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...INTERNET $2.6 million Amount paid to 43-year-old Maryland resident Chris Clark for the domain name pizza.com. Clark bought it for $20 in 1994 2,156 Number of cybersquatting complaints that the U.N.'s World Intellectual Property Organization received in 2007, alleging abuse of trademark-registration online...
...million Amount paid to 43-year-old Maryland resident Chris Clark for the domain name Pizza.com Clark bought...
...student from the College. Such motions are tantamount to a permanent severance of ties with Harvard. A two-thirds vote by the Faculty is required to pass the motion, and the action can only be reversed by another Faculty vote. In most cases, disciplinary action against students is the domain of the Administrative Board. In extreme cases—such as rape, sexual misconduct, or large-scale theft—the Dean of the College can bring the matter before the Faculty, according to Secretary of the Ad Board John “Jay” Ellison. Former Dean...
...said Kevin Casey, Harvard’s director of federal and state relations. “It’s the next step in the movement that has been under foot for the last three or four years to get more publications into the general public domain...
...National Library of Medicine; the texts of such discoveries are readily accessible through scientific publications. Indeed, whether in journals, books, or online, nearly all of Harvard’s academic output—from graduate theses to economic policy papers—exist in the public domain. As a result, every dollar that Harvard pours into research is effectively a dollar contributed to the collective understanding of society. Rather than assailing Harvard for its enormous wealth, outsiders should laud the University for the beneficial purposes for which it utilizes its money: namely, the furthering of public knowledge...