440m!

montabone

That’s how much climb I have in the 1.15 hour basic run here in Asti region. Could be 18-19K total.

I have now Suunto X3HR, an out-of-date model, but my first-ever heart rate monitor. Got it free, and the only reason I took it was the altimeter… Not that the heart rate measurements would be interesting. In the 1.15 / 440m climb run I had 148 avg and 169 max. In uphill it was usually about 165, and downhill about 130, even less. Today did an easier 7K with 138 avg and 158 max. Even though it included 150m uphill…

We have a deal!

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Just signed an intellectual property agreement with Microsoft as a start-up CEO. We are going public in the coming weeks. But right now I need a cold beer…

Libertine, art and censorship

It always feels great to find new artist. Today I found Mylene Farmer. Grazy. Wikipedia tells me she has sold more than 45 million albums. It’s all about the language barrier which affects everything. For example her videos beat everything else on YouTube in how explicit they are. Take Libertine as an example:

Sex sells? I disagree. This would not sell if the video would lack “art form” and if the music would be something else than perfect pop. Kate Ryan has performed some remakes. Compare Libertine here:

Cheaper video, no content. Passes all censors but looks uninteresting. Music is more upbeat, and technically perhaps more polished and pervasive. Like pretty much all “art form” today: a quick cover-up. Tastes good though…

Biznes, part II

I wrote about my business ventures three months ago. Things move quickly. The list looks now as follows:

  • NTFS-3G, an innovative open source start-up providing plug & play Windows file system interoperability for consumer electronics and other embedded systems.
  • DJ Online, the online music distribution system that last month closed a round from private investors and is now selling like bananas.

Other plans are more or less on hold.

Constitutional law in the Finnish courts and academia

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Gained exceptional court victory on Thursday: our Supreme Administrative Court found last fall’s e-voting experiment unlawful and ordered new elections.

Some afterthoughts. The decision came after a vote. One judge out of five would have accepted the lower court’s opinion. A three judge panel of Helsinki Administrative Court said in January unanimously that losing 2% of votes cast was not critical and cited “state’s constitutional rights” as a legal argument to maintain flawed results. On this background, I feel disappointed the Supreme Administrative Court made a narrow legal decision, citing mainly paragraphs from the election statute and without discussing the constitutional rights basis at all. The decision’s value as a legal precedent is thus seriously limited.

Why? We did argue the constitutional basis of the case in length. We cited and quoted German Constitutional Court’s and European Court of Human Rights’ decisions. We cited and quoted Council of Europe’s report, with the basis on constitutional law. No impact. Nothing.

As a practicing lawyer, my own hunch is that constitutional rights remain a forbidden or worthless legal source in the Finnish courts. Any kind of more “practical” written source — be it parliamentary preparatory material, prior case or scholarly commentary — beats all constitutional law argument hands down. Our courts and judges are not prepared to assess constitutional law arguments as they require open pro & contra argumentation. These things were not teached at law school. These things cannot be learned from prior Finnish cases or tradition.

I am also sceptical that our courts would change their existing practice anytime soon. At the very same date we got the winning decision, I also received the latest issue of the leading Finnish law journal Lakimies. No matter our courts do not recognize constitutional rights, there are a bunch of academics writing about them and their application in every other issue in that particular journal alone. Once more there is a 20+ page theoretical piece assessing some high-level options (mainly parliamentary and judicial) to review constitutional rights. That article, like so many others in this debate, has absolutely no connection to the Finnish courts. The article is too theoretical and thick in academic jargon for anyone who tries to actually use constitutional rights arguments before the courts. Also, it gives no guidance for a judge who must face the question: how the hell do I write a legal opinion on a constitutional right argument without losing my credibility?