Huey rated Number Go Up: 5 stars

Number Go Up by Zeke Faux
In 2021 cryptocurrency went mainstream. Giant investment funds were buying it; celebrities like Tom Brady endorsed it; and TV ads …
Science fiction, technology, law, and Singapore.
I'm on Mastodon as @[email protected]
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In 2021 cryptocurrency went mainstream. Giant investment funds were buying it; celebrities like Tom Brady endorsed it; and TV ads …

FINALIST FOR THE 2020 GENERAL NONFICTION MINNESOTA BOOK AWARDS Interested in the origins of the species? Consider the Platypus uses …

A grabby next-Tuesday thriller about cryptocurrency shenanigans that will awaken you to how the world really works.
Martin Hench …

The average human lifespan is absurdly, outrageously, insultingly brief: if you live to 80, you have about four thousand weeks …

A man learns that all the animals at the Zoo are robots. A secret terminal in Changi Airport caters to …

A doubly disgraced dwarven hero. A band of accident-prone adventurers. Giving redemption a second shot may have been a grave …

When Arthur takes a job at a Blue's Doughnuts, he has no idea that his fat, obstinate boss Buford Lafont …
Leslie Klinger is an expert in Sherlockian literature and an attorney who fought to keep Sherlock Holmes in the public domain despite attempts by the Conan Doyle estate to argue otherwise. The Conan Doyle estate attempted to argue, during litigation relating to Netflix's Enola Holmes and Miramax's Mr Holmes, that copyright law protects certain personality traits of Holmes that were only alluded to in later stories (whose copyright has not expired). But Klinger was successful in persuading the court that copyright law does not protect personality traits of fictional characters.
Leslie Klinger is an expert in Sherlockian literature and an attorney who fought to keep Sherlock Holmes in the public domain despite attempts by the Conan Doyle estate to argue otherwise. The Conan Doyle estate attempted to argue, during litigation relating to Netflix's Enola Holmes and Miramax's Mr Holmes, that copyright law protects certain personality traits of Holmes that were only alluded to in later stories (whose copyright has not expired). But Klinger was successful in persuading the court that copyright law does not protect personality traits of fictional characters.