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Hispanic Actor(s) - Seattle
- Project
ID # 31856
| Project Type |
Commercials
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Submission Type |
SRN
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| Location |
Tacoma WA |
Union |
Non-union
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| Rate/Pay |
$250.00 per event
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Release Date |
04-27-06
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| Audition Date |
12-31-69
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Submission Deadline |
04-27-06
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| Shoot Date |
12-31-69
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| Casting Category |
Commercials - Non-SAG
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| Market(s) |
Seattle, WA |
These are non-speaking roles (unless we decide to improv on the spot).
Scheduled for a 1 day shoot. Pay is $250. Non-union.
Note: This is a self-response notification. If you fit the role criteria and are interested in this project, please see the submission info below the role description.
NOTE: ALL TALENT UNDER THE AGE OF 18 MUST BE ACCOMPANIED BY A PARENT OR LEGAL GUARDIAN AT ALL TIMES
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Seeking 1 talent(s) for this role
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1 - Male, late 30's to 40's (Father)
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Searchable talent specs:
Gender: Male Age: from 35 to 50 Ethnicity: Hispanic - |
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Seeking 1 talent(s) for this role
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2 - Female, 6 - 8 years old, (Daughter)
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Searchable talent specs:
Gender: Female Age: from 5 to 10 Ethnicity: Hispanic - |
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Had it been convicted, Elcomsoft could have been fined $2 million with additional penalties if willful intent was determined
"They built a tool, and sure that tool could be misused by some people but nobody alleged they themselves committed any infringement," said Fred von Lohmann, senior intellectual property attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a leading DMCA critic law enforcement agencies including the FBI and the Department of Justice
The defense had argued that the Elcomsoft's program merely enabled owners of the eBook Reader to exercise their rights to "fair use" under copyright law, including making copies of e-books for backups, transfers to other devices and other personal use
The case was an important test of consumers' rights to use digital movies, images and books they legally obtain
The case against Elcomsoft Ltd was the most high-profile criminal prosecution under the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which many in the technology industry consider unduly restrictive
The court held that permitting such software would deprive movie studios of revenues because copies of DVDs can be instantly circulated online Whyte to clarify the "fair use" definition shortly after deliberations began S Adobe has been concerned about any perception that copyright content isn't secure "
Elcomsoft president Alex Katalov said the program that triggered the prosecution is no longer being sold in Russia or anywhere else
District Judge Ronald M
Prosecutors had tried to prove that the Elcomsoft software was illegal because it permitted owners to freely distribute copyright material, encouraging piracy
"I don't see it as throwing a blanket on DMCA," Burton said "Under the eBook formats, you have no rights at all, and the jury had trouble with that concept," said Strader Frewing had told jurors that the Russians "were selling a burglar tool for software to make a profit
The young Elcomsoft programmer who developed the software, Dmitry Sklyarov, became a lightning rod for hacker rights when he was arrested last year after attending a hacker convention in Las Vegas
But prosecutors continued to press charges against Sklyarov " He quickly left the courtroom after the verdict and had no immediate comment
Defense attorney Joe Burton said the government failed to prove Elcomsoft intended to violate the law, but predicted more prosecutions
The copyright act under which Elcomsoft was tried prohibits the production and distribution of any product that circumvents security features of digital media
During the 10 days the software was offered in the summer of 2001, about 20 copies were sold worldwide, including nine in the United States
Two other criminal cases, both against individuals, ended in plea agreements
Adobe had complained to the FBI after the software became available for download in the United States, for around $99 Adobe eventually dropped its support of the charges against Sklyarov after Internet policy groups threatened to organize a boycott of the company's products
Russian Software Firm Found Innocent
Dec 18, 10:43 AM EST
A federal jury on Tuesday acquitted a Russian software firm of digital copyright violations for creating a program that cracks the security features of Adobe Systems' electronic book software
Jury foreman Dennis Strader said that argument had a big impact on the jurors, who asked U "It will take another case to test that Adobe said Tuesday it was disappointed but stood by its original decision to report Elcomsoft's activities to prosecutors
Though Adobe provides the software for viewing e-books free on computers, the program for creating such books sells for up to $10,000 per copy
The Moscow company makes a variety of code-cracking programs, and its clients include numerous U
Prosecutor Scott H
In a civil case stemming from the same provision of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, a federal appeals court in New York sided with Hollywood's major studios in upholding a ruling against a man who had posted on his Web site a program that let users decrypt and copy DVDs S
With Adobe's Acrobat eBook Reader software, publishers can set such restrictions as banning printing entirely or restricting the number of pages or allotted time for reading The assistant professor at Moscow Technical University spent several weeks in jail before the government agreed to drop charges against him in exchange for his testimony at Elcomsoft's trial