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Salon.com
June 13, 2002
Damien Cave
File sharing: Innocent until proven guilty An economist says music piracy should be hurting the recording industry, but it isn't -- and he doesn't know why. mark for My Articles similar articles
PC World
January 2002
Frank Thorsberg & Tom Spring
New Shackles on Your CD, Video Copying In an effort to stem piracy, entertainment companies are placing new copy restrictions into their products... mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 21, 2005
Alyce Lomax
Play It, Don't Burn It, Sam The controversy over music and copyright continue with word of a new copyright protection technology that severely limits what CD buyers can do with their music. Is the record industry going too far, and hurting its prospects in the process? mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
April 5, 2004
Heather Green
Creativity In Chains In Free Culture: How Big Media Uses Technology and the Law to Lock Down Culture and Control Creativity, the author insists that our very ability to make cultural products is newly endangered. mark for My Articles similar articles
PC World
October 2004
Michael Desmond
Sneaky Sharing Despite well-publicized wins by piracy foes, illegal digital music and movie trading continues to flourish in underground havens. mark for My Articles similar articles
PC World
March 2002
Kevin McKean
Up Front: Why Your CD-RW May Be Obsolete Restrictive new copyright protections could lock you out of your own music CDs... mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
March 2004
Lawrence Lessig
Some Like It Hot OK, P2P is "piracy." But so was the birth of Hollywood, radio, cable TV, and (yes) the music industry. mark for My Articles similar articles
Knowledge@Wharton
July 2, 2003
Online Music Wings its Way to the Celestial Jukebox In a celestial jukebox, instead of downloading songs to a computer hard drive or burning them onto a CD, listeners log onto a site that streams the music directly to their computers for immediate listening. It's like having your own all-request FM channel. mark for My Articles similar articles
PC World
March 2006
Dan Tynan
Hollywood vs.Your PC: Round 2 Legal options in digital entertainment are growing. But they come with restrictions that can hobble your ability to enjoy the content you've paid for and even threaten your control over your system. mark for My Articles similar articles
Home Theater
October 5, 2007
Copying Is Stealing, Says Sony BMG A single mother of two was successfully sued for using peer-to-peer file sharing to violate numerous copyrights. What may ultimately come to matter more than the verdict were some of the details that emerged along the way. mark for My Articles similar articles
PC Magazine
November 15, 2011
Dan Costa
iTunes Match Ends Piracy As We Know It Apple iTunes Match and streaming music services are putting an end to the MP3 generation?and the piracy that came with it. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
March 13, 2002
Damien Cave
Chained melodies Copyright-holding corporations are pushing new laws and computer-crippling technologies in their war on piracy. But can anything keep geeks from copying the music and movies they crave? mark for My Articles similar articles
PC World
December 2003
Anne Kandra
To Copy or Not to Copy? Here's what the law says you can -- and can't -- do with digital media files. mark for My Articles similar articles
PC World
November 2002
Dylan F. Tweney
Hollywood vs. Your PC Movie and music moguls are hopping mad over the new technologies that are transforming digital entertainment. Washington is listening. what's at risk? Your ability to enjoy DVDs and CDs you've bought, your privacy -- even your control over your PC. mark for My Articles similar articles
PC World
September 2005
Laurianne McLaughlin
Copyright Crackdown New XCP2 technology on music CDs limits the number of copies you can make -- and gets in the way of putting tunes on an IPod. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
April 2008
Kirk Teska
What Can You (Legally) Take From the Web? Web sites and bloggers beware: copyright law applies to you too. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
May 2002
Mike Godwin
Hollywood vs. the Internet Why entertainment companies want to hack your computer... mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
August 7, 2000
Scott Rosenberg
But isn't it against the law? How Napster turns otherwise upstanding citizens into recidivist outlaws -- and what the music industry can do to save itself. mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
October 13, 2005
Roy Mark
Feds Bust Massive Piracy Scheme A federal grand jury indicted three San Francisco-area men Wednesday for their involvement in what the music industry calls the largest illegal CD manufacturing seizure in the United States. mark for My Articles similar articles
Information Today
June 2009
K. Matthew Dames
Intellectual Property: Why the Frame of `Piracy' Matters What does piracy really mean? The term's definition and history are important along with the reasons why its continued misrepresentation matters to the country's copyright policy. mark for My Articles similar articles
PC World
April 12, 2002
Tom Spring
Gateway Ads Hit Sour Chord With Music Industry RIAA calls anti-copy controls campaign 'misleading scare tactics'... mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
November 2004
Hilary Rosen
How I Learned to Love Larry She was the champion of the music industry. He was the voice of the people. It was a deathmatch made in heaven, but they found common ground... Done right, copyrights can inspire the next digital revolution... mark for My Articles similar articles
HBS Working Knowledge
June 21, 2004
Sean Silverthorne
Music Downloads: Pirates---or Customers? Internet music piracy not only doesn't hurt legitimate CD sales, it may even boost sales of some types of music. mark for My Articles similar articles
PC World
November 5, 2001
Tom Spring
Music Labels Target CD Ripping Claiming to fight piracy, labels test copy protection to keep audio CDs from going digital... mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
Home Theater
August 17, 2007
Sympathy for the Devil: 10 Questions for the RIAA Cary Sherman, President of the Recording Industry Association of America answers questions about peer-to-peer file sharing and more. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
July 2001
Mike Godwin
Copywrong Why the Digital Millennium Copyright Act hurts the public interest... mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
October 5, 2007
David Needle
Piracy's Other Price - Jobs Report says 373,375 Americans currently unemployed can thank motion picture, sound recording, video game and software pirates for the lack of job opportunities. mark for My Articles similar articles
T.H.E. Journal
April 2004
Bob Kruger
Failing Intellectual Property Protection 101 Character education may be the key to piracy prevention. mark for My Articles similar articles
PC Magazine
October 21, 2003
Michael J. Miller
Upbeat About Digital Music Let's hope that in its zeal to stop pirates the music industry doesn't hurt legitimate customers. mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
December 6, 2007
Sean Gallagher
New Bill Stiffens File-Sharing Penalties The U.S. House of Representatives is edging closer to laying out harsher penalties and stepping up enforcement for the illegal sharing of music and movies. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
November 2004
Thomas Goetz
Sample the Future Rip, mix, burn. Swap till you drop. The music cops can't do a thing - it's 100 percent legal, licensed by the bands. The Wired CD, copyrighted for the 21st century. mark for My Articles similar articles
AskMen.com
April 4, 2001
Justin Becker
How To Burn CDs Learn what all the hype is about and find out how to burn CDs for your listening pleasure... mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
January 5, 2005
Rich Smith
Copyright Holders Uber Alles? A German court found that the personal computer-making joint venture owned by Siemens and Fujitsu was selling computers that could be used for copying copyrighted materials without the payment of mandatory royalties due to the copyright owners. mark for My Articles similar articles
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... mark for My Articles similar articles
PC Magazine
February 16, 2005
Bill Machrone
Unlock Protected Music When you buy music from an online service, you may want to move it to a different format. Here's how. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
October 2000
Jesse Walker
Music for Nothing Why Napster isn't the end of the world. Or even the music industry... mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
October 14, 2008
Anders Bylund
Send Lawyers, Guns, and Money: Hollywood Attacks The entertainment industry's legal teams reloaded their weapons this week. The proverbial "it" is about to hit the fan. mark for My Articles similar articles
CIO
August 1, 2003
Radcliffe & Rosen
Patent, Copyright and Trade Secret -- What's the Difference? - The intellectual property in software can be protected three ways: patents, copyrights and trade secrets. mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
May 4, 2006
David Miller
RIAA Targets Piracy 'Hot-Spot' Cities The recording-industry group identifies 12 U.S. cities where counterfeiters are thriving. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
Home Toys
June 2006
Scott Bahneman
Sea Change in the Music Industry Benefits Consumers The digital music revolution is upon us and it's changing the landscape of the music industry as we know it. Accounting for $1.1 billion in 2005 music revenues, online music services now represent six percent of global music sales. mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
October 5, 2007
Nicholas Carlson
Guilty Verdict in Nation's First Music Downloading Jury Case The nation's first music downloading jury case came to a close yesterday, with the record industry claiming a landmark victory in its efforts to end illegal downloads. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
March 27, 2001
Charles C. Mann
Napster-proof CDs The music industry has a secret plan to safeguard popular music from the wild Web... mark for My Articles similar articles
PC World
June 2002
Tom Spring
Consumer Alert: Feds Eye Copy Locks for PC Gear Congress gets into copy controls fray as tech firms, Hollywood duke it out... mark for My Articles similar articles
PC Magazine
October 10, 2007
Isabelle Groc
The Price of Piracy A new report says music thievery costs our economy billions. Are such numbers reliable? mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
July 11, 2005
Stephen H. Wildstrom
Vinyl In, Music Files Out New software lets you copy LPs into your PC. But it's no picnic. ADS Technologies Instant Music RDX150... Roxio Easy Media Creator... Nero 6 Ultra Edition... mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
December 26, 2007
Microsoft's Piracy Fight Gains Momentum in China Microsoft continues reaping the benefits of Beijing's efforts to curb illegal wares. mark for My Articles similar articles
Entrepreneur
June 2006
Jane Easter Bahls
Hitting Hard Piracy laws just got tougher. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
November 2004
David G. Post
Free Culture vs. Big Media In the book Free Culture: How Big Media Uses Technology and the Law to Lock Down Culture and Control Creativity, author Lawrence Lessig leads the charge to retake the public domain. mark for My Articles similar articles