The new SPHERE instrument for the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope recently achieved 'first light'. The New Scientist is reporting on an image they released this week that calls into question whether Frodo really did snuff out the Eye of Sauron.
So, how long before the MPAA goes after the HR 4796 system for breach of copyright?
On a more serious note, the image has amazing detail. This should make it easier to detect and analyze planets orbiting other stars.
(Score: 3, Funny) by DECbot on Monday June 09 2014, @03:38PM
I propose we build a spaceship in order to travel to HR 4796 and serve them the lawsuit. The spaceship will have to travel pretty quickly in order to ensure the copyright does not lapse before serving the suit, or we admit the obvious, copyrights held by corporations have no expiration date.
Who feels like a road trip?
cats~$ sudo chown -R us /home/base
(Score: 3, Interesting) by bob_super on Monday June 09 2014, @05:20PM
According to Albert, we need the star to come very fast towards the lawsuit, because the other way the copyright would expire faster.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 10 2014, @12:16AM
I believe the faster frame of reference has the 'slower time'. It has been a while since I did SR though.
(Score: 2) by bob_super on Tuesday June 10 2014, @01:07AM
Same, it's been a while.
It depends where you keep your clock, but I'd think you want the star to age a lot to get to your fresh static copyright claim, rather than have your claim age too fast as it tries to reach the star.
Moral of the idea: if the **AA guys are after you, make them run at light speed to deliver the summons, then adjust your calendar to their perceived delivery date. I'm sure the judge will instantly forget in a puff of relativistic confusion how that last part isn't how the laws are written.