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Here we go againHere we go againPosted May 9, 2008 17:40 UTC (Fri) by khim (subscriber, #9252)In reply to: It's difference between German and British law systems by rahvin Parent article: The GPL wins in Germany - again
And more importantly, a system where there isn't consistency ... would be the opposite of Justice Quite true - that's why single cupreme court usually can overturn any and all decisions and judge can be retired if it's decisions are regularly overturned by supreme court. What you call common sense, I call favoritism or persecution. Judges routinely like to hide their own bias under the label of "common sense". Commow law does not protect from this - or else Texas judges were getting the same proportion of copyright lawsuits as everyone else. Common law has positive feedback loop in the system. And while "the same treatment" looks good in theory on practice the end result is "the same incorrect treatment". A lot of strange abberations (like software patents) were created this way. This can hardly be called "height of justice". A lot of lawmakers activity in US and UK are needed to stop this process from wreaking the whole system. It works, but is this an optimal solution? I'm not so sure - the whole things looks strikingly similar to RBMK (where positive feedback is negated by external circuit) and while RMBK is more efficient then normal PWR without such feedback loop 1986 showed that it's not strictly speaking "better"...
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Here we go again Posted May 15, 2008 6:42 UTC (Thu) by lysse (subscriber, #3190) [Link] Bear in mind that there is one crucial difference between US and UK law - which is that in the US the Supreme Court truly *is* supreme, but in the UK, the courts are ultimately subject to the Crown (and therefore the government of the day). In particular, an Act of Parliament can (and on occasion, does) stomp on an undesirable precedent immediately; but the reverse is not true - a court cannot throw out a law. God knows I'm not defending such a system, but it does seem to clip the feedback loop you're complaining about.
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