ACLU: Intel 'violating free speech'

Published: 22 May 2000 y., Monday
In a case of email as free speech, the ACLU has filed an Amici Curiae (Friend of the Court) brief in an appeal pending in the lawsuit brought against by Intel. Over a two-year period, Hamidi is reported to have sent six emails to other Intel employees criticising the company's employment policy and the hiring of staff from outside the US. Intel asked Hamidi to desist, but he refused. Now no longer with the chip behemoth, Hamidi runs the FaceIntel website with the aim of highlighting what he considers to be inappropriate corporate behaviour. The ACLU says that Intel's subsequent legal actions were a heavy-handed attempt to silence a critic, not an effort to prevent overload to its email system. The California Court of Appeal is not expected to make a decision on the case until the end of the year.
Šaltinis: theregister.co.uk
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

A public opinion survey

Heads of Companies in Lithuania Support EU and NATO Membership more »

Moscow Demands Federal Laws on Immigration

Between 600-800 thousand illegal immigrants currently living in Moscow more »

The unofficial visit

The Dalai Lama has concluded an eight-day tour of the Baltic states more »

Against the upcoming visit

CATHOLICS, ORTHODOX CLASH OVER POPE more »

The protest measures

UKRAINIAN ORTHODOX BELIEVERS TO STAGE ANTIPAPAL RALLY ON 21 JUNE more »

CeBIT comes to Shanghai, China

Organizers and Exhibitors attach high hopes to this Mega-Event in Asia more »

Two shot in EU summit riots

Demonstrators have been battling heavily outnumbered police in violence in Gothenburg, Sweden as European Union leaders meet for a summit. more »

One million of signatures

Signatures Collected To Establish Death Penalty For Drug Traffickers more »

The disagreement

Bojars fires Riga police chief again more »

Blair Returns to Power in a Landslide Victory

But Exit Polls Indicate a Slightly Smaller Majority more »