DUI and Open Source Software
'I'm not drunk, your software is'
Tom Sanders in California, vnunet.com 20 Oct 2005
"A Florida court will hear arguments on Friday in a case where the accuracy of a breathalyser is being scrutinised because the manufacturer has refused to release the source code.
Lawyers representing more than 150 defendants who have been charged for driving under the influence of alcohol in two Florida counties will file the request.
They argue that they have a right to see the source code of the alcohol breath analyser that was used to determine their clients' guilt. . .
A Florida court will hear arguments on Friday in a case where the accuracy of a breathalyser is being scrutinised because the manufacturer has refused to release the source code. . . They argue that they have a right to see the source code of the alcohol breath analyser that was used to determine their clients' guilt."
Tom Sanders in California, vnunet.com 20 Oct 2005
"A Florida court will hear arguments on Friday in a case where the accuracy of a breathalyser is being scrutinised because the manufacturer has refused to release the source code.
Lawyers representing more than 150 defendants who have been charged for driving under the influence of alcohol in two Florida counties will file the request.
They argue that they have a right to see the source code of the alcohol breath analyser that was used to determine their clients' guilt. . .
A Florida court will hear arguments on Friday in a case where the accuracy of a breathalyser is being scrutinised because the manufacturer has refused to release the source code. . . They argue that they have a right to see the source code of the alcohol breath analyser that was used to determine their clients' guilt."


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