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Jenn Dukes

Could ebooks open a new chapter in legal publishing? - 0 views

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    Apparently the U.S. isn't so far behind! See: http://elangdell.cali.org/content/federal-rules-ebooks-legal-information-institute who posted Federal Procedure e-books just a few weeks ago.
Derik Dupont

Google, Others Digitizing Books in Europe - WSJ.com - 0 views

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    While Google remains in legal limbo with its effort to put books online in the U.S., such digitizing is moving ahead in different places in Europe under several experimental programs." />
Ryan Holman

Prince George's considers copyright policy that takes ownership of students' work - 0 views

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    A proposal by the Prince George's County Board of Education to copyright work created by staff and students for school could mean that a picture drawn by a first-grader, a lesson plan developed by a teacher or an app created by a teen would belong to the school system, not the individual. The measure has some worried that by the system claiming ownership to the work of others, creativity could be stifled and there would be little incentive to come up with innovative ways to educate students. Some have questioned the legality of the proposal as it relates to students.
Paul Riccardi

Legal ruckus over Kindle 2's text-to-speech feature : Christopher Null : Yahoo! Tech - 0 views

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    Not sure if someone else already posted about this, but Kindle could find itself in the middle of a copyright battle over audio rights.
Derik Dupont

In U.S., Long History of Governments Subsidizing Newspapers - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Two scholars point out that newspapers have had help since Washington's day, with paid ads from local governments and discounts on bulk mail.
arnie Grossblatt

A.P. Cracks Down on Unpaid Use of Articles on Web - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • aking a new hard line that news articles should not turn up on search engines and Web sites without permission, The Associated Press said Thursday that it would add software to each article that shows what limits apply to the rights to use it, and that notifies The A.P. about how the article is used.
  • the company’s position was that even minimal use of a news article online required a licensing agreement with the news organization that produced it.
  • Search engines and news aggregators contend that their brief article citations fall under the legal principle of fair use.
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  • Each article — and, in the future, each picture and video — would go out with what The A.P. called a digital “wrapper,” data invisible to the ordinary consumer that is intended, among other things, to maximize its ranking in Internet searches. The software would also send signals back to The A.P., letting it track use of the article across the Web.
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    AP gets ready to play rough with news aggregators and search engines - and with the notion of fair use.
arnie Grossblatt

The best report ever on media piracy | Felix Salmon | Analysis & Opinion | Reuters.com - 1 views

  • he big forces driving media piracy in developing countries are real and powerful and will not be changed, no matter how many western politicians get on their moral high horses and insist that countries like India and China build a “culture of intellectual property.” But the irony is that if governments and corporations really wanted to build such a culture, then they would encourage companies to set their prices low enough that the populations of those countries could actually afford to buy music, movies, and software at the full legal retail price. It turns out that domestic companies are quite good at distributing media at low prices, and can build profitable businesses by doing that. But foreign companies have different incentives in the short term, and don’t do that.
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    Data-grounded research on the costs of media piracy developing economies.
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