Posts Tagged ‘Facebook’

Including Social Media Accounts in Your Will

Dr. Emir Crowne and Omar Ha-Redeye published an article in the Winter 2013 issue of Anokhi magazine, The Immortality of Your Online Presence.

The Immortality of Your Online Presence by Omar Ha-Redeye




Paul Ceglia’s Facebook Contract

This contract could be the deathblow to Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook:
Facebook Ceglia Contract

Read more on Slaw.




SEEC Masters Certificate in Public Management

Omar Ha-Redeye conducting a training session on social media for the public sector on Wednesday, March 9, 2011, for the Masters Certificate in Public Management at the Schulich Executive Education Centre (SEEC).

Apparently some people do have warm, fuzzy feelings for tax agencies (an issue discussed during the presentation), and this press release was received around the same time of the presentation:




CBC Radio with Yanik Dumont Baron

Omar Ha-Redeye was interviewed by Yanik Dumont Baron on CBC Radio (French) today on threats made over social media. This past week two men were arrested independantly in Quebec for making threats online, Martin Levesque and David Abitbol.

The interview can be heard below, or downloaded here.




Do You Like This Post?

By telling me, it’s the equivalent of leaving a pee trail.

At least that’s what Garry Wise thinks.




Go Pirate on Facebook

Facebook is notorious for constantly making changes.  Supposedly it keeps the users interested.

There’s a new beta language setting that might be of interest to users.  You can now change your preference to English (Pirate).

Sean Malarkey demonstrates in this video:

˙sıɥʇ ǝʞıl ʞool ƃuıɥʇʎɹǝʌǝ sǝʞɐɯ ɥɔıɥʍ ‘ƃuıʇʇǝs (uʍop ǝpısdn) ɥsılƃuǝ uɐ uǝʌǝ s,ǝɹǝɥʇ

Both of which would make for a great prank if you get access to a friend’s profile.




Most Viewed on Facebook

The slideshare presentation of a paper presented at the 3rd Annual Law Student Conference is one of the most viewed presentations today on Facebook.




Online Reputation Management at Schulich School of Business

This talk was given to marketing professionals at the Schulich School of Business.

Presentation included questions and answers, as well as interactive exercises using the brands and companies of participants, but this content has been removed to respect the privacy of the companies involved and their representatives.

Legal cases discussed include:




JDSupra’s Fun Tuesday with LOTR

JDSupra‘s Fan Page on Facebook is featuring an older article on Law is Cool by Omar Ha-Redeye and Jacob Kaufman about the law and the Lord of the Rings as part of their “fun Tuesday.”

Robert Bexley, Editor in Chief of The Docket, the Georgia State University College of Law Newspaper, writes in:

First Published in October 2008 edition of The Docket, the Georgia State University College of Law Student Newspaper:

By: Robert Bexley

Frodo Baggins v. Sauron, (Mrdr. App. Ct. 2008).

The case at bar is one between the estate of Mr. Sauron, Plaintiff and Mr. Frodo Baggins, Defendant. Plaintiff brought suit alleging that Defendant had intentionally destroyed a valuable family heirloom of the decedent. The trial court denied demurrer for Defendant, and the jury awarded Plaintiff $200,000 in nominal and punitive damages. Defendant appealed, stating trial court error in denying demurrer.
The facts go back 650 years. Mr. Smeagol Gollum, a hermit and schizophrenic, misplaced his gold ring. While spelunking in a cave, Bilbo Baggins, Appellant/Defendant’s uncle, found the ring.
Upon returning home, Mr. Baggins kept the ring safe and on his nephew’s eleventy-first birthday, conveyed the ring to him. Appellant, Frodo Baggins, learned that the ring in fact belonged to Mr. Sauron of Golgoroth and instead of returning the ring, Appellant was told by his counsel, Mr. Gandalf Mithrandir, Esq., to destroy it in Mount Doom. The facts of the trial court are unclear as to why this course of action was necessary.
Appellant snuck into Mordor and ascended Mount Doom. Upon reaching the summit, however, Mr. Gollum approached Appellant insisting upon the return of the ring. Appellant refused and hit Mr. Gollum on the head. Immediately before throwing the ring into the fiery depths of Mount Doom, Appellant had a change of heart and put on the ring so he could safely return it to Mr. Sauron. Mr. Gollum awoke furious and bit off the finger of Appellant on which the ring was placed. Appellant then pushed Mr. Gollum over a cliff into molten lava, destroying the ring, Mr. Gollum, and oddly enough, Mr. Sauron.
Despite the horrors of Appellant’s actions, the case at bar is only concerned with the destruction of Plaintiff/Respondent’s property.
There is a doctrine in Torts that justifies the actions of a person, when acting in good faith; he may destroy another’s property in the best interest of the community as long as the necessity is clearly shown. In Surroco v. Geary, it was necessary to raze a house in order to save adjoining homes and thus the city from an oncoming blaze. The court found the defendant not liable for destroying the plaintiff’s home because he was acting in the public interest, even by good faith mistake.
Mr. Baggins was under the impression that he was protecting the public interest by destroying the so-called “One Ring to Rule Them All.” We hold that pushing an ancient malnourished lunatic into magma to destroy a ring is conduct reasonably necessary to protect all of humanity. As such, we find that the trial court erred by denying Appellant’s demurrer. We reverse the trial court’s ruling and hold Appellant not liable for damages to Respondent’s property.

(omitted, Saruman, J., dissenting.)




Fixing Your Facebook News Feed

Facebook is at it again, making changes to the design, and reintroducing the live feed.

You have to adjust the settings though to get the most out of the experience, and here’s how to do it.




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