>>5
Ukraine is Russia's vassal. They'll do what they are told to do. That's how they shut down the gas pipelines and half of the country's population froze to death.
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Anonymous2012-09-20 15:24
>>5
Yep. In practice Ukraine has no sovereignty, that is why you get prison sentence there for antisemitism. Same for Japan, which, despite having no Jewish population, punishes its antisemites by orders from U.S. I.e. Japan treats its own citizens worse than foreign Jews.
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Anonymous2012-09-20 15:25
>>6
Both Russia and U.S. are Jew-controlled countries. So this changes nothing. Want freedom - kill Jews.
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Anonymous2012-09-20 15:41
Leaving aside the Judenfrage, I guess another patent-free country would be BEST KOREA.
And I say "I guess" because no one could know for sure but Alejandro Cao de Benós, who incidentally is a IT consultant.
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Anonymous2012-09-20 16:46
Onionland
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Anonymous2012-09-20 20:04
>>9
Hah. I do suppose I can pick some shit-tier niggerland with no patent laws as the basis for a software company. I am really getting sick of MPEG LA's bullshit.
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Anonymous2012-09-21 8:28
>>6
That happened when they were US-puppets you idiot
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Anonymous2012-09-21 8:38
>>11 I can pick some shit-tier niggerland with no patent laws as the basis for a software company.
Doubt that. If some Iran refuses to persecute for patent infringement, U.S. will just bomb it together with countries, which refused to embargo infringer.
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Anonymous2012-09-21 8:41
>>13
And if Iran by some chance has enough army strength to deter U.S., it will quickly implement own national patent system, parallel to the U.S. one and, after some time, will merge with U.S., persecuting you in process.
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Anonymous2012-09-21 8:46
>>13
They are already on the to-be-bombed list due to other fundamental disputes, so you can easily infringe copyright as long as the said bombing date arrives.
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Anonymous2012-09-21 9:08
>>15
There are no there reason, but subordination.
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Anonymous2012-09-21 10:57
>>13
Iran's a bad idea. I mean, they probably won't like the idea of a software company that creates cryptographic privacy-enhancing software right within its borders.
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Anonymous2012-09-21 11:01
There's plenty of EU countries that don't yet know whether they recognize them or not. Pick one that is particularly unfriendly to the USA, make software, get sued, win the trial then create the precedent.