to protect sources from retribution, not to protect some opportunist guy who found (or possibly lifted) something very valuable in a bar and sold it to a journalist for big bucks.DrEvil said:I'm calling it now (since this is now an internet soap opera):
Officials will find "questionable" pornographic material on Chen's computers.
But, gizmodo will get their way and have all evidence removed by way of that "journalist" clause.
lunarworks said:The thing with the journalist clause it that it's there to protect sources from retribution, not to protect some opportunist guy who found (or possibly lifted) something very valuable in a bar and sold it to a journalist for big bucks.
The guy who found it claims he tried to call Apple technical support. If he knew what he was dealing with, and obviously he did, he could have e-mailed Steve Jobs directly (his e-mail address is publicly known), or brought it to an Apple store. Either of those routes would have had direct results, and probably some token of gratitude. Now he's possibly up shit creek.
Edit: Of course, this would be completely different if he had found a folder, for example, that had information on Apple killing babies for fun and profit. That's a whole different story.
Ask for the manager, hand it directly to him, and tell him you're e-mailing Steve Jobs to let him know. It's like invoking the name of Sauron. The manager will be scared shitless and will seal it in the nearest safe he can find.PhoncipleBone said:That would have been funny, but it would still leak from them.
I wonder if the store manager would've even knew it was real.lunarworks said:Ask for the manager, hand it directly to him, and tell him you're e-mailing Steve Jobs to let him know. It's like invoking the name of Sauron. The manager will be scared shitless and will seal it in the nearest safe he can find.
Unless you want it leaked, of course... which is kinda understandable.