Page Title: illegal-art.org :: a project of Stay Free! magazine

  • This webpage makes use of the TITLE meta tag - this is good for search engine optimization.

Page Description:

  • This webpage DOES NOT make use of the DESCRIPTION meta tag - this is NOT GOOD for search engine optimization.

Page Keywords:

  • This webpage DOES NOT make use of the KEYWORDS meta tag - whilst search engines nowadays do not put too much emphasis on this meta tag including them in your website does no harm.

Page Text: Brad Neely's re-interpretation of the first Harry Potter movie Illegal Art issue (#20) of Stay Free! magazine + Illegal Art CDs available here . Also, check out our new blog, Stay Free! Daily , focused on American media and culture, including intellectual property issues. * * * Good news! Tom Forsythe, has won a major victory in his case against Mattel. Mattel, you may recall, sued Forsythe over his Food Chain Barbie photographs; Forsythe won in federal discourt court, then again in circuit court. Now the district court has gone the extra mile. Calling Mattel's case "objectively unreasonable" and "frivolous," the court has ruled that Mattel must pay Forsythe's team over $1.8 million to cover legal fees and court costs! Major congrats to Tom and his (until now) pro-bono lawyers... but perhaps the real winners are the rest of us. This case sets a precedent, and, with luck, it'll discourage corporations from using copyright law to make frivolous cases against artists. | Read the court decision * * * EMI OUTLAWS "GREY ALBUM" Find out more and download the Grey Album here . * * * The laws governing "intellectual property" have grown so expansive in recent years that artists need legal experts to sort them all out. Borrowing from another artwork--as jazz musicians did in the 1930s and Looney Tunes illustrators did in 1940s--will now land you in court. If the current copyright laws had been in effect back in the day, whole genres such as collage, hiphop, and Pop Art might have never have existed. The irony here couldn't be more stark. Rooted in the U.S. Constitution, copyright was originally intended to facilitate the exchange of ideas but is now being used to stifle it. The Illegal Art Exhibit will celebrate what is rapidly becoming the "degenerate art" of a corporate age: art and ideas on the legal fringes of intellectual property. Some of the pieces in the show have eluded lawyers; others have had to appear in court. Loaded with gray areas, intellectual property law inevitably has a silencing effect, discouraging the creation of new works. Should artists be allowed to use copyrighted materials? Where do the First Amendment and "intellectual property" law collide? What is art's future if the current laws are allowed to stand? Stay Free! considers these questions and others in our multimedia program. -- Carrie McLaren * * * For in-depth information about copyright law and its impact on free expression, please see the new "copyright" issue of Stay Free! magazine , which includes the Illegal Art Catalog and will be available at all exhibit events. See also Articles and Illegal Art Links . Illegal Art is sponsored by Brooklyn -based Stay Free! magazine, with support from the Online Policy Group , a nonprofit ISP devoted to free speech, and Prelinger Archives . Illegal Art logo adapted from American Alphabet , by Heidi Cody

  • This webpage has 464 words which is between the recommended minimum of 250 words and the recommended maximum of 2500 words - GOOD WORK.

Header tags:

  • It appears that you are NOT using header tags - this is a NOT a good thing!

Spelling errors:

  • This webpage has 2 words which may be misspelt.

Possibly mis-spelt word: EMI

Suggestion: EMU
Suggestion: EMO
Suggestion: EM
Suggestion: MI
Suggestion: SEMI
Suggestion: EMIR
Suggestion: EMIT
Suggestion: EMS
Suggestion: EMF
Suggestion: E MI
Suggestion: EM I
Suggestion: EMIL
Suggestion: ELI

Possibly mis-spelt word: CDs

Suggestion: CD
Suggestion: Cs
Suggestion: CD's
Suggestion: IDs
Suggestion: CDT
Suggestion: ODs
Suggestion: CDC
Suggestion: C's
Suggestion: CD s
Suggestion: Cos
Suggestion: Cps
Suggestion: Cads
Suggestion: Cods
Suggestion: Cuds

Broken links:

  • This webpage has 2 broken links.

Broken image links:

  • This webpage has no broken image links that we can detect - GOOD WORK.

CSS over tables for layout?:

  • This webpage looks like it may use Tables for layout - this is NOT recommended.

Last modified date:

  • We were unable to detect what date this page was last modified

Images that are being re-sized:

  • This webpage has no images that are being re-sized by the browser - GOOD WORK.

Images that are being re-sized:

  • This webpage has no images that are missing their width and height - GOOD WORK.

Mobile friendly:

  • After testing this webpage it appears to be mobile friendly - this is a GOOD thing!

Links with no anchor text:

  • This webpage has no links that are missing anchor text - GOOD WORK.

W3C Validation:

Print friendly?:

  • It appears that the webpage does NOT use CSS stylesheets to provide print functionality - this is a BAD thing.

GZIP Compression enabled?:

  • It appears that the serrver does NOT have GZIP Compression enabled - this is a NOT a good thing!