dracodraconis: (Default)

globeandmail.com: Gender bias evident in parental alienation cases

A Toronto lawyer recently presented a study of 74 parental alienation cases between 1987 and 2008, in which parental alienation was defined as the situation in which "...an estranged parent systematically brainwashes a child into hating the other parent." He discovered the father was the alienater in only 24 cases while the mother was the alienater in the other 50 cases. More than half (13) of the alienating fathers were ordered into therapy while only 12 of the 50 mothers were required to do the same.
dracodraconis: (Default)

U.S. Court Finds No Link Between Vaccines, Autism - washingtonpost.com

A US federal court has ruled that there is no evidence for a link between vaccines and autism so families of autistic children are not entitled to financial compensation from vaccine manufacturers.
dracodraconis: (Default)

Ontarians must butt out before driving with kids

As of Wednesday (today), people who light up a cigarette in a car with some 16 years of age or younger, if caught, will face a $250(Can) fine. Studies have shown that the cigarette smoke concentrations in a car are 30 times higher than in the home due to the enclosed space. As a result, children in cars are exposed to far higher levels than in the home, albeit for shorter periods of time.

dracodraconis: (Default)
Source: http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=5525

Apple's troubles are reminiscent of the 2002 "Windows is a big meanie" lawsuit. Marcus Yam reports on DailyTech:

Shortly following news of Apple’s stock options backdating scandal, the Associated Press is reporting that the company is now facing several lawsuits, including one alleging that Apple is monopolizing the digital music market.

The lawsuit is over Apple’s proprietary iPod and iTunes software, which is generally incompatible with non-Apple products. Media purchased on iTunes is supposed to be playable only on iPod hardware, and songs purchased on other DRM systems are not easily playable on iPods.

Apple motioned for the courts to dismiss the case, originally filed July 21, but the courts denied the motion on Dec. 20. The plaintiff seeks unspecified compensation.

While the iPod reigns supreme in the music player market, Apple’s success has not come without a price. Last year, Creative Labs sued Apple over patent infringement of the iPod interface, which eventually lead to a countersuit. The companies eventually settled on having Apple pay Creative $100 million for use of the patented technology.

The popularity of the iPod has drawn attention from hackers discontent with the proprietary nature of the device. Jon Lech Johansen, who cracked DVD encryption, has undone Apple’s protection scheme and plans to license his work to companies interested in opening up interoperability between iPod/iTunes and non-Apple devices.

January 2010

S M T W T F S
     1 2
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31      

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags