| Old Articles: <Older 1841-1850 Newer> |
 |
Entrepreneur February 2007 Jane Easter Bahls |
Post No Evil Businesses that host blogs are subject to lawsuits over libel. Here's a quick look at the law.  |
InternetNews January 23, 2007 Roy Mark |
Court Rejects Orphan Works Appeal Ninth Circuit rules 'no compelling reason' for First Amendment review of copyright law.  |
The Motley Fool January 23, 2007 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
XM's Inno Lands in Court XM has to find order in the court over a copyright lawsuit.  |
InternetNews January 22, 2007 Nicholas Carlson |
MySpace Sues 'Spam King' MySpace's CAN-SPAM lawsuit puts Scott Richter back in the news.  |
InternetNews January 19, 2007 Sean Michael Kerner |
In Defense of SCO? The SCO story is dominated by SCO's litigious activities against IBM, Novell and, by extension, the wider Linux community.  |
InternetNews January 18, 2007 Ed Sutherland |
Parental Controls Don't Save MySpace Four families sue MySpace just one day after it implemented parental controls.  |
InternetNews January 18, 2007 David Needle |
Plea Deal Said to Be Offered in HP Pretexting Case Former HP chairman Patricia Dunn reportedly offered a deal that would drop felony charges.  |
ifeminists January 17, 2007 Wendy McElroy |
In Child Porn Case, Technology Entraps the Innocent Your computer could be storing and distributing child pornography without your knowledge. Like ID theft in the '90s, the problem of zombie PCs is just emerging. Laws must be rewritten or repealed to take into account the technological realities with which we all live.  |
InternetNews January 17, 2007 Roy Mark |
Jury to Phisher: You've Got Prison Time California man faces 100 years in prison for phishing scheme aimed at AOL users.  |
D-Lib February 2007 Crews & van Westrienen |
Copyright, Publishing, and Scholarship: The "Zwolle Group" Initiative for the Advancement of Higher Education The relationship of copyright law to the creation and publication of scholarly works is a critical concern for the advancement of new knowledge.  |
| <Older 1841-1850 Newer> Return to current articles. |