Trevor Reid || MBA-Law Student Blog

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Google Buzz Leads to Lawsuit

Posted by Trevor Reid on February 18, 2010

James Temple of the San Francisco Chronicle blogs that Google’s departure from its usual iterative, customer attentive release philosophy has earned the company a class action lawsuit on top of widespread derision. “A class action complaint filed in San Jose federal court alleges that Google Inc. broke the law when its controversial Google Buzz service [answer to a question nobody asked] shared personal data without the consent of users,” Temple writes. The suit relies in part on the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

Up until now there have been Google and Gmail features that I celebrate, ones that I help improve and ones that I ignore. Buzz became the first that I loathe.

Posted in Business, Intellectual Property, Management, Marketing, Technology, Torts | Comments Off

It’s Time…

Posted by Trevor Reid on February 12, 2010

It’s time to renovate and refocus this blog. It’s time to post more and filter less.

As my law and MBA studies draw to completion Trevor-Reid.Com will return to its intended beginnings as a personal web site for sharing and ranting. I want this site to become a greater resource for those in the thick of law school and business school. So, I’ll be posting more of the briefs, articles, outlines, and resources that I used in class.

A new blog, Confessions of a Financial Hitman, will focus on my new venture: FJR Judgment Recovery. It’s great to finally be applying what I’ve learned in school and out to a business that I’m passionate it about.

Posted in Civic Arts, Misc. | Comments Off

Large Taliban Offensive on Kabul Underway

Posted by Trevor Reid on January 18, 2010

A major Taliban attack began on Kabul Jan. 18. The fighting is being reported by both American and Taliban sources. According to one American source, reports of an imminent attack began circulating Jan. 17. Heavy fighting is being reported at multiple locations, apparently focused around the Serena Hotel. The hotel, which is frequented by foreign journalists and government officials, has been attacked in the past. According to the Taliban, 20 suicide bombers are taking part in the attack. They claim the Presidential Palace, Ministries of Justice, Finance, Mines and Industry are among the targets. There reports of casualties, but numbers and locations are unclear.

The attack is still in progress, with Taliban forces reportedly fighting Afghan security forces. Explosions, gunfire and rocket fire have been reported along with the suicide bombers. It is unclear as to whether this assault will prove larger than attacks carried out last February.

Early reports in a situation like this tend to be inaccurate, and it will be a while before we get a clear sense of what has happened. However, it is clear that this is a major assault.

UPDATE:

The Taliban attack in the Afghan capital of Kabul is reportedly winding down. The assault began around 9:35 a.m. local time Jan. 18 (the day the new cabinet was being sworn in) when reports of rocket fire and explosions were heard in the Afghan capital near several government buildings.

Just 23 minutes later, reports emerged that the Taliban had claimed the attack in a message to Afghan Islamic Press. In the claim, Taliban spokesman Zabihollah Mojahed has said 20 suicide assailants were attacking the Presidential Palace, the Central Bank and the Ministries of Finance, Justice and Mines and Industries. The Serena Hotel, Defense Ministry and Afghan Telecom had also reportedly come under attack.

A little after noon local time, militants began to lay siege on two major shopping centers, including a mall called the Grand Afghan Shopping Center near the Justice Ministry. Eyewitness reported militants carrying rocket-propelled grenades entered the second and third floors of the mall. A vehicle-borne improvised explosive device (VBIED) reportedly detonated outside one of the shopping centers, killing several security forces.

This report is republished with the permission of STRATFOR: www.STRATFOR.com.

Posted in Civic Arts, History, International, Middle East, Political Affairs | Comments Off

Study Finds Sexual Abuse in Juvenile Detention Not Uncommon

Posted by Trevor Reid on January 8, 2010

On Thursday the U.S. Department of Justice announced findings that more than 3,200 incarcerated juveniles, 12 percent, had been raped or sexually abused while in detention during the past twelve months. This figure included assaults by one inmate against another as well as any sexual activity between detention staff and detained juveniles. The survey sampled about 9,000 of the country’s 26,550 young people in prisons.

Westat, a company in Rockville, Maryland conducted the anonymous survey under contract to the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

In some facilities in Indiana, Maryland, North Carolina and Texas nealry a third of juvenile inmates reported being sexually abused.

Posted in Misc. | Comments Off

Misconceptions Persist About the Right to Home School

Posted by Trevor Reid on October 30, 2009

This article and video claim that “many states that require you to have some kind of teaching certificate to home school your kids.”

A Family’s Decision To Home School

That’s incorrect.

As far as I know, no state currently requires a homeschooling parent to be a certified teacher. I think the last state to have such a requirement was Michigan. The Michigan Supreme Court struck that requirement in the early 1990’s. Michigan v. DeJong, 501 N.W.2d 127 (Mich. 1993).

It’s a quirky misconception that parents ought to be certified to teach their own kids. Education is a parental right and duty that parents *may* delegate to private or state schools.

Certification for government school teachers is a way to promote safety and quality that is only appropriate to public administration. It is important because the state is stepping into the very private domain of raising children. Private schools typically set their own standards and may or may not look favorably on state certification for their educators.

Posted in Civic Arts, History, United States | 2 Comments »