| Old Articles: <Older 1021-1030 Newer> |
 |
PC World January 2005 Tom Spring |
Spam Law Test A year after Congress enacted the CAN-SPAM legislation, our tests show that unsubscribing from marketing e-mail can still be hard.  |
InternetNews December 14, 2004 Roy Mark |
Court Rules RIM Infringed A federal appeals court ruled today that a district court properly determined that Research in Motion infringed on the patents on NTP, but still sent the case back to the district court for further review of damages.  |
Bio-IT World November 19, 2004 Lentini & Bent |
Intellectual Property: Patents and Genomic Medicine Patents, so critical to encouraging investment in developing new technologies, threaten to become a legal and economic minefield that could prevent effective commercial exploitation of genomics.  |
PC Magazine December 28, 2004 Sebastian Rupley |
Making Movies, Taking Movies Lawsuits are coming for people trading films online.  |
InternetNews December 10, 2004 Roy Mark |
MGM, Grokster to go Under Supreme Scope Hollywood hopes the high court will overturn the lower court's decision ruling P2P operations legal.  |
InternetNews December 9, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
Microsoft to Appeal Browser Plug-in Ruling Redmond still fighting a patent infringement ruling about its ActiveX technology.  |
The Motley Fool December 8, 2004 Tom Taulli |
Litigating for Profit Some of IT's biggest profits are found in the courtroom.  |
InternetNews December 6, 2004 Roy Mark |
Supreme Court to Hear Broadband Access Case Justices will review the 9th Circuit decision that overturned the FCC on cable modem providers sharing their fiber optic lines with ISPs.  |
Job Journal December 5, 2004 Michael Kinsman |
Career Pros: Supreme Court Weighs Age-Old Issue With about 70 million American workers over 40 -- roughly half of the labor force -- it's difficult to think that they need protected status as a class. Yet that's just what federal and state laws do. And for very good reasons.  |
Reason December 2004 Bob Levin |
Disney's War Against the Counterculture Why a decades-old copyright case matters now more than ever to anyone who chooses parody as a way to speak to power, especially corporate power.  |
| <Older 1021-1030 Newer> Return to current articles. |