Clear and Simple Law on - Does the Berlin attorney general violate German accessibility law by publishing unintellegible statutes on government websites? German law incorporates the target="_new">W3C on accessibility. The standard requires clear and simple German law professor Maximilian Herberger examines the issue, in English, on June 19, 2007: target="_new"=>Access to Among the exmples for legal gibberish is a quote from Annemarie Huber-Holz of Switzerland who introduce a multi-line title to an E.U. directive. Herberger calls for thinking outside the box. That may include adopting proposals such as citizen-friendly summaries of statutes, pictures or diagrams. too friendly is not advisable, however, lest the website programmer run into liability issues as happened in California target="_new" rel="nofollow">In re: Jayson docket no. 04-17190, on February 28, 2007, see Kochinke, rel="tag" class="techtag">German rel="tag" class="techtag">law rel="tag" class="techtag">law rel="tag" class="techtag">Law style="font-size:10px; text-align:right;color:red;letter-spacing:-0.05em;float:right"> © German American Law Journal :: Washington Internet Law in - In Germany, internet law springs from various sources. An important, European statute addresses identification and removal requirements for content providers. in apparent conflict with various constitutional principles, as frequently reported here, the invasive telemedia statute encounters acquiescence instead of protests. Axel Spies has summarized, in English, several aspects of the known as TMG for non-European content providers in the June 2007 issue of target="_new" rel="nofollow">Business Communications law on the TMG has been mixed; for a recent supreme court ruling on contributory liability, takedown notices and provider immunity, see Liability in Supreme style="font-size:10px; text-align:right;color:red;letter-spacing:-0.05em;float:right"> © German American Law Journal :: Washington Beer - reports of an age discrimination case in Germany involving an interpreter at the Hannover Fair. While this is interesting news, the comments lead to more revealing information. We read that target="_new">Bush poured himself a at the G8 meeting and Sarkozy was asked why Bush did not show up the next morning. The news here reported that Bush from an target="_new">upset while a comment there point to a presidential hangover. Not much wrong with that, except for the clean image righteously portrayed by the administration and a possible cover-up by major Addendum: Googling Bush and at European Google news sites produces numerous reports of target="_new">Bush and target="_new">drinking one Much ado about nothing, apparently: He appears to have had Non-alcoholic Heineken, just an indication of a limited selection or bad taste. Some report that he had it flown in for the G8 meeting. That would be an expensive beer. That#tracking |
Alt A Alt B Alt C Alt D |