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InternetNews April 28, 2006 Roy Mark |
Hollywood Targets Campus LANs The Recording Industry Association of America and the Motion Picture Association of America sent letters Thursday to 40 universities in 25 states alerting the schools of LAN piracy problems on their campuses.  |
Searcher May 2003 Carol Ebbinghouse |
Big Brother Invades the Campus and Workplace: Infotainment and the Copyright Cops The leading entertainment organizations have now begun targeting colleges and universities, as well as corporate America.  |
InternetNews March 9, 2007 Roy Mark |
Lawmakers Bash Colleges Over Campus Piracy House panel threatens to take matters into its own hands if college administrators don't crack down on online campus piracy.  |
InternetNews February 28, 2007 Roy Mark |
RIAA Sends Schools a P2P Heads Up Music industry increases pressure on colleges and universities to curb illegal music downloading.  |
InternetNews March 30, 2007 Roy Mark |
Congress Flunks P2P Test Lawmakers consider throwing millions at a problem it can't solve: illegal peer-to-peer file sharing.  |
CIO April 15, 2003 Sarah D. Scalet |
The Pirates Among Us The entertainment industry is battling the illegal distribution of copyrighted music and movie files -- and will stop at nothing to enlist your help.  |
InternetNews March 23, 2004 Roy Mark |
RIAA Keeps Pressure on P2P Users Record companies file another 500 lawsuits against music file sharers, including those using college servers.  |
InternetNews August 25, 2004 Roy Mark |
RIAA Steps Up P2P Legal Campaign Undaunted by a landmark legal decision, the Recording Industry Association of America increases pressure on individual file swappers.  |
PC Magazine February 25, 2008 Susie Parker |
College P2P: A Hard Lesson A new bill threatens to crack down on peer-to-peer (P2P) downloading at colleges, but administrators say that Congress is misguided.  |
PC World November 14, 2002 Michelle Madigan |
Copyright Cops Target Workplace, Schools Music industry renews piracy fight with correspondence and courts, while colleges and companies consider their liability.  |
InternetNews April 12, 2005 Jim Wagner |
The RIAA is After Student Pirates The music organization continues its assault against illegal file-sharing, this time targeting students using Internet2.  |
InternetNews October 20, 2010 |
McAfee Names Top 10 Social Security Number Traps At the kickoff of National Protect Your Identity Week, software security vendor McAfee advises users to exercise caution when sharing their Social Security numbers with colleges, government agencies and other groups.  |
InternetNews September 22, 2005 Roy Mark |
P2P, Internet2: Heady Brew For College Kids Unfazed by a landmark Supreme Court decision, students target Internet2 and campus LANs for file swapping, new report says.  |
InternetNews September 29, 2005 Tim Gray |
College Kids Can't Avoid The Sound of Music Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) file another round of copyright infringement lawsuits against 757 individuals.  |
PC Magazine May 18, 2005 Sebastian Rupley |
Infringing Copyrights at Mach 5 Copyright-infringement skirmishes have now extended beyond the Internet to Internet2, the ultra-high-speed network that universities use for developing the future of the Net.  |
InternetNews January 21, 2004 Roy Mark |
RIAA Files 532 New Lawsuits The music industry files its largest batch of copyright infringement actions to date.  |
InternetNews March 28, 2007 Roy Mark |
Bill Would Hand Colleges Cash For Anti-Piracy Legislation would allow colleges and universities to apply for anti-piracy funding.  |
InternetNews December 19, 2003 Roy Mark |
ISPs Win a Round in File-Swapping Tussle In a major blow to the music industry's campaign to sue individual file-swappers, court sides with Internet service providers over revealing customers' identities.  |
InternetNews March 27, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
ISPs Deny 'Three Strikes' Deals With RIAA Big ISPs look to quash speculation that they are on board with graduated response system to fight copyright infringement with service cancellations.  |
PC World January 14, 2003 Malaika Costello-Dougherty |
A Truce Over Copy Controls? Hollywood, tech industries agree to fight piracy and legislation, but support technical restrictions.  |
InternetNews January 16, 2004 Roy Mark |
ISPs Ignore RIAA's New P2P Ploy A cold shoulder so far for a proposal that ISPs become agents in the battle against copyright infringement  |
PC World December 13, 2001 Todd R. Weiss |
Feds Crack Software Piracy Rings Two-year probe targeted international groups illegally distributing software, games, and movies online...  |
InternetNews December 5, 2007 Sean Gallagher |
DOJ Sides With RIAA in File Sharing Case The Justice Department says a Minnesota woman is still on the hook for almost a quarter-million bucks in landmark file-sharing case.  |
InternetNews September 15, 2005 Clint Boulton |
RIAA Puts More File-sharing Firms On Notice The recording agency sends cease-and-desist letters to seven file sharing proprietors in the wake of its Grokster victory.  |
Reason May 2008 David Weigel |
Downloading Lies The Motion Picture Association of America admits that movie piracy figures presented to Congress in its 2005 report, leading to stricter controls of Ethernet use at American universities, were seriously flawed.  |
InternetNews April 6, 2006 Roy Mark |
China, Russia Top International Piracy List China and Russia's "lack of political will" put the two countries at the top of a congressional group's 2006 International Piracy Watch List.  |
Wired March 2004 Lawrence Lessig |
Some Like It Hot OK, P2P is "piracy." But so was the birth of Hollywood, radio, cable TV, and (yes) the music industry.  |
InternetNews December 6, 2007 Sean Gallagher |
New Bill Stiffens File-Sharing Penalties The U.S. House of Representatives is edging closer to laying out harsher penalties and stepping up enforcement for the illegal sharing of music and movies.  |
InternetNews May 3, 2005 Roy Mark |
High Court Refuses Digital Copyright Appeal The Supreme Court rejected an appeal by Internetmovies.com over an erroneous takedown notice from the Motion Picture Association of America issued under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.  |
InternetNews May 27, 2005 Roy Mark |
No Summer Break From The RIAA The music industry targets lawsuits at students using high-speed, second-generation university networks to swap music files.  |
Information Today June 2009 K. Matthew Dames |
Intellectual Property: Why the Frame of `Piracy' Matters What does piracy really mean? The term's definition and history are important along with the reasons why its continued misrepresentation matters to the country's copyright policy.  |
Salon.com August 31, 2001 Damien Cave |
Copywrong? A government report giving the Digital Millennium Copyright Act a passing grade is a disaster for the general public, say critics...  |
Wired October 2000 John Heilemann |
David Boies: The Wired Interview Wired and Boies talked for several hours about the lawyer's defense strategy for the Napster case, the future of intellectual property and free speech in a networked world, and how it feels for this David to be taking on yet another Goliath...  |
InternetNews February 17, 2004 Roy Mark |
RIAA Unleashes Another Round of Lawsuits For the second time this year, music industry targets more than 500 Jane and John Doe swappers for copyright infringement actions.  |
Home Theater October 14, 2008 |
Another Bad Copyright Law Passes The newly signed Prioritizing Resources and Organization for Intellectual Property Act escalates penalties for copyright infringement.  |
InternetNews January 15, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
New Clashes Await Over Digital Copyright Does government need to do more to curtail piracy, or are media industries threatening the freedom of the Internet?  |
InternetNews July 20, 2009 |
Music, Software Heads Stump for Tougher IP Laws New economic study highlights important role of industries like software and music and calls attention to rising threat from piracy.  |
Home Theater March 27, 2009 |
AT&T Is RIAA's First ISP Ally AT&T will begin sending warning notices to its internet service customers who engage in illegal file sharing.  |
The Motley Fool February 21, 2007 Alyce Lomax |
Reading, Writing, and the RIAA The music industry tries a collegiate crackdown. This seems to be just another example of the music industry's tendency to lash out rather than address the changing landscape.  |
PC Magazine September 15, 2003 Sebastian Rupley |
Bad Pitch Dissonance is in the air. The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) is raising the stakes in the music-swapping battle by pursuing legal action against individuals who may share music online.  |
InternetNews January 5, 2010 |
Hacker Hits Eastern Washington University Colleges continue to be popular targets for hackers, with another 130,000 student records exposed.  |
InternetNews December 21, 2009 |
Hacker Breaches College Library System Incident compromises more than sensitive information of more than 51,000 patrons at 25 campus libraries.  |
Entrepreneur August 2007 Jacquelyn Lynn |
Small Business Owners Risk Identity Theft Insuring your identity makes it easier to get it back.  |
PC World October 2004 Michael Desmond |
Sneaky Sharing Despite well-publicized wins by piracy foes, illegal digital music and movie trading continues to flourish in underground havens.  |
InternetNews October 12, 2004 Roy Mark |
High Court Bounces Latest RIAA Effort The U.S. Supreme Court today rejected industry's effort to revive a controversial practice that briefly forced ISPs to reveal the identities of thousands of accused peer-to-peer music pirates with no notice to the alleged infringers.  |
InternetNews May 4, 2006 David Miller |
RIAA Targets Piracy 'Hot-Spot' Cities The recording-industry group identifies 12 U.S. cities where counterfeiters are thriving.  |
InternetNews February 28, 2007 Roy Mark |
Fair Use Bill Would Unlock DMCA New legislation would allow consumers to make digital copies for home networks.  |
BusinessWeek July 14, 2003 Heather Green |
Hollywood's Most Wanted St. Louis-based 321's software allows people to protect their $19.95 investment in prerecorded DVDs by making copies before they're lost or damaged. To Hollywood, the software is no less than a tool for piracy. That has sparked controversy over just what's permissible under the law.  |
Information Today August 5, 2010 George H. Pike |
Digital Copyright Exemptions Benefit Educators, Filmmakers and Smartphone Owners The Librarian of Congress recently approved several new exemptions to the anti-circumvention provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.  |
PC Magazine October 10, 2007 Isabelle Groc |
The Price of Piracy A new report says music thievery costs our economy billions. Are such numbers reliable?  |