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[Kindle] Free eBook: "The Law in Black and White and The Yellow in between" (Usually US $4.99) @ Amazon

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From the author:

"I have written a book that is about my experience as an Asian lawyer in Australia. It discusses areas of the law like family law, estate planning and migration issues.

There are interesting anecdotes about my experience as a lawyer.

I am your Homeless lawyer, and my book is titled, The Law in Black and White and the Yellow in Between.

Please download a free copy of the book with the hope that you will provide a review of the book on Amazon.

Free eBook version available for immediate download for the next 48 hrs only on Amazon by arrangement with my publisher.

For the next 48 hrs, you can find it on Amazon here:

https://www.amazon.com.au/gp/product/B07Z3JHH42?pf_rd_p=d292…

The usual cost is USD$4.99 (A$7.35) for the ebook and USD$14.99 for a printed paperback."

Get the ebook for free for the next 48 hrs.

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closed Comments

    • "Kindle Price: $5.99 "
      Not free in amazon us

  • Joxer, you related to the author?

    • Perhaps Joxer is the author

    • +1

      He was an old principal of mine, so not sure if that's related per se.

      I think he email bombed the details to people.

      I am a half yellow lawyer :P

      • +3

        "Joxer, I am your father."

      • I am a half yellow lawyer :P

        Bill Richmond?

  • What are your thoughts on the pressure on China to respect international copyright laws?

    • +1

      There is no such thing as an “international copyright” that will automatically protect a work throughout the world. Protection against unauthorized use in a particular country depends on the national laws of that country.

      • Wrong. There are treaties and conventions.

    • +2

      I'm a criminal lawyer so I don't really do much IP law.

      Copyright however subsists in every work pretty much automatically so it's quite widespread. I think you mean more China's abuse of IP based on patents, trademarks and designs. China is moving forward as shown in the JLR case however it seems they favour the local manufacturers in almost all instances except if the foreign company has a large local investment i.e. they've built a local manufacturing plant.

      Cases are easily distinguished in law though so don't be amazed if a precedent has little weight moving forward. The truth is that China is too big for most companies and other countries to do anything.

      • Arguably though the whole patent system needs to be redesigned from the ground up given that someone's patented a stick and other laughable examples like Apple patenting a simplistic rectangular mobile phone.

        https://patents.google.com/patent/US6360693B1/en

        • You can patent almost anything, they'll take your filing fee money. At the end of the day you also need to patent in every jurisdiction you intend to protect the product, so just filing a patent in the major markets will set you back $50k or thereabouts.

          The reality though is when you come to try to rely upon the patent in litigation then you could see your patent fly out the window if there's any whiff of prior art or lack of innovation. A market like China will need something pretty impressive to recognise it.

  • edit - nvm

  • "This title is not currently available for purchase"

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