Light It on Fire and Shove It into the Atlantic
Episode 57 · April 17th, 2015 · 1 hr 42 mins
About this Episode
We hereby deliver an evening episode comprising role-playing, word pictures, and other podcasting art forms to convey critical information on, among other miscellany: Christian’s week of broken things, follow-up on lines, math and the book of true reasons, Mark Lemley’s article on “faith-based IP,” imagining Benjamin Franklin’s lightning powered potato peeler, iPhone copycats, and, morality aside, the death penalty’s stupidity, and the measure of a civilization.
This show’s links:
- The Wirecutter and the Sweet Home
- Oral Argument 55: Cronut Lines
- The documentary about people competing to win a truck, Hands on a Hardbody
- Oral Argument 51: The Faucet (guest John Pfaff)
- Euclid’s Elements
- About Paul Erdős
- Mark Lemley, Faith-Based Intellectual Property
- Frank Michelman, Takings
- Mark Lemley, The Surprising Virtues of Treating Trade Secrets as IP Rights
- International News Service v. Associated Press
- SCOTUSblog on Glossip v. Gross
- Associated Press, Utah Brings Back Firing Squads as Lethal Injection Drugs Remain Scarce
- About Cameron Todd Willingham
- Oral Argument 45: Sacrifice
- About “death-qualified” juries