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Salon.com August 4, 2000 Ken Kurson |
Inside Judge Wapner's wallet How the courtly pioneer of "The People's Court" made the big money.  |
Managed Care July 2000 Neville M. Bilimoria, J.D. |
HMOs Continue Losing Ground On Liability Issues at State Level The recent U.S. Supreme Court decision offers a nice breather, but executives should not let down their guard, as an Illinois ruling shows.  |
Managed Care July 2000 |
HMO Incentives Not Grounds for Suit U.S. Supreme Court Rules Unanimously Use of financial incentives in HMOs' contracts with physicians may be losing favor, but it's not about to be declared outright illegal any time soon. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimously that patients maynot sue a health plan just because it offers physicians incentives intended to limit health care services.  |
Salon.com July 28, 2000 Salon Technology Staff |
Napster wins last-minute reprieve A federal appeals court granted Napster a new lease on life Friday afternoon, only hours before a court-ordered deadline would have required the service to shut down.  |
Salon.com July 27, 2000 Scott Rosenberg |
Why the music industry has nothing to celebrate Napster's shutdown will only cause a thousand alternatives to bloom.  |
Salon.com July 27, 2000 Damien Cave & Kaitlin Quistgaard |
Court to Napster: You're going down The judge vents her wrath on the Napster "monster" and closes the music-swapping service -- for now.  |
Salon.com August 27, 1999 Mark Gimein |
Jay Walker's patent mania Is the Priceline.com founder a genuine inventor -- or an intellectual-property parasite?  |
Salon.com April 19, 2000 Damien Cave |
Can spam be canned? ISPs spend millions annually fighting spam; a federal law headed for the House promises scant relief.  |
Salon.com July 19, 2000 Damien Cave |
Code on trial Does the DVD-decrypting DeCSS do for video what Napster did for music, and can copyright law stop it?  |
Salon.com July 7, 2000 Eric Boehlert |
Napster death match, Round 3 Fending off a life-threatening court injunction, file-swapping phenom Napster insists it has done nothing wrong.  |
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