Re: Specialty Technical Publishers

2004-08-20 Thread Matt Ghali

On Thu, 19 Aug 2004 16:57:46 -0700, Owen DeLong [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Ah... But, the problem here is you registered godengatevw.com and
 haywardvw.com.  They'd have a much harder time fending off an en
 pro per motion for summary dismissal if you had registered domains
 like godengatevwsucks.com and haywardvwsucks.com.  Because you
 registered domains that directly use their trademarks without clear
 indication that they are used without permission for commentary,
 you are in a legal gray-area (gray is the expensive color in the
 legal world).  If you used those domains to sell cars, you'd be in a
 legal black area and you could simply settle the suit and understand
 that you were wrong.  If you had registered names that clearly weren't
 their names, but, commentary on them, you'd be pretty much in the
 white zone from what attorneys have told me.  You still might get sued,
 and, it still might cost you some to defend it, but, you might get
 away with a simple en pro per motion for summary dismissal on the grounds
 that you were making fair comment.  Of course, they could charge libel,
 in which case, you'd have to defend yourself and prove that everything
 said was factual.

Actually, their original broad injunction against me, obtained before
I even had a chance to secure counsel, was easily overturned by us in
an order to show cause hearing.

Your perception is incorrect. It does not matter what domain name I
legitimately register, my speech is protected regardless. The only
time they would have a legitimate cause for grievance were if I went
afoul of the lanham act by using initial interest confusion to
divert their customers for my own profit.

I really lucked out and found some excellent legal representation to
sort out these issues for me- including the lawyer representing the
People Eating Tasty Animals in their case against PETA.

Incedentally, it turns out that neither of their business names are
registered trademarks.

 Did they ask you to hand over the domains (demand letter) and you refused,
 or did they go straight to litigation?

Straight to litigation. I was informed that they were first aware of
the sites by their lawyer, who demanded I take down any content, or
see them in court.

 Partially.  Although, you might still be able to characterize this as a
 SLAPP suit.  It's a stretch, but, might be worth a try.  I believe that
 entitles you to a certain amount of relief and some special handling of
 your side of the case to make it easier for the little guy to fend off
 injustice inflicted by the big guy.

Unfortunately, a case has to be very clear cut and frivolous to
qualify as a possible SLAPP. In other words, it has to be a strong
possibility for a summary judgement before it even gets to judicial
arbitration. That's unfortunate, because a SLAPP judgement would have
allowed me to countersue for legal fees.

 Anyway, this is way off NANOG topic, so, if you want to continue the
 discussion, let's take it off the list before Susan tries to string
 me up.

It seems there's others interested in the subject, and its a situation
that a lot of folks on the list could easily find themselves in. At
the very least, I'd like to be in the list archives offering
assistance and advice to anyone in the future in the same trouble.

matto


Re: Specialty Technical Publishers

2004-08-20 Thread Joshua Brady

As I have seen the past few days, Susan seems to think quite a bit is
off topic...my personal perception of NANOG is it is a group of
network operators which talk about many things including but not
limited to those of the network operations stand point, I have even
been told that discussing email was off-topic and when has email not
been a core part of the network? I am all for Matt talking about the
litigation of this case, its a quite common thing now in the wonderful
world of the internet, so does that now not fall under rules?


Josh



On Fri, 20 Aug 2004 09:46:49 -0700, Matt Ghali [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
 On Thu, 19 Aug 2004 16:57:46 -0700, Owen DeLong [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  Ah... But, the problem here is you registered godengatevw.com and
  haywardvw.com.  They'd have a much harder time fending off an en
  pro per motion for summary dismissal if you had registered domains
  like godengatevwsucks.com and haywardvwsucks.com.  Because you
  registered domains that directly use their trademarks without clear
  indication that they are used without permission for commentary,
  you are in a legal gray-area (gray is the expensive color in the
  legal world).  If you used those domains to sell cars, you'd be in a
  legal black area and you could simply settle the suit and understand
  that you were wrong.  If you had registered names that clearly weren't
  their names, but, commentary on them, you'd be pretty much in the
  white zone from what attorneys have told me.  You still might get sued,
  and, it still might cost you some to defend it, but, you might get
  away with a simple en pro per motion for summary dismissal on the grounds
  that you were making fair comment.  Of course, they could charge libel,
  in which case, you'd have to defend yourself and prove that everything
  said was factual.
 
 Actually, their original broad injunction against me, obtained before
 I even had a chance to secure counsel, was easily overturned by us in
 an order to show cause hearing.
 
 Your perception is incorrect. It does not matter what domain name I
 legitimately register, my speech is protected regardless. The only
 time they would have a legitimate cause for grievance were if I went
 afoul of the lanham act by using initial interest confusion to
 divert their customers for my own profit.
 
 I really lucked out and found some excellent legal representation to
 sort out these issues for me- including the lawyer representing the
 People Eating Tasty Animals in their case against PETA.
 
 Incedentally, it turns out that neither of their business names are
 registered trademarks.
 
  Did they ask you to hand over the domains (demand letter) and you refused,
  or did they go straight to litigation?
 
 Straight to litigation. I was informed that they were first aware of
 the sites by their lawyer, who demanded I take down any content, or
 see them in court.
 
  Partially.  Although, you might still be able to characterize this as a
  SLAPP suit.  It's a stretch, but, might be worth a try.  I believe that
  entitles you to a certain amount of relief and some special handling of
  your side of the case to make it easier for the little guy to fend off
  injustice inflicted by the big guy.
 
 Unfortunately, a case has to be very clear cut and frivolous to
 qualify as a possible SLAPP. In other words, it has to be a strong
 possibility for a summary judgement before it even gets to judicial
 arbitration. That's unfortunate, because a SLAPP judgement would have
 allowed me to countersue for legal fees.
 
  Anyway, this is way off NANOG topic, so, if you want to continue the
  discussion, let's take it off the list before Susan tries to string
  me up.
 
 It seems there's others interested in the subject, and its a situation
 that a lot of folks on the list could easily find themselves in. At
 the very least, I'd like to be in the list archives offering
 assistance and advice to anyone in the future in the same trouble.
 
 matto
 


-- 
Joshua Brady


Re: BANANOG [Re: Specialty Technical Publishers]

2004-08-20 Thread Joshua Brady

On Fri, 20 Aug 2004 21:04:57 +0100, Per Gregers Bilse
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Aug 20,  1:07pm, Joshua Brady [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  been a core part of the network? I am all for Matt talking about the
  litigation of this case, its a quite common thing now in the wonderful
  world of the internet, so does that now not fall under rules?
 
 The point is that NANOG is supposed to focus on network operational issues
 (and by implication also issues of architecture and engineering); issues
 of a tangential or personal interest water down the contents, whether or
 not they are important for the Internet and/or your business.  Including
 cashflow, litigation, world peace, and falling asteroids.

Sure understood there, however...NANOG is a discussion list which I
believe needs to focus on more than just the strict network
operational issues. (a user on AS12345 is announcing my IP's can
someone purdy please go smack him and make him stop), such as we do at
the NANOG confrences, discuss everything in and around the network
operations field, which deals with cashflow, litigation, world peace
if your an ISP in say iraq  or afghanistan right now, and falling
asteroids headed to your satellites or your datacenters or god forbid
your CEO's Porsche.

 
 The reason for trying to maintain focus is simple: few people deeply
 involved in core Internet issues have the time to sift through heaps of
 interesting discussion that has no relevance for their work.  In the
 end, everybody who might make a difference will have written NANOG off
 and simply not take part.  This has to a large extent already happened,
 but it would be good not to make the situation worse.

Then I guess the solution is simple...don't sift through it.
Everything eventually evolves from the original reason it was created
and we can't just sit around and not conform to that.


 There used to be a mailing list called com-priv, the original purpose
 being discussion about commercialisation and privatisation of the
 Internet.  Maybe NANOG/Merit as a group/organisation should revive
 it, and discuss non-technical matters on that?  Business Associated
 NANOG (BANANOG) discussion would be much happier on a separate list.
 Could even sit on a Merit server I guess, it would simply shift traffic
 from one list to another.

I suppose, but then we get the complaints of Grrr *grumble* I have to
sign up for another mailing list just to discuss issues which can
easily be discussed in one location? but if you can get Merit to
create a BANANOG I guess we can see how it goes.

 In the meantime, a tried and tested relevance test for NANOG is very
 simple: How do I configure my router for that?

Step 1: Kick the router out of the rack.
Step 2: Bring in big lumberjacks to beat the router until it conforms,
if it conforms skip to  step 5, if not go on to step 3.
Step 3: Hire someone who didn't have to ask that question.
Step 4: Get a roll of duct tape and gently slide the router back into place.
Step 5: Plug router in and enjoy!


 Best,
 
   -- Per
 
 


-- 
Joshua Brady


RE: Specialty Technical Publishers

2004-08-19 Thread Michel Py

 Michel Py wrote:
 File a complaint with the BBB of Vancouver, BC. They are known
 to the BBB. Then, let their collection goons waste their time
 and their money, and tell them that if they want to see it back
 they have to send you a prepaid box.

 Mike Lewinski wrote:
 Ah, excellent pointer! I see the Vancouver BBB lists this
 report on their website also indicating a pattern of abuse:
 http://166.70.33.197/~van/commonreport.html?bid=105759

Yeah, that's the kind of customer that has a valid address on each side
of the US/Canada border, and I'm happy to have their Internet service
provided by a competitor. Sooner or later, someone is going to get
pissed and let some steam out with one of these $65 DDOS that Alexei
mentioned sometime ago.

Michel.



Re: Specialty Technical Publishers

2004-08-19 Thread Dan Mahoney, System Admin
On Thu, 19 Aug 2004, Matt Ghali wrote:
Aah, the wonders of dropping a site somewhere in China and forgetting 
about it.  If spammers can do it

If you put vague enough info into WHOIS, and host the site correctly 
(DNS on about seven free services ought to be enough, the actual site on a 
couple of round-robins pointed at things like servers overseas).

I didn't say it was ethical, but just think how much more money it costs 
the lawyers to try and find you.

(Which, if you lose, they'll pass on to you -- be careful).
It's about this point that I say this is why I like animals and computers 
and hate people.

-Dan
PS: Of course, Matt, for yourself, you're posting specific customer data. 
But the fact that they try to blame you for it tends to only strengthen 
your claim.



On Wed, 18 Aug 2004 18:54:43 -0600, Mike Lewinski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In any event, after doing some googling and finding other victims of
this company, I've decided to register
SpecialtyTechnicalPublishersSucks.com in order to publicly document
their abuses. Sooner or later someone will have the time and resources
to fight them all the way- perhaps I can lend some ammo.
Be very careful. After getting the serious shaft from a volkswagen
dealership, I went down that path and registered goldengatevw.com and
haywardvw.com, among others. I then posted a warning on them about the
owners shady history and business practices
( https://matt.ethereal.net/ggvw/ ),
Because of my actions, regardless of their legality or constitutional
protections, I am now spending tens of thousands of dollars on legal
fees defending myself  from a 1.5 million dollar lawsuit.
( https://matt.ethereal.net/ggvw/mystory/ )
What I've learned about the process is that its not about who's
telling the truth. It's about who's got more money to spend on
lawyers.
matto
--
Hate fedora with a white hot burning passion right now though ... damn thing is 
Linux-XP(tm)
-Bill Nolan
2/24/04
Dan Mahoney
Techie,  Sysadmin,  WebGeek
Gushi on efnet/undernet IRC
ICQ: 13735144   AIM: LarpGM
Site:  http://www.gushi.org
---


Re: Specialty Technical Publishers

2004-08-19 Thread Owen DeLong

--On Thursday, August 19, 2004 12:01 PM -0700 Matt Ghali [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:

On Wed, 18 Aug 2004 18:54:43 -0600, Mike Lewinski [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
In any event, after doing some googling and finding other victims of
this company, I've decided to register
SpecialtyTechnicalPublishersSucks.com in order to publicly document
their abuses. Sooner or later someone will have the time and resources
to fight them all the way- perhaps I can lend some ammo.
Be very careful. After getting the serious shaft from a volkswagen
dealership, I went down that path and registered goldengatevw.com and
haywardvw.com, among others. I then posted a warning on them about the
owners shady history and business practices
( https://matt.ethereal.net/ggvw/ ),
Ah... But, the problem here is you registered godengatevw.com and
haywardvw.com.  They'd have a much harder time fending off an en
pro per motion for summary dismissal if you had registered domains
like godengatevwsucks.com and haywardvwsucks.com.  Because you
registered domains that directly use their trademarks without clear
indication that they are used without permission for commentary,
you are in a legal gray-area (gray is the expensive color in the
legal world).  If you used those domains to sell cars, you'd be in a
legal black area and you could simply settle the suit and understand
that you were wrong.  If you had registered names that clearly weren't
their names, but, commentary on them, you'd be pretty much in the
white zone from what attorneys have told me.  You still might get sued,
and, it still might cost you some to defend it, but, you might get
away with a simple en pro per motion for summary dismissal on the grounds
that you were making fair comment.  Of course, they could charge libel,
in which case, you'd have to defend yourself and prove that everything
said was factual.
Because of my actions, regardless of their legality or constitutional
protections, I am now spending tens of thousands of dollars on legal
fees defending myself  from a 1.5 million dollar lawsuit.
( https://matt.ethereal.net/ggvw/mystory/ )
Did they ask you to hand over the domains (demand letter) and you refused,
or did they go straight to litigation?
What I've learned about the process is that its not about who's
telling the truth. It's about who's got more money to spend on
lawyers.
Partially.  Although, you might still be able to characterize this as a
SLAPP suit.  It's a stretch, but, might be worth a try.  I believe that
entitles you to a certain amount of relief and some special handling of
your side of the case to make it easier for the little guy to fend off
injustice inflicted by the big guy.
matto
Anyway, this is way off NANOG topic, so, if you want to continue the
discussion, let's take it off the list before Susan tries to string
me up.
Owen
P.S.  IANAL, but, I've talked to a lot of them, and, I have some experience
navigating the legal system on my own behalf (en pro per).  YMMV.
--
If it wasn't crypto-signed, it probably didn't come from me.


pgpZHYNiViHMo.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Specialty Technical Publishers

2004-08-18 Thread Mark Barker
Invoicing for unsolicited materials is commonly referred to as mail 
fraud hereabouts.
The courts have consistently upheld the notion that such materials can 
be considered gifts.
IANAL but I would advise /dev/nulling all further correspondence from 
these losers.

-- MAB
On Aug 18, 2004, at 18:36, Mike Lewinski wrote:
Has anyone else has run into these scumbags? Sometime last winter I 
received a call along the lines of We'd like to send you some 
materials to review. Well, they sent some Internet Law encyclopedia 
along with an invoice for ~$700. Of course, there was no cost 
mentioned in the sales call- for all I knew they were going to send me 
a brochure about their product. I can say with 100% certainty that I 
would never have authorized them to send me something like this had 
they mentioned the cost without much further discussion as to what I 
was receiving.

This is just a general heads-up to a sleazy business practice for a 
sleazy company that is now attempting to extort money.




Re: Specialty Technical Publishers

2004-08-18 Thread Owen DeLong
No... It is not a good idea to /dev/null it.  If you /dev/null it, the
doctrine of Acquiescence by Estoppel works in their favor (essentially latin
legalise for Silence is Consent).  Instead, you should write on the 
invoice
that you never agreed to purchase the items and send it back to them 
certified
mail.  Make a copy of the invoice with your annotation and keep it for your
records.

At that point, they are pretty much stuck.
IANAL, but, this is what I've been told by lawyers.
Owen
--On Wednesday, August 18, 2004 7:38 PM -0400 Mark Barker [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:

Invoicing for unsolicited materials is commonly referred to as mail
fraud hereabouts.
The courts have consistently upheld the notion that such materials can be
considered gifts.
IANAL but I would advise /dev/nulling all further correspondence from
these losers.
-- MAB
On Aug 18, 2004, at 18:36, Mike Lewinski wrote:
Has anyone else has run into these scumbags? Sometime last winter I
received a call along the lines of We'd like to send you some
materials to review. Well, they sent some Internet Law encyclopedia
along with an invoice for ~$700. Of course, there was no cost
mentioned in the sales call- for all I knew they were going to send me
a brochure about their product. I can say with 100% certainty that I
would never have authorized them to send me something like this had
they mentioned the cost without much further discussion as to what I
was receiving.
This is just a general heads-up to a sleazy business practice for a
sleazy company that is now attempting to extort money.


--
If it wasn't crypto-signed, it probably didn't come from me.


pgpN0t9PeBxte.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Specialty Technical Publishers

2004-08-18 Thread Mike Lewinski
Owen DeLong wrote:
No... It is not a good idea to /dev/null it.  If you /dev/null it, the
doctrine of Acquiescence by Estoppel works in their favor (essentially 
latin
legalise for Silence is Consent).  Instead, you should write on the 
invoice
that you never agreed to purchase the items and send it back to them 
certified
mail.  Make a copy of the invoice with your annotation and keep it for your
records.
Thanks for the advice. I'm getting an opinion as to whether it is too 
late to follow this course, given that what led to my little outburst 
resulted from a call from their collections agency (I had actually asked 
to have it shipped back when it first arrived but the office manager had 
other more pressing things to do so it's been gathering dust, unopened 
except to look at the invoice). If we do send it back, it's going to be 
accompanied by an invoice for our shipping costs and time.

In any event, after doing some googling and finding other victims of 
this company, I've decided to register 
SpecialtyTechnicalPublishersSucks.com in order to publicly document 
their abuses. Sooner or later someone will have the time and resources 
to fight them all the way- perhaps I can lend some ammo.

So, this is an invitation to anyone who's had an experience with STP to 
submit it to me directly- I'll be happy to anonymize if requested when I 
publish it.

TIA,
Mike


RE: Specialty Technical Publishers

2004-08-18 Thread Michel Py

 Mike Lewinski wrote:
 Has anyone else has run into these scumbags? Sometime last
 winter I received a call along the lines of We'd like to
 send you some materials to review. Well, they sent some
 Internet Law encyclopedia along with an invoice for ~$700.
 Of course, there was no cost mentioned in the sales call-
 for all I knew they were going to send me a brochure about
 their product. I can say with 100% certainty that I would
 never have authorized them to send me something like this
 had they mentioned the cost without much further discussion
 as to what I was receiving. This is just a general heads-up
 to a sleazy business practice for a sleazy company that is
 now attempting to extort money.

File a complaint with the BBB of Vancouver, BC. They are known to the
BBB. Then, let their collection goons waste their time and their money,
and tell them that if they want to see it back they have to send you a
prepaid box.

Michel.



Re: Specialty Technical Publishers

2004-08-18 Thread Mike Lewinski
Michel Py wrote:
File a complaint with the BBB of Vancouver, BC. They are known to the
BBB. Then, let their collection goons waste their time and their money,
and tell them that if they want to see it back they have to send you a
prepaid box.
Ah, excellent pointer! I see the Vancouver BBB lists this report on 
their website also indicating a pattern of abuse:

http://166.70.33.197/~van/commonreport.html?bid=105759
Better Business Bureau of Mainland B.C
BBB Reliability Report
Specialty Technical Publishers
10 1225 E Keith Rd
North Vancouver, BC V7J 1J3
General Information
Original Business Start Date:   December 1986
Principal:  Julie Farrell, Cust Services Mgr
Phone Number:   (604) 983-3434
Fax Number: (604) 983-3445
Membership Status:  No
Website Address:www.stpub.com
Customer Experience
Based on BBB files, this company has an unsatisfactory record with the 
Bureau due a pattern of complaints. Although the company resolves the 
complaints, it has failed to correct the underlying reason for the 
complaints.

Additional Information
Additional Doing-Business-As Names:

S T P Specialty Technical Publishers

S T P Specialty Technical Publishers
Additional TOB Classifications:
PUBLISHERS-DIRECTORY  GUIDE
Educational/General Comments
Unsolicited Invoices
TIPS FOR CONSUMERS - UNSOLICITED INVOICES:
For your information the BBB advises that it has received numerous 
complaints from businesses  organizations alleging they have received 
invoices for goods or services which they had not ordered, or second 
notices requesting payment when no first notice had been received. 
Sometimes, final notices have been received, threatening that the 
account would be turned over to a credit department and that such action 
could affect the credit rating of the organization and make it liable 
for collection and legal costs.

What you have received RESEMBLES an invoice. It may be, in fact, a form 
of advertising. You are not required to pay anything unless you wish to 
participate in the offer. In some cases the goods or services offered 
may be of lesser quality than the quality expected for the price. In 
many cases these look alike invoices are paid by unwary accounts payable 
personnel. Be sure to educate your staff to recognize solicitations in 
the form of look alike invoices. Also, be sure your payables system has 
at least two people to authorize any payments so they can check each other.

BBB Membership
This company is not a member of the Better Business Bureau.
Report as of 08/18/2004
Copyright© 2004 Better Business Bureau of Mainland B.C.
As a matter of policy, the Better Business Bureau does not endorse any 
product, service or company. BBB reports generally cover a three-year 
reporting period, and are provided solely to assist you in exercising 
your own best judgment. Information contained herein is believed 
reliable but not guaranteed as to accuracy. Reports are subject to 
change at any time.

The Better Business Bureau reports on members and non-members. 
Membership in the BBB is voluntary, and members must meet and maintain 
BBB standards. If a company is a member of this BBB, it is stated in 
this report.