<!-- f9 -->
Ibid., 93.
</para></footnote>
+<indexterm><primary>Erskine, Andrew</primary></indexterm>
</para>
<para>
When the London booksellers tried to shut down Donaldson's shop in
Holland, "Copyright Act Raising Free-Speech Concerns," Billboard,
May 2001; Janelle Brown, "Is the RIAA Running Scared?" Salon.com,
April 2001; Electronic Frontier Foundation, "Frequently Asked
- Questions
-about Felten and USENIX v. RIAA Legal Case," available at
+Questions about Felten and USENIX v. RIAA Legal Case," available at
<ulink url="http://free-culture.cc/notes/">link #27</ulink>.
+<indexterm><primary>Electronic Frontier Foundation</primary></indexterm>
</para></footnote>
He and a group of colleagues were working on a paper to be submitted
at conference. The paper was intended to describe the weakness in an
Concentration in size alone is one thing. The more invidious
change is in the nature of that concentration. As author James Fallows
put it in a recent article about Rupert Murdoch,
+<indexterm><primary>Fallows, James</primary></indexterm>
</para>
<blockquote>
<para>
<!-- f28 -->
James Fallows, "The Age of Murdoch," Atlantic Monthly (September
2003): 89.
+<indexterm><primary>Fallows, James</primary></indexterm>
</para></footnote>
</para>
</blockquote>
whenever you turn a very large percentage of the population into
criminals." This is the collateral damage to civil liberties
generally.
+<indexterm><primary>Electronic Frontier Foundation</primary></indexterm>
</para>
<para>
"If you can treat someone as a putative lawbreaker," von Lohmann