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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.  |
Home Theater September 30, 2003 |
Disney Launches Moviebeam Movie-on-demand service begins in three cities.  |
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.  |
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.  |
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.  |
PC Magazine September 24, 2003 Mark Hachman |
Send Me a Movie Disney and Dotcast bank on a new technology for beaming movies.  |
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.  |
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.  |
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.  |
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.  |
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