•   Posted on

     September 7, 2018 in 

    Brad commented on Spotting Review Yelp Laundering: If you check the WHOIS for MGA (whose physical address on Yelp is an apartment complex) on GoDaddy, the registrant for MGA’s website is “Lior Mi” — at Grand Garage Door’s physical address. So Grand Garage Door and MGA Garage Door are run by the same people. Good to know. I ran that physical address on the Harris County Appraisal

  •   Posted on

     September 5, 2018 in 

    The left torsion spring on our garage door broke, so I looked for a replacement part. I called MGA Garage Door in Houston, and was told that they don't sell parts, but would send out a service guy to give me an estimate. It turns out that the companies advertising "garage door parts" don't sell them. They're service companies. And they've got you over a barrel because

  •   Posted on

     September 3, 2018 in 

    This weekend my kid and I took a machining class, learning the basics of running a milling machine. The instructor, a Greenfield-grade curmudgeon, had several stories of people using his machines incompetently and breaking things. The stories all ended, "and that's why I hate people." Last Friday the Vermont Supreme Court in State v. Vanburen held that state's revenge-porn statute constitutional. Eric Goldman has a good first analysis

  •   Posted on

     August 27, 2018 in 

    Every month or so for about the last year I've received an email purportedly marketing "estimators," "estimating services," or "material take-offs." Emails have been from: "Luke Shaw" of "International Estimating, LLC," 14 East, 4th Street, Suite 405, New York City, NY 10012;"David Jackson" of "International Estimating, LLC," 14 East, New York City, NY;"Jacky Lee" of "International Estimating, LLC," 14 East, 4th Street, Suite 405, New York City,

  •   Posted on

     August 11, 2018 in 

    https://twitter.com/ConLawWarrior/status/1028086368868556800 I wrote on this topic some years ago, here. My sense then was that the slow death of the jury trial in federal criminal cases did not reflect what was happening here in Texas: Closer to earth, where most criminal prosecutions actually take place, the dynamic can be quite different. In our discussion on Twitter, Clark mixed two ideas: Type I errors in the criminal justice

  •   Posted on

     May 15, 2018 in 

    (b) A person commits an offense if: (1) without the effective consent of the depicted person, the person intentionally discloses visual material depicting another person with the person's intimate parts exposed or engaged in sexual conduct; (2) the visual material was obtained by the person or created under circumstances in which the depicted person had a reasonable expectation that the visual material would remain private; (3) the

  •   Posted on

     May 6, 2018 in 

    "The First Amendment's guarantee of free speech does not extend only to categories of speech that survive an ad hoc balancing of relative social costs and benefits. The First Amendment itself reflects a judgment by the American people that the benefits of its restrictions on the Government outweigh the costs." The legislature must strike a balance between sexual-privacy rights and the First Amendment. Because revenge porn does

  •   Posted on

     April 26, 2018 in 

    I wrote yesterday about a loss, so I hope you'll indulge me in talking about two recent wins, one before the loss and one after. A couple of weeks ago I described my bizarre oral-argument experience in Tyler, where the prosecutor (bless his heart) melted down in front of the court. I wrote: When you’re arguing with the court about how big you’re going to win, it’s

  •   Posted on

     April 26, 2018 in 

    This is a truly bizarre law. It presumes that there is “an interest in sex” that is not prurient. We are not sure what kind of interest that is. We are also left guessing at who gets to determine whether an image has sex appeal. … What the “prurient interest in sex” means is anyone’s guess. It would also be interesting to learn who the legislature believes should determine

  •   Posted on

     April 26, 2018 in 

    I don't think I've ever voted in a State Bar election. I've certainly never endorsed a candidate. But I feel compelled to endorse a candidate in this year's election for State Bar President. Randy Sorrels is running on a platform of 12 Ideas (12! Like jurors! Or apostles! Or months!) most of which will make life better for us without making life worse for our clients. The few

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