Best franchising law books according to redditors

We found 13 Reddit comments discussing the best franchising law books. We ranked the 8 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Franchising Law:

u/lawstudent2 · 27 pointsr/technology

Said in mocking tone: "Aw, boo."

> It's more likely the downvotes were from people in the computer security field who understand that the internet is the 2012 version of the wild fucking west

Sad for you, I actually have worked in computer security, now I'm a lawyer who specializes in intellectual property and internet law, I'm in-house for a company that makes, among other things, enterprise grade security software, and that is just total fucking bullshit. Everything you are saying is infuriatingly wrong.

In the last 30 years, there have been fifteen sets of laws passed by the US congress directly regulating online behavior.

Not only that, this:
> Most of the outcry over CISPA has been from the people who want to keep the internet some sort of lawless land where they can anonymously download their fill of horse porn while some other guy steals 4 million identities and sells them to fraud mills in taiwan and china.

Is just utter fucking bullshit. I don't even know where to start: the internet is not just for horse porn, and your argument saying that open = evil is a classic 'moral panic' argument, the opennness of the internet is precisely what has allowed google, airbnb, amazon, twitter and foursquare to work, and if you cannot understand that horse-porn is an unfortunate but necessary externality of this open-ness, it is because you are a dumbass; the people who write this legislation don't know how to check their own fucking email, and are utterly unqualified to be doing this; identity theft is already illegal and passing new laws about using computers in identity theft won't make it less common; local law is not going to regulate behavior in china; the list goes on.

The only 'wild west'-ness of the internet is that computers are general computation machines, and code can be run on them to do pretty much anything, but, other than that, the internet is regulated by all the same laws that your behavior IRL is regulated by. It has multiple governing bodies, ranging from the US courts to the UN and Icann. Many thick textbooks and treatises exist on internet law. Not just that, but, if you have read Code 2.0 by Larry Lessig, and it is abundantly clear you have not, you would know that law simply doesn't change the way the internet works, it just changes what you can throw people in jail for. So, basically, CISPA and SOPA do not make the internet a better place or reduce cybercrime, and, even, if they were perfect, it is still theoretically impossible for these bills to accomplish those goals, and, often the proposed legislation makes the problem worse. It is literally outside the possible realm of law to stop people from being gullible idiots and falling for nigerian scammers.

So, basically, everything you have said is wrong, and, sadly for you, I not only have a JD, but my first career was in IT, and just... nothing you are saying is right, and not only is it wrong, it is just retweeting the hysterical nonsense of copyright maximalist groups and people who are paroxysmically and unjustifiably afraid of terrorism and willing to throw their rights away because one time a few brown people did a thing with some planes. I sincerely hate that this was your answer, because this is precisely the sort of bullshit that makes me so fucking depressed: not only are your arguments wrong, they are based on luddite misconceptions, actively hinder progress, are not shared by experts, and, most importantly they employed rhetorical devices designed to make your opponents look like criminals and pornographers, so, sincerely, go fuck yourself. I am not 'implying' that you are a pornographer or a criminal, I'm actively calling you a douche, and I fully stand by my decision to openly call you a douche and claim your contribution to the debate as a detriment to society, because at least I'm being goddamn upfront about it.

u/wrineha2 · 16 pointsr/badeconomics

I'm sure you are aware of the public choice literature on this subject, so I will skip that. But on the issue of jurisprudence, there is very little.

The classic text in political science is Riker's "Liberalism Against Populism." Also, if you want to spring for the law text book, there is this one. But I cannot attest to its quality.

A good article on the implications of Arrow, which it seems you want, is "Congress Is a 'They,' Not an 'It': Legislative Intent as Oxymoron."

I was researching this topic a couple months back in the context of public interest, the animating theory behind a number of government agencies. So, if you find anything else, do let me know.

u/Malician · 5 pointsr/LetsTalkMusic

This is posted as a second reply, because I mean to answer your question directly and to the best of my ability regardless of how you clarify your last line.

The idea that trespassing on intellectual property rights is akin to stealing is not accepted by everyone. I think it's fair to say that you portray opposing perspectives as rationalizations which do not merit extensive debate; not only heterodox positions, but thinly veiled excuses for participating in behavior everyone really knows is bad.

This perspective is not new. I highly recommend reading William Patry's book on the subject; he is without question one of the most well studied and best copyright lawyers in the world today, and he illustrates why a false and manufactured moral viewpoint regarding the subject of intellectual property has been used by minority interests to pass bad law.

(Of course, from your perspective, this consists of protecting the minority's rights, rather than unnecessarily restricting behavior in order to create artificial monopolies which do not favor creation or innovation).

I can understand this, and instead of saying that these are merely rationalizations to appropriate rights you do not deserve so that you may profit from them, I accept them at face value. However, after reading your post and the attitude it takes, I feel that I may be far too charitable.

edit: When I speak of a false and manufactured moral viewpoint, I certainly do not regard all maximalist copyright rhetoric as such, or all its supporters. Instead, I suspect it can be generalized as the main motivation behind the most powerful backers of excessive restriction, while other individuals may well share similar concerns for very different reasons.

From your perspective, it seems obvious that anyone who disagrees with you does so primarily because they want free things - that they should lose the argument by default. While this may or may not be true, I feel that you have not proved it and do not need to use this tactic. You can still illustrate the reasons why major backers of copyright reform have taken their positions (and refute specific arguments you find incorrect) without pidgeonholing your opponents' views.

u/Bob_Sconce · 4 pointsr/legaladvice

I think you just want to argue. In that case, go to /r/legaladviceofftopic

I'd point you to this book, for a broad description: https://www.amazon.com/End-Ownership-Personal-Property-Information/dp/0262035014/

I'd also refer you to:
Verner v. Autodesk at https://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-9th-circuit/1537762.html

ProCD v. Zeidenburg at https://www.law.cornell.edu/copyright/cases/86_F3d_1447.htm

MAI Systems v. Peak Computer

and, Nimmer on Copyright talks about it as well

u/GeneralJohnStark · 3 pointsr/AskAnAmerican

Internal Revenue Code; US Tax, IRS, and Related Law, Title 26 USC https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00COW2GYU/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_blTtzbHR88QQF

u/atleast5letters · 2 pointsr/law

E&Es; my LLM friend last year wouldn't even go to class and just study each class for two weeks and do well on his final. E&Es explain the concepts better than classes do anyways (law school isn't geared toward good pedagogy).

u/[deleted] · 2 pointsr/law
u/ell20 · 2 pointsr/Entrepreneur

yeah, based on your original post, I imagine you're someone who has some experience doing this already. The difference is just that you need to have a different approach with investors as the language they speak is completely different.

Big things they'll care about:

- ROI, how long to turn a profit

- Usage of funds, and your ability to execute on the initiatives

- Risk factors and how you manage it

- how much do they get (i.e. equity) and how much do they need to put in

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make sure that your numbers can be justified somehow. Most startups have a problem with financial projections and so most investors don't take it seriously except as a shorthand for magnitude and it often serves more of a proxy as the team's realistic expectations. Being able to show where this might come from (in a more detailed due diligence meeting, of course.) will help build credibility for the numbers and demonstrate your acumen in the industry, which will be a huge boon to your chances of closing a deal.

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Some other notes:

- raising money from investors can take anywhere between 3-6 months if you do it full time. During this time, you really can't mind the other operational stuff. So make sure whatever other things you have on your plate is well greased and can run effectively without you.

- A crowdfunding campaign can also take a significant amount of time. Usually, we're looking at 3 months to properly build a campaign, launch, and get people to put money in. So make sure you spend a lot of time on socializing the concept first before actually launching the campaign. And don't forget that you need to spend money on collateral like videos and such. That costs can be anywhere between 1500 to 10K depending up production value. I would stay away from crowd equity platforms as those tend to give incredibly bad deals for both investors and companies. I would instead gate incentives behind it and treat it more like pre-sales and validation for ACTUAL investors if you go this route.

- There are a variety of instruments available for investors to do this with. Equity (common stock) and debt is the most common, but don't forget things like convertible notes, senior debt, etc. I would get a book on term sheets before you draft the agreement.

u/NoMordacAllowed · 1 pointr/techsupport

Thanks - that just opens up more questions, though.

Audited for what? Was there some contract you had signed? What could they do, and how did they get away with this setup? What exactly were they licensing? The "right" to hook up clients to a server doesn't seem like something M$ has any say in.

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If you don't have more info that's fine. This is just baffling to me. I know server licenses are typically extra-idiotic anyway, but this sounds like a whole "new" End of Ownership type thing I'm unfamiliar with.