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Jeffrey Kendall

File-sharers are content industry's "largest customers" - 0 views

    • Jeffrey Kendall
       
      proof that the artists in at least this country are still making similar revenue regardless of filesharing. The labels however are a different story.
    • Jeffrey Kendall
       
      An interesting idea for record labels to make up for the lack of revenue from selling albums but if labels are taking a cut from this then should they also offer a cut rate to their album sales with the increase of profit from this sector?
  • "360 deals"
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    Good look at how file sharing is affecting the record labels more so then the artists and how those who share files actually purchase more content then those who don't.
Benjamin Sperry

P2P lawyers score a victory; mass subpoenas can proceed - 0 views

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    One way that some have tried to deal with piracy is by suing large groups of people that are sharing a file, rather than sue individual people. The problem is that there is a debate on whether it is alright to clump these people into a single case. This article shows that some attorneys have ruled that you may not lump multiple file sharers into a single case, while others have ruled this practice to be fine.
Scott Thomas

RIAA to Stop Suing Music Fans, Cut Them Off Instead | Epicenter | Wired.com - 0 views

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    Article discusses RIAA's new approach to curbing the downloading portion of file sharing. RIAA is working with ISP's to have them slow down the internet connections of people who are downloading music illegally. Does not mention anything about doing the same for people who are sharing though. The sharers are still being sued.
Jeffrey Kendall

Court Favors Comcast in F.C.C. 'Net Neutrality' Ruling - NYTimes.com - 0 views

    • Jeffrey Kendall
       
      I could understand the thoughth behind possibly wanting to slow down illegal downloads and make them less appealing to people but then to decide to slow down YouTube because it eats up bandwidth as well. At what point do they stop?
  • The decision will allow Internet service companies to block or slow specific sites and charge video sites like YouTube to deliver their content faster to users.
  • The court ruling, which came after Comcast asserted that it had the right to slow its cable customers’ access to a file-sharing service called BitTorrent,
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    Anyone interested in net neutrality or the governments role in online regulation of service providers
Kendall Burrage

Itunes more popular than illegal file sharing. - 0 views

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    Good article relevant to this weeks discussion as well as my topic for the final paper.
Yvonne Garth

EFF's Top 12 Ways to Protect Your Online Privacy | Electronic Frontier Foundation - 0 views

  • Do not reveal personal information inadvertently. You may be "shedding" personal details, including e-mail addresses and other contact information, without even knowing it unless you properly configure your Web browser. In your browser's "Setup", "Options" or "Preferences" menus, you may wish to use a pseudonym instead of your real name, and not enter an e-mail address, nor provide other personally identifiable information that you don't wish to share. When visiting a site you trust you can choose to give them your info, in forms on their site; there is no need for your browser to potentially make this information available to all comers. Also be on the lookout for system-wide "Internet defaults" programs on your computer (some examples include Window's Internet Control Panel, and MacOS's Configuration Manager, and the third-party Mac utility named Internet Config). While they are useful for various things, like keeping multiple Web browers and other Internet tools consistent in how the treat downloaded files and such, they should probably also be anonymized just like your browser itself, if they contain any fields for personal information. Households with children may have an additional "security problem" - have you set clear rules for your kids, so that they know not to reveal personal information unless you OK it on a site-by-site basis?
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    The article is on online privacy.
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    The article describes ways to protect a person's online privacy.
Jason Pinkerton

THE FACTS ABOUT DOWNLOADING, FILE SHARING, AND CD BURNING - 0 views

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    This article explains very well what people don't realize and how it affects you when they are downloading music illegally.
Benjamin Sperry

BitTorrent is to stealing movies what "bolt-cutters are to stealing bicycles" - 0 views

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    Looks at a piece of legislation being debated right now that is intended to address piracy. "The bill would give the government legal tools to blacklist a "rogue" website from the Internet's Domain Name System, ban credit card companies from processing US payments to the site, and forbid US-based online ad networks from working with the site. It even directs the government to keep a list of suspect sites, even though no evidence has been presented against them in court."
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