tailieunhanh - FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION

The puzzling thing about most Americans is that they take the law so seriously. I don’t mean they obey the law, nor do I mean that they shouldn’t obey the law. I mean instead that they approach the law with unquestioned reverence. They treat its commands as truths. They register disagreement as problems in themselves, rather than as something the law has missed. Not everyone, of course. But normal sorts are like this. We feel as much entitlement to question the law as we do to question our doctor’s diagnosis of strep throat in our child. . | KEMBREW McLEOD Foreword by Lawrence Lessig With a New Epilogue FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION Resistance and Repression in the Age of Intellectual Property 2 127 381 January 6 1998 UNITED STATES TRADEMARK FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION Tfo records of thi ĩbútcd Stales Patent and Trademarkoffice show that an application for ngistration of the Mark shown in this Certificate was filed in the office that the application was examined and determined to hem compliance with the requirements of tile aw and until tile regulations prescribed by the Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks and that the Applicant is entitled to registration of the Mark z under the Trademark Act of 1946 as Amended. This registration shall remain in force for TE9f 10 years unless terminated earíữr as provided by law and subject to compliance with the provisions of Section s of the Trademark Act cf 1946 as Amended. Commissioner of Patents and Trademark Kemf rew McLeod Sunderland Massaciuiseits