Tuesday, December 30, 2008

The Freedom of Speech in Source Codes and Conferences

Richard Stallman was in Kolkata recently. He made the inaugural speech at a Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) conference held in Science City. Some of you may know Richard Stallman; he’s the man behind the GNU GPL (GNU’s Not Unix, General Public License) free software license. Free software is a big deal for some people, programmers, I.T. professionals, companies that deal in I.T. solutions and distributions.

He began a movement that declared that the source code behind the program be made free, too, for the User to manipulate and play around with the program and distribute it. For him, as a programmer at MIT, it was imprisonment and simply against our fundamental Right to Freedom to contract with and be bound by the terms of Click-wrap contracts and the like that some software licenses (Read: Microsoft™) abound in.

So at the FOSS conference, Richard Stallman came onto the stage and told us that there was no such thing as ‘Free and Open Source’. It was the Free Software Movement (FSM) that he spoke for, and he shed light on a past episode with Linus Torvalds that led to the branching of the FSM into the FSM & Open Source Software Movement that has given us Linux. His speech went on to describe the advantages of adopting Free Software and discussed its many merits, at the same time dismissing Microsoft™ as a dictatorship and the U.S. Government as a terrorist organisation. He said that there were four basic freedoms associated with the Free Software Movement: 0) to run the program as you wish; 1) to make changes to the code and run the program; 2) to be able to pass on the software to your friends; 3) to be able to pass on the altered or customized code to your friends. “Free as in mukhto,” he said.

The second day witnessed a lot of new inputs on the subject and its applicability in businesses, e-governance and the legal aspects of it. The IPR Chair of our University, Prof. Shamnad Basheer was there to make a presentation on the legal aspects of FOSS (“(de)coding the Law”) in the course of which he made some use of the phrases ‘Intellectual Property’ and ‘Intellectual Property Rights’. Naturally, you would say. But St. Ignucius here took serious umbrage to it, booing during the presentation, accusing our Professor of resorting to their terminology and thus persuaded by their beliefs and denied the existence of notions like Intellectual Property at all. And fireworks followed, and we all watched, and clapped, of course.

But the audience was mostly unresponsive on both days, and was only mildly discomforted each time the firebrand speaker (with the big belly and the flaming, open hair like a has-been rockstar) came onto the stage to make his point.

The conference was quite well organized, with a comprehensive kit for every participant, and lunch and tea and snacks served on both days. Also, the range of related subjects that were touched upon along with FOSS was impressive, like FOSS and Sustainable Development, FOSS and Information Technology, FOSS and businesses. Anyone interested enough in the topics would have learnt quite a bit.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

K. C. Basu Endowment Lecture


The K. C. Basu Endowment Lecture is an annual lecture instituted by Dr. Kaushik Basu, Professor of Economics, Cornell University in his father’s name. The lecture is hosted by NUJS. The event has been graced in the past by stalwarts like Amartya Sen, Pranab Bardhan, N. R. Narayana Murthy and Joe Stiglitz. This year was no exception, with Lord Professor Meghnad Desai delivering a lecture on “Rule of Law and Indian Democracy”.

Addressing a moderately large gathering at the Science City Mini Auditorium on 23rd December 2008, Lord Desai deconstructed the fictional syncretic narrative on which many political theorists have sought to base post-independence Indian political identity. He said that the failure of this fiction is evident from the fact that so many of us today are “hyphenated Indians”, having a regional, caste-based or religious identity which competes with our national identity. The solution, he opined, is to construct a new identity based on the legal and constitutional fact that India is a unified political entity. Respect for the rule of law and the democratic ideal would reduce fragmentation. Individual identity, as opposed to group identity, would be given precedence, and individual rights and liberties would be better safeguarded.

At the end of the one hour-long lecture, there was a brief but thought-provoking question-answer session moderated by the Guest of Honour, State Finance Minister Mr. Ashim Das Gupta. The session closed with a vote of thanks from the Registrar, and the welcome announcement that light refreshments would be served outside to members of the audience.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

NLS – NFCG corporate governance moot

After a series of delays and confusion, the team for the NLS Corporate Law moot (Prateek Datta, Rohan Sahai and Mayur Bhandari) was finally formed on 10th November 2008, which incidentally was also the last date of registration for the moot! In the two weeks we had for preparing the memo, it was only in the last week that we to move beyond the realms of ‘materiality’ and ‘independence of directors’ to the actual legal issues involved!

Then the action shifted to Bangalore. From a particular ‘all girl’ team expressing sarcasm and wonder at every stage of our progress, to a team randomly asking Rohan at the Xerox shop for a copy of one of the cases we had used, the two days were full of surprises for us. The most pleasant surprise of all, of course, was winning the moot after a tense final round. Cheers to Corporate Governance (moot!)
-Mayur Bhandari (Class of 2011)

Thursday, December 11, 2008

SILP Movie Screening

The Society of International Law and Politics organised a movie screening on 11th December 2008 to commemorate World Human Rights Day on 10th December. A documentary purportedly on state sponsored terrorism, “Terror Storm” was screened in Room 006. However, the documentary turned out to be more of a conspiracy theory, holding the US, UK and Israeli governments responsible for all acts of terror occurring in the world over the past half century. The Bush and Blair administration were singled out for special mention for their role in 9/11 and the London bombings. While red-faced directors rued their mistake in screening a film without watching it first, the audience of mostly First Year students seemed to enjoy the more radical of the conspiracy theories being propounded by the maker of the documentary.

Sunday, December 7, 2008

NUJS-Herbert Smith Corporate Law Moot Court Competition


The first NUJS-Herbert Smith National Corporate Law Moot Court Competition was organised by the NUJS Moot Court Society in early December this year. The competition, sponsored by London-based firm Herbert Smith LLP, saw participation from twelve premier law schools from across the country. The moot problem revolved around the legality of derivative contracts in the wake of a hypothetical RBI Circular—an issue of great current relevance.

The competition was inaugurated on 5th December. The preliminary rounds and the quarterfinals were held the following day, while the semis and finals were held on 7th December. Several luminaries from the legal world, including High Court judges, practising advocates and partners of law firms consented to judge the speaking rounds.

NALSAR, Hyderabad and GLC, Mumbai met in the finals, where NALSAR emerged victorious. NLU, Jodhpur won best memo, and Parnika Chaturvedi from NLU was awarded Best Speaker. Mr. Balai Chandra Roy, Advocate General, West Bengal was the chief guest for the finals, which were held in Vidyut Bhavan, Karunamoyee. Ironically for a corporate law-related moot sponsored by a corporate law firm, the Chief Guest in his valedictory speech emphasised the importance of graduates from national law universities joining the Bar instead of being lured into the corporate world.

After three hectic days, the organisers, volunteers and participants got a chance to unwind at the after-moot party held at the Nicco Super Bowl. NUJS has always been a force to reckon with in the field of mooting, but the efficient way in which the NUJS-Herbert Smith Moot was conducted will no doubt add to the prestige of the college.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Moot Corpus Fund

The days of penurious mooters are over. No longer may they be seen tearing their hair and gnashing their teeth at the sight of flight charges and registration fees or compiling Indian GDP stats in order to apply for Rego-waivers from tournament organizers. In a landmark move, the University has decided to allocate the surplus funds from the CLAT registration fees to fund ALL mooting competitions which it participates in. For subsequent years, these funds shall be placed in a special Moot Corpus, whose interest shall be utilized to fund future competitions. From Manfred Lachs to MP Law, all Moot teams have been heard to whoop and yell in joy at this move, and veterans have been seen to shake their heads in disbelief and wonder why this had not been their comeback year.