| Old Articles: <Older 321-330 Newer> |
 |
Salon.com March 26, 2002 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Web radio's last stand A new ruling involving the Digital Millennium Copyright Act is set to wipe out independent online music stations...  |
Salon.com March 19, 2002 Eric Boehlert |
Is the WWF on the ropes? Sunday's Wrestlemania broadcast, with its much hyped match between Hulk Hogan and the Rock, might not have been enough to save Vince McMahon's crumbling empire...  |
Wired March 2002 Frank Rose |
Big Media or Bust As consolidation sweeps the content and telecom industries, FCC merger maniac Michael Powell has a plan: Let's roll...  |
Wired March 2002 Jack Boulware |
Pirates Of Kiev You want Top 40? How about nine albums on one disc - three bucks. Microsoft Office XP? Two dollars and change. Welcome to Ukraine, where rip, mix, and burn is a point of national pride...  |
PC World March 15, 2002 Tom Spring |
Copy Controls: Fair Use or Foul Play? Hollywood, techies, and Congress wrangle to control what digital video you can store, swap, and see...  |
PC World March 14, 2002 Tom Spring |
Battle Intensifies Over Right to Copy Consumer, industry groups joust in Congress over rights and wrongs of sharing, seeing, and storing digital entertainment...  |
Salon.com March 13, 2002 Eric Boehlert |
Record companies: Save us from ourselves! With payola up but profits down, labels are wondering if paying $100 million to middlemen "fixers" is still a swell business idea...  |
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?  |
| Knowledge@Wharton |
Warren Lieberfarb Takes Center Stage in the Burgeoning DVD Business Within the electronics industry, Warren Lieberfarb, president of Warner Home Video, is known as the "architect of the DVD," the man who introduced a new CD-based format that delivers superior digital sound and picture...  |
| Knowledge@Wharton |
That's Entertainment: Media Conglomerates Go Global Big fish have been gobbling up smaller fish in the media world for the past decade. And the trend shows no sign of ending...  |
| <Older 321-330 Newer> Return to current articles. |