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Salon.com October 18, 2001 Elizabeth Manus |
The instant book that wasn't "09/11 8:48" -- the first book published about the terrorist attacks -- was print-on-demand. So why wasn't it available everywhere, immediately?  |
Wired October 2001 Jeff Howe |
Licensed to Bill Big Media wants you to pay for what you read, watch, and hear - and keep paying. Digital rights management technology will make sure you do...  |
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...  |
Searcher October 2001 Dave Rensberger |
Swinging the Big Bat: Power Versus Technology Digital content is endlessly flexible and slippery. Providers all up and down the line wake up to the fact that content itself may not be the cash cow they thought it was. The real profits are in the control of the delivery systems...  |
Reason October 2001 Jeff A. Taylor |
Sky High Taxes Good tax collectors find new things to tax. Los Angeles County Assessor Rick Auerbach may turn out to be taxman of the century if he succeeds in slapping property taxes on several satellites...  |
Wired September 2001 Tom McNichol |
Split Screen Play Square built a videogame empire with Final Fantasy. The next target: Pixar...  |
Salon.com September 6, 2001 Anthony York |
Courtney Love's big Sacramento adventure The singer and actress takes her campaign against the record industry to the California legislature...  |
Searcher September 2001 Barbara Quint |
Searcher's Voice - That Windblown Look Now that the Supreme Court has made its decision in the Tasini case, one which confirms the copyright ownership of freelance authors in full-text material currently online, our world trembles as it waits to learn how publishers, database aggregators, search services, and authors will work out their ownership problems.  |
PC World August 31, 2001 Frank Thorsberg |
Will Copyright Law Kill Your Computing Habits? The Digital Millennium Copyright Act faces scrutiny and its first cases--including Sklyarov's prosecution.  |
| Knowledge@Wharton |
Dotcom Bomb Hits the Publications That Covered It The demise of the Industry Standard and the potential for the contagion to bring down other Internet-economy magazines may be unprecedented...  |
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