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Magazine articles on television, music, film and publishing industries.
Old Articles: <Older 481-490 Newer>
Information Today
October 2003
Gail Dykstra
The Great Copyright Debate Digital music copyright has become a media circus with a jumble of contending lawsuits, claims, and counterclaims. mark for My Articles 61 similar articles
Home Theater
September 30, 2003
Disney Launches Moviebeam Movie-on-demand service begins in three cities. mark for My Articles 177 similar articles
Inc.
October 2003
Nicole Gull
Web Sets Sites on TV Dot-coms will be right back... after a commercial break, that is. A band of Web entrepreneurs are leveraging their brands in old media. mark for My Articles 11 similar articles
BusinessWeek
October 6, 2003
Ewing & Green
Global Downloading, Local Lawsuits Hauling U.S. file-sharers to court won't stop the flow of free tunes from overseas. mark for My Articles 74 similar articles
PC Magazine
October 14, 2003
Rhapsody Gets Real RealNetworks' RealOne Rhapsody has everyone happy including music fans, and thanks to a clever security technique that prevents piracy, record execs, too. mark for My Articles 265 similar articles
PC Magazine
September 24, 2003
Mark Hachman
Send Me a Movie Disney and Dotcast bank on a new technology for beaming movies. mark for My Articles 185 similar articles
BusinessWeek
September 29, 2003
Jason Bush in Moscow
The Movies in Russia: A Happy Ending After All Following a long dry spell, box offices draw crowds again. mark for My Articles 103 similar articles
BusinessWeek
September 29, 2003
Steve Jobs, Apple Apple has broken the logjam and made it possible for the music industry to successfully sell tunes on the Web. mark for My Articles 1429 similar articles
BusinessWeek
September 29, 2003
Jim Ramo, Movielink Music labels saw sales plummet by 7% last year as pirates downloaded songs for free. To avoid a repeat in their industry, the major movie studios called upon Jim Ramo, a 56-year-old former cable exec, to run their film download site. mark for My Articles 70 similar articles
Wired
October 2003
Frank Rose
The Fast-Forward, On-Demand, Network-Smashing Future of Television What happens when digital video recorders give viewers control of the TV schedule, the content, and the ads? The whole world is watching. mark for My Articles 724 similar articles
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