Raymond G. Taylor
Bio
Author living in Kent, England. Writer of short stories and poems in a wide range of genres, forms and styles. A non-fiction writer for 40+ years. Subjects include art, history, science, business, law, and the human condition.
Stories (636)
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Wikipedia shysters
Have you donated to the Wikimedia Foundation this Christmas? Have you ever donated to keep Wikipedia free and ads free? If you have, you might like to know that you have helped contribute to a huge fortune controlled by Wikipedia's parent Wikimedia Foundation.
By Raymond G. Taylorabout a month ago in 01
Which AI. AI-Generated.
Which is best: Chat-GPT or Google Gemini? Don't ask me, I have no idea. Well, actually, I do now. Why? Because I asked my 'AI' friend Gemini (a large language model, trained by Google and based on the Gemini architecture). Are the answers I got from Gemini accurate? Who knows? For that matter, who cares? If accuracy was an issue I would check and verify, just like when I read a non-fiction article or book for any serious research I might be doing. Come on, folks, it ain't rocket science.
By Raymond G. Taylor2 months ago in Futurism
What is space law?
Space law is a body of legal principle, an area of law, defined by its subject matter and the human activities it covers, rather than a specific jurisdiction or location. Space law is among a growing number of emerging categories of law, along with others such as media law or environment law, which ‘retain the idea of keeping study and teaching within categories defined by a body of legal principle which corresponds with common law or statute’ (Bartie, 2010, p350). The body of legal principle that forms the core of space law is found in international law, as might be expected, given the acceptance during the latter half of the twentieth century, of international legal regimes underpinning the law of other areas beyond national jurisdiction: the sea, air space and Antarctica.
By Raymond G. Taylor2 months ago in 01














