Notes 1. By a rough estimate made by the Consumer Project on Technology based on a compulsory license that West granted to the U

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问题 Notes
1. By a rough estimate made by the Consumer Project on Technology based on a compulsory license that West granted to the U. S. Justice Department, the cost of renting access to a single year of federal court cases—some 15,000 cases—comes to $40,500 for a single user.
2. The most comprehensive history of the struggle to break West Publishing’s monopoly and institute a regime of universal citation for federal cases is an essay by Jol Silversmith, "Universal Citation: The Fullest Possible Dissemination of Judgments," originally published in the now-defunct Internet Legal Practice Newsletter in May 1997.
3. Franz Kafka, The Trial (translated by Willa and Edwin Muir, 1988), cited in Silversmith, ibid.
4. See, e. g. , Reuter, "Justices, Judges Took Favors from Publisher with Pending Cases," Washington Post, March 6, 1995; John J. Odlund, "Debate Rages Over Who Owns the Law," The Minneapolis Star Tribune. March 5-6, 1995, reprinted in the Congressional Record, July 28, 1995 (Senate).
5. HyperLaw Inc. v. West Publishing. See David Cay Johnston, "West Publishing Loses a Decision on Copyright," New York Times, May 21, 1997, p. D1.
6. The courts in Great Britain, however, have adopted a public-domain, technology-neutral citation system based upon paragraph numbering. See "Neutral Citation of Judgments System is Introduced", The Times (London), January 16, 2001.
John J. Odlund’s "Debate Rages Over Who Owns the Law" was published by

选项 A、Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990.
B、The Minneapolis Star Tribune.
C、The now-defunct Internet Legal Practice Newsletter.
D、The Atlantic, October 1995.

答案B

解析 根据提问,迅速查找到提及John J. Odlund’s “Debate Rages Over Who Owns the Law”的注释4。
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