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Theresa de los Santos

Hollywood loses landmark copyright case in Australia | Reuters - 0 views

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    Hollywood studios lost a landmark copyright court case against an Australia internet provider on Thursday, when a court ruled iiNet could not be held responsible for unauthorized downloads of movies using its service.
Theresa de los Santos

The Associated Press: 'Harry Potter' author hit with plagiarism lawsuit - 0 views

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    "J.K. Rowling has been named in a lawsuit alleging she stole ideas for her wildly popular and lucrative "Harry Potter" books from another British author. The estate of the late Adrian Jacobs added Rowling as a defendant in a lawsuit it filed in June against Bloomsbury Publishing PLC for alleged copyright infringement, according to a statement released by the estate's representatives, who are based in Australia."
Alex Markov

EB Games Joins Campaign For R18+ Rating For Videogames | Kotaku Australia - 0 views

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    Australia's largest videogame retailer has joined the movement to add an R18+ rating category for interactive entertainment Down Under.
anonymous

Men At Work's 'Down Under' Violated Copyright - News Story | Music, Celebrity, Artist N... - 0 views

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    Popular 80's band from Australia ruled to have infringed on the copyright of an old children's campfire song, "Kookaburra Sits in the Old Gum Tree" for their hit, "Men Down Under." The court ruled on Thursday (February 4) that Men at Work copied the children's song in "Down Under" and must pay the copyright owner years of royalties. Sinclair, who wrote "Kookaburra" died in 1988, but her publishing company, Larrikin, owns the copyright for the ode to the native Australian bird and filed a copyright-infringement suit last year against the band.
chris_seaman

Beware the 'copyright cops' - 0 views

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    "Australian internet rights groups fear a piracy court case could force internet service providers (ISPs) to become "copyright cops" and cut web access to customers who illegally download"
Theresa de los Santos

BBC News - ISP cleared of copyright infringement - 0 views

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    In the first case of its kind, an Australian court has ruled that an internet service provider cannot be responsible for illegal downloading. iiNet, Australia's third largest ISP, was taken to court by a group of 34 movie production houses. The group included the Australian divisions of Universal Pictures, Warner Brothers and 20th Century Fox. They claimed that iiNet was guilty of copyright infringement for not preventing illegal downloads of films.
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