Notes1. By a rough estimate made by the Consumer Project on Technology based on

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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. [br] 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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