Popular on Rezul
- Heads on Beds- Virtual Estate Agency- Flat-Fee Pricing- Client Virtual Office- Multiligual Platform - 101
 - Jaipur's Savista Retreat announces $299 all-inclusive nightly rate for two for the 2026 season, including meals and city-center transfers
 - Bookmakers Review Releases 2028 Democratic Nominee Betting Odds: Newsom Leads Early Field
 - Root Canal Specialist In Frederick Maryland Joins Pearlfection Dentistry
 - Hiclean Tools Releases HCX2100 Electric Pressure Washer
 - Some Music for Donald's Bad Day
 - Legacy Realty Advisors Celebrates Four Years of Impact and Innovation in Tulsa Real Estate
 - CCHR: Opening State and Private Mental Hospitals Could Fuel Worsening Outcomes
 - Events by Dubsdread Sets the Table for Unforgettable Weddings, Corporate Events, and Social Gatherings in Winter Park, Florida
 - Heritage at South Brunswick Announces New Single-Family Home Collection
 
Similar on Rezul
- Qvarz LLC Expands Global Reach with High-Precision Quartz Cuvettes and Optical Components
 - Frost Locker: New Research Reveals Mild Cold—Not Extreme Cold—Delivers Real Health Benefits of Cold Therapy
 - Launch of Professional Private Autopsy Services to Support Families, Professionals, and Researchers
 - Mysterious Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Appears to Pause Near Mars, Exhibiting Periodic Light Pulses
 - Postmortem Pathology Delivers Expert Private Autopsy Services with Compassion and Precision
 - CCHR: Misinformation Clouds Debate on Psychiatric Drug Toxicology Transparency
 - Mensa Foundation's New Science Program Encourages Hands-On Discovery
 - Pepperdine University Malibu, California and Community Partners Recognized with 2025 ReadyCommunities Partnership National Service Award
 - CCHR Exposes Conflicted Psychiatrists Behind Teen Antidepressant Surge
 - CCHR: VA's Psychiatric Treatments Betray Veterans, Fuel Suicide and Death
 
2025 Nobel Prize Physics Used by Law Professor Back in 1961
Rezul News/10717045
Quantum Weirdness Led to Legal Weirdness and to "FOO" in Computer Programs
WASHINGTON - Rezul -- The Nobel Prize in Physics was just awarded (https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/physics/2025/...) to three scientists "for the discovery of macroscopic quantum mechanical tunneling and energy quantisation in an electric circuit," based primarily upon experiments conducted in 1984 and 1985.
But interestingly, more than 20 years earlier, an MIT student published a paper describing how he used that same quantum tunneling effect to produce a circuit which used only one active element to create a flip-flop circuit.
A flip-flop circuit is the basic circuit used in all computers to permit it to calculate using binary numbers (0 or 1). See Banzhaf, "One Tunnel-Diode Flip-Flop," PROC. IRE, vol. 49, p. 622; March, 1961.
It was the first published article by John Banzhaf, who went on to obtain two U.S. patents, showed that computer programs could be protected by copyrighting them, helped update U.S. copyright law to include computers and data processing, and wrote one of the first articles explaining how the law applied to computers. See Banzhaf, "When Your Computer Needs a Lawyer," 11 Communications of the ACM, Number 8, 1968 (https://www.google.com/url?esrc=s&q=&rct=j&sa=U&url=https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/363567.363573&ved=2ahUKEwjKwpTot5OQAxWqNmIAHZeMBYsQFnoECAYQAg&usg=AOvVaw2lzQ1FXTz0ix8IKEKt20Q4)
More on Rezul News
But that wasn't his first article about the law. Before going from studying physics and circuit design at MIT to studying law at Columbia Law School, Banzhaf wrote an article explaining "Murphy's Law." See Banzhaf, The Laws of Murphy and Finagle, 1958 (http://banzhaf.net/by/MurphysLaw.pdf)
Then, just a few years ago, he was surprised to read studies (http://banzhaf.net/by/BanzhafsFirstLawArticle.html) showing that this early Murphy Law article played a role in the prominent use of the word "FOO" by computer programmers ever since, and continuing to this very day.
He knew that he may be one of the oldest living hackers (http://banzhaf.net/by/VOODOOPhoneHacking.pdf), but never dreamed that an article he wrote back in 1958 would have a significant influence on the programming of computers in 2025.
Banzhaf's novel flip-flop circuit, which he designed and then successfully tested, utilized the concept of quantum tunneling; one aspect of what has often been called "quantum weirdness" (aspects of quantum mechanics that challenge and defy human physical intuition). . .
More on Rezul News
Subsequently he made use of what might be termed legal weirdness: unearthing a concept virtually unknown at the time to help obtain special prosecutors for Richard Nixon, resurrecting a 15th century legal concept to force Spiro Agnew to return the money he took in bribes, expanding a little known legal concept to drive cigarette commercials from our airwaves, virtually inventing the concept of corrective advertising, and much more.
So both quantum mechanics and law have a certain weirdness, says the law professor, and he was able to utilize it in both seemingly foreign different fields.
http://banzhaf.net/ jbanzhaf3ATgmail.com @profbanzhaf
But interestingly, more than 20 years earlier, an MIT student published a paper describing how he used that same quantum tunneling effect to produce a circuit which used only one active element to create a flip-flop circuit.
A flip-flop circuit is the basic circuit used in all computers to permit it to calculate using binary numbers (0 or 1). See Banzhaf, "One Tunnel-Diode Flip-Flop," PROC. IRE, vol. 49, p. 622; March, 1961.
It was the first published article by John Banzhaf, who went on to obtain two U.S. patents, showed that computer programs could be protected by copyrighting them, helped update U.S. copyright law to include computers and data processing, and wrote one of the first articles explaining how the law applied to computers. See Banzhaf, "When Your Computer Needs a Lawyer," 11 Communications of the ACM, Number 8, 1968 (https://www.google.com/url?esrc=s&q=&rct=j&sa=U&url=https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/363567.363573&ved=2ahUKEwjKwpTot5OQAxWqNmIAHZeMBYsQFnoECAYQAg&usg=AOvVaw2lzQ1FXTz0ix8IKEKt20Q4)
More on Rezul News
- Arnica Unveils "Arnie AI" to Secure the Future of AI-Driven Software Development
 - Axiros North America Announces New CEO: Gabriel Davidov
 - CCHR Exposes Harms Behind Today's Mental Health Awareness Campaigns
 - Now Is the Right Time: Kaltra Highlights Its Proven Replacement Microchannel Coils
 - How to Optimize Your Website for AI Search with DeepRank AI
 
But that wasn't his first article about the law. Before going from studying physics and circuit design at MIT to studying law at Columbia Law School, Banzhaf wrote an article explaining "Murphy's Law." See Banzhaf, The Laws of Murphy and Finagle, 1958 (http://banzhaf.net/by/MurphysLaw.pdf)
Then, just a few years ago, he was surprised to read studies (http://banzhaf.net/by/BanzhafsFirstLawArticle.html) showing that this early Murphy Law article played a role in the prominent use of the word "FOO" by computer programmers ever since, and continuing to this very day.
He knew that he may be one of the oldest living hackers (http://banzhaf.net/by/VOODOOPhoneHacking.pdf), but never dreamed that an article he wrote back in 1958 would have a significant influence on the programming of computers in 2025.
Banzhaf's novel flip-flop circuit, which he designed and then successfully tested, utilized the concept of quantum tunneling; one aspect of what has often been called "quantum weirdness" (aspects of quantum mechanics that challenge and defy human physical intuition). . .
More on Rezul News
- New Free Science Bingo Cards Help Grade 1 Students Learn Through Play
 - New Leadership Team Acquires Coldwell Banker Premium Realty in Lake Worth
 - AvranceCorp Developments Set to Expand With New Corporate Headquarters
 - DeployHub Joins Catalyst Campus SDA TAP Lab
 - Veterans Day 2025: Virginia Veterans Can Claim Free Words of Veterans Book Vouchers
 
Subsequently he made use of what might be termed legal weirdness: unearthing a concept virtually unknown at the time to help obtain special prosecutors for Richard Nixon, resurrecting a 15th century legal concept to force Spiro Agnew to return the money he took in bribes, expanding a little known legal concept to drive cigarette commercials from our airwaves, virtually inventing the concept of corrective advertising, and much more.
So both quantum mechanics and law have a certain weirdness, says the law professor, and he was able to utilize it in both seemingly foreign different fields.
http://banzhaf.net/ jbanzhaf3ATgmail.com @profbanzhaf
Source: Public Interest Law Professor John Banzhaf
0 Comments
Latest on Rezul News
      - SecurePII Raises US$3.5M (A$5M) to Unlock AI and Compliance for Voice Data and Expands Global Presence
 - Peter Coe Verbica Stands with Rural Families and Horse Owners: "Keep Horses Classified as Livestock"
 - The Mobile-First Company Raises $12M to Build Simple, Powerful Software for Small Teams
 - Lick Pineapple Flavored Massage Oil Outperforming and Enticing
 - Spencer Buys Houses Local Home Buying Service Focused on Speed, Fairness, and Simplicity
 - Cerberus ODC in Collaboration with NVIDIA Launches All-American AI-RAN Stack, Enabling AI-Native 5G Today and Accelerating the Path to 6G
 - National Compliance Firm issues Artificial Intelligence Policy Program for Mortgage Banking
 - Pastor Darrell Armstrong Suspends Gubernatorial Campaign And Endorses Mikie Sherrill
 - Dr. Johnny Shanks Attends Full Arch Growth Conference 2025
 - Offline Asset Protection: NJTRX Implements 98 Percent Cold Storage as Industry Faces 2 Billion USD Losses
 - Thousands of Smiles, Millions of Logo Views: RoarFun Brings Emotions Into Premium Retail Spaces with Formula Simulator for Immersive Brand Activation
 - Qvarz LLC Expands Global Reach with High-Precision Quartz Cuvettes and Optical Components
 - $300 Million Web3 Initiative and ZIGChain Partnership Power $20 Target in Noble Capital Markets Report for SEGG Media (N A S D A Q: SEGG)
 - Stillwater Architects Redefines Luxury Living with Bespoke Remodeling and Renovations in Boulder, CO & Big Sky, MT
 - David Weekley Homes Scores Lucky 7 at 2025 Atlanta Obie Awards
 - Assent Recognizes Manufacturers for Leading Supply Chain Sustainability Programs
 - Arc Longevity Sells Out Debut Women's Creatine Gummy
 - Frost Locker: New Research Reveals Mild Cold—Not Extreme Cold—Delivers Real Health Benefits of Cold Therapy
 - Phinge, Home of Netverse, Through its Extensive Software & Hardware Patent Portfolio, Shows Founder & CEO Robert DeMaio's Vision & Innovation
 - Denver Apartment Finders Launches Redesigned Homepage, Making Denver Apartment Search Easier for Houston Residents