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Treasury Department Is Warning Publishers... Monday, March 1. 2004

#1 User is offline   K1NGWARREN Icon

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Posted 01 March 2004 - 01:39 AM

QUOTE
Treasury Department Is Warning Publishers of the Perils of Criminal Editing of the Enemy
Monday, March 1. 2004

Writers often grumble about the criminal things editors do to their prose. The federal government has recently weighed in on the same issue — literally.

It has warned publishers they may face grave legal consequences for editing manuscripts from Iran and other disfavored nations, on the ground that such tinkering amounts to trading with the enemy.

Anyone who publishes material from a country under a trade embargo is forbidden to reorder paragraphs or sentences, correct syntax or grammar, or replace "inappropriate words," according to several advisory letters from the Treasury Department in recent months.

Adding illustrations is prohibited, too. To the baffled dismay of publishers, editors and translators who have been briefed about the policy, only publication of "camera-ready copies of manuscripts" is allowed.

The Treasury letters concerned Iran. But the logic, experts said, would seem to extend to Cuba, Libya, North Korea and other nations with which most trade is banned without a government license.

Laws and regulations prohibiting trade with various nations have been enforced for decades, generally applied to items like oil, wheat, nuclear reactors and, sometimes, tourism. Applying them to grammar, spelling and punctuation is an infuriating interpretation, several people in the publishing industry said.


http://www.nytimes.c...nal/28PUBL.html


The Treasury Department also specified that the above texts can only be printed on paper which burns at precicely 451 degrees Fahrenheit.
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#2 User is offline   jyd Icon

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Posted 01 March 2004 - 03:12 PM

reminds me a little bit of this
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