Kevin Goldberg’s Journalistic ‘Seven Deadly Sins’

Professor Kevin Goldberg came into class to talk about his self-titled ‘Seven Deadly Sins of the Journalist.’ His points were derived from the actual Seven Deadly Sins — gluttony, greed, sloth, lust, pride, envy and wrath.

The Sins

Gluttony: fair use, copyright is about exploiting your content for money

Greed: reporter’s privilege, there is little to no protection for a reporter in federal court

Sloth: using ‘alegedly’ or ‘in my opinion;’ don’t get it first, get it right

Lust: Section 230 of Communications Decency Act, a company takes no responsibility of another information provider

Pride: compensatory (monetary loss), special (emotional loss) or punitive (intended to punish) damages

Envy: permission and licensing, use of Creative Commons

Wrath: public spaces are fair game, private spaces are off-limits

Goldberg went on to explain the logistics and legal matters of trademarking. He spoke about the differences between trademarking and copyrighting (patent).

Question_Copyright_2

A patent is protection of an idea, a copyright is protection of an expression of an idea, and a trademark is protection of specific branding or marketing.

What was more intriguing about Goldberg’s talk were the ideas of different product names. There is distinction between fanciful (made-up words), arbitrary (real-life words), suggestive (distinctive and arbitrary), descriptive (describes a product) and generic (it is what it says it is) names.

i.e. Apple is generic and Camel is arbitrary

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