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InternetNews January 5, 2005 Roy Mark |
Court Rejects DMCA Subpoena Process ... Again Decision upholds earlier ruling that music industry must use traditional subpoenas in P2P legal wars. |
InternetNews October 12, 2004 Roy Mark |
High Court Bounces Latest RIAA Effort The U.S. Supreme Court today rejected industry's effort to revive a controversial practice that briefly forced ISPs to reveal the identities of thousands of accused peer-to-peer music pirates with no notice to the alleged infringers. |
InternetNews December 19, 2003 Roy Mark |
ISPs Win a Round in File-Swapping Tussle In a major blow to the music industry's campaign to sue individual file-swappers, court sides with Internet service providers over revealing customers' identities. |
InternetNews January 5, 2004 Roy Mark |
RIAA Lawsuits Chilling Illegal Downloads The music industry may have lost a recent round in court over its crusade against file-swapping, but a new study shows that it's got the edge in the war. |
InternetNews January 16, 2004 Roy Mark |
ISPs Ignore RIAA's New P2P Ploy A cold shoulder so far for a proposal that ISPs become agents in the battle against copyright infringement |
PC World January 2004 Andrew Brandt |
Privacy Watch: Subpoenas Can Unlock Your Privacy Under a provision of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, anyone who who claims that you violated their copyright can force your ISP to reveal your contact information. |
InternetNews February 17, 2004 Roy Mark |
RIAA Unleashes Another Round of Lawsuits For the second time this year, music industry targets more than 500 Jane and John Doe swappers for copyright infringement actions. |
InternetNews January 21, 2004 Roy Mark |
RIAA Files 532 New Lawsuits The music industry files its largest batch of copyright infringement actions to date. |
PC World April 2003 Dylan F. Tweney |
Now They're After You: Music Cops Target Users Recording industry expands focus and guns for file traders. |
PC World August 22, 2002 Stephen Chiger |
Anti-Piracy Crusade Targets ISPs RIAA drops recent suit when site folds, but consumer groups fear ongoing pressure on Internet speech. |
InternetNews March 23, 2004 Roy Mark |
RIAA Keeps Pressure on P2P Users Record companies file another 500 lawsuits against music file sharers, including those using college servers. |
InternetNews December 30, 2004 Jim Wagner |
BitTorrent Operator Bites Back at MPAA LokiTorrent, a Web site that tracks and indexes BitTorrent files, says it's setting up a legal defense fund to fight a lawsuit filed by the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA). |
InternetNews March 1, 2005 Roy Mark |
P2P Companies Set Stage for Supreme Court Appearance File-sharing software makers claim Hollywood wants to control both content and distribution by overturning Sony Betamax standard. |
InternetNews August 20, 2004 Roy Mark |
P2P War Takes Bad Turn for Hollywood Court rules P2P technology is legal even if the software itself is used for illegal purposes. |
Search Engine Watch September 26, 2007 Grant Crowell |
Copyright Law: What Search Marketers Should Know (Part 1) Most online copyright infringement issues are best handled by being diplomatic and professional, and can be handled with some simple legal procedures. |
InternetNews February 28, 2007 Roy Mark |
Fair Use Bill Would Unlock DMCA New legislation would allow consumers to make digital copies for home networks. |
PC World June 12, 2001 Scarlet Pruitt |
RIAA Makes Peace With One Site, Battles Others Listen.com follows Napster's lead, bows out of lawsuit against record labels... |
Salon.com August 23, 2001 Amita Guha |
Fingered by the movie cops Under today's digital copyright laws, you are guilty until proven innocent. I know -- it happened to me... |
PC Magazine July 7, 2011 Chloe Albanesius |
Pirates Beware, ISPs Agree to Copyright Alert System A coalition of copyright holders and ISPs like Comcast and Verizon have signed up for the "Copyright Alert System," which will provide notices to consumers if their ISP suspects there is illegal downloading going on. |
InternetNews March 27, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
ISPs Deny 'Three Strikes' Deals With RIAA Big ISPs look to quash speculation that they are on board with graduated response system to fight copyright infringement with service cancellations. |
New Architect March 2003 Bret A. Fausett |
Hooray RIAA Media companies try our patience, but they're advancing Internet law. |
Salon.com August 18, 2000 Damien Cave |
DeCSS judge: Code isn't free speech MPAA president Jack Valenti cheers the decision. Next stop: Appeals court. |
InternetNews November 4, 2004 Roy Mark |
MPAA Targets Movie Downloaders The Motion Picture Association of America plans to begin filing copyright theft lawsuits Nov. 16 against users of peer-to-peer networks who illegally trade movies over the file-swapping networks. |
Salon.com June 16, 2000 Damien Cave |
Did Judge Jackson goof? By forcing Microsoft to comply with conduct remedies in 90 days, Jackson may have put the case exactly where he doesn't want it -- in the Court of Appeals. |
Information Today March 14, 2013 George H. Pike |
Copyright Alert System to Warn, Then Punish, Peer-to-Peer File Sharing After months of delays, a coalition of content providers and Internet Service Providers launched the Copyright Alert System, a "six strikes" structure that will notify, then potentially punish users for illegal file sharing. |
PC World April 23, 2002 Tom Spring |
DVD Copy Controls Head to Court Small software firm challenges digital copyright law, tries to assert the right to backups... |
InternetNews June 9, 2005 Tim Gray |
Supreme Court Rejects Lexmark Appeal The U.S. Supreme Court rejected a bid from Lexmark International to hear its case against a printer chip maker it claims violates the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. |
InternetNews February 3, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
Key Online Music Piracy Ruling Reviewed The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals mulls the Recording Industry of America's lawsuits against file-swappers. |
InternetNews October 18, 2006 Roy Mark |
Universal Sues Video Sites The simmering legal questions surrounding video sites and their use of copyrighted material hit the courts for the first time late Monday with Universal Music Group filing infringement suits against Grouper and Bolt. |
InternetNews October 8, 2004 Jim Wagner |
Entertainment Industry Looks For Supreme Relief The entertainment industry filed a petition with the U.S. Supreme Court to get a definitive ruling whether software companies should be allowed to create software used to facilitate pirating copyrighted material. |
PC World August 2003 Frank Thorsberg |
Consumer Alert: Copy Controls Crackdown Multimedia lovers find themselves caught in a digital vise these days, as Hollywood tightens its copyright controls on movies, games, and music on DVDs and CDs -- most recently squeezing customers accused of copyright infringement in court. Technology is starting to offer some relief, though. |
InternetNews November 12, 2004 Roy Mark |
Conservatives Aim to Sink Pirate Act American Conservative Union says Hollywood wants to use the DOJ as its private law firm to sue copyright infringers. |
InternetNews December 5, 2007 Sean Gallagher |
DOJ Sides With RIAA in File Sharing Case The Justice Department says a Minnesota woman is still on the hook for almost a quarter-million bucks in landmark file-sharing case. |
InternetNews November 17, 2004 Roy Mark |
Software Gives Parents Chance to Snoop The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) will release free software that allow parents a peek into their kids' computers for 'illegal files' and the programs that download them. It also filed lawsuits against movie file-swappers. |
Wired October 2000 John Heilemann |
David Boies: The Wired Interview Wired and Boies talked for several hours about the lawyer's defense strategy for the Napster case, the future of intellectual property and free speech in a networked world, and how it feels for this David to be taking on yet another Goliath... |
CIO October 1, 2005 Worthen & Gross |
Doing Justice to Technology In IT cases, Roberts gets technical details right |
Home Theater June 4, 2009 |
White House Is Eclectic on Copyright Where does the Obama administration stand on the consumer's right to record? Depends on the situation. On copyright issues, the White House is not predictable, but eclectic. |
PC World January 7, 2003 Gillian Law |
Defendant Acquitted in DVD Hacking Case Update: While Norwegian teen is cleared, anyone who attempts to bypass copy controls could find themselves in serious trouble, experts say. |
InternetNews May 1, 2007 Michael Hickins |
Google Says Viacom Suit 'Threatens Expression' Google claims YouTube rules abide by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. |
InternetNews April 14, 2006 David Miller |
Report Details DMCA Misuses A new report from the Electronic Frontier Foundation takes aim at the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, a controversial law enacted seven years ago to protect intellectual property in the digital age. |
InternetNews July 1, 2005 Erin Joyce |
Click Here For Inducement Disclaimers The Supreme Court's ruling that P2P technology developers can induce users to steal copyrighted works could be extended to search services that in effect publicize those P2P services. |
The Motley Fool November 21, 2011 Evan Niu |
Stop the Stop Online Piracy Act Now This legislation might just ruin the Internet. |
Home Theater March 27, 2009 |
AT&T Is RIAA's First ISP Ally AT&T will begin sending warning notices to its internet service customers who engage in illegal file sharing. |
PC World October 3, 2001 Scarlet Pruitt |
File-Sharing Services Sued RIAA and the MPAA file suit to stop file-sharing services like KaZaA and Morpheus that popped up on the Internet after Napster's demise... |
Information Today May 2007 David Mirchin |
Copyright: Viacom's $1 Billion Claim Against YouTube Viacom claims that YouTube has actively infringed Viacom's copyrighted works by publicly performing more than 150,000 unauthorized clips of copyrighted programming owned by Viacom. The outcome could rewrite the rules on content. |
CIO April 15, 2003 Sarah D. Scalet |
The Pirates Among Us The entertainment industry is battling the illegal distribution of copyrighted music and movie files -- and will stop at nothing to enlist your help. |
InternetNews January 14, 2004 Roy Mark |
Senator Plans P2P Summit Hoping to avoid online piracy legislation, U.S. Sen. Norm Coleman is pushing for technological solutions. |
Salon.com August 31, 2001 Katharine Mieszkowski |
No free speech for animal rights Web sites A British medical research firm hammers its online opponents, courtesy of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act... |
InternetNews November 23, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
BitTorrent Cleans Up Illegal content won't be linked anymore from BitTorrent.com, but will it stop BitTorrent from being used for piracy? |
InternetNews September 29, 2005 Tim Gray |
College Kids Can't Avoid The Sound of Music Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) file another round of copyright infringement lawsuits against 757 individuals. |