People who had tiny plastic particles lodged in a key blood vessel were more likely to experience serious health problems or die during a three-year study
Embarrassing that some states still fund non-public research. For people who are unaware, scientific articles have a DOI. Enter this in scihub, and you will probably find a pirated version of the paper.
If someone were prosecuted for pirating research papers which they, as someone who pays tax in a country which funded that research, have any likelihood of success in using that point as a defence? Or if they made the paper available to residents of that country?
Am sure corporate interests & standard neoliberalism would move swiftly to stifle any such angle of attack, but still.
Whatever about anywhere else, within the US, the foundational concept of no taxation without representation could apply here without much stretch.
Embarrassing that some states still fund non-public research. For people who are unaware, scientific articles have a DOI. Enter this in scihub, and you will probably find a pirated version of the paper.
It’s not available in scihub too.
If someone were prosecuted for pirating research papers which they, as someone who pays tax in a country which funded that research, have any likelihood of success in using that point as a defence? Or if they made the paper available to residents of that country?
Am sure corporate interests & standard neoliberalism would move swiftly to stifle any such angle of attack, but still.
Whatever about anywhere else, within the US, the foundational concept of no taxation without representation could apply here without much stretch.
Aaron Schwartz has entered the chat