Skip to main content

Home/ Copyright Commerce and Culture/ Group items tagged 2010

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Andrea R.

Sahi '10 Finds Piracy on BitTorrent - 0 views

  •  
    Sahi, a commuter science major at Princeton, Class of 2010, was able to collect more concrete data regarding shared torrents or large files across the sharing site. Looking at the identification numbers of anonymous users, this February, Sahi found that perhaps only ten out of a 1000 files were actually legal. Although it is a known fact that BitTorrent contains pirated material, this project will help identify which files are being accessed most frequently, which may ultimately aid in efforts to prevent piracy.
as391783

Watch out, Hulu. Meet the new Napster of television - 0 views

  •  
    ivi says they can rebroadcast under Section 111
Melissa Cohen

'Fela!' Is Sued for Copyright Infringement - 0 views

  •  
    This is a few months old, but it shows how copyright issues can come up years after a work is created. The author of a biography of Fela Kuti sued the producers and creative team of Fela! the musical, even though the production had been shown Off-Broadway and on Broadway for a few years.
Alexandra Wolff

Drive to Stop Copyright Infringement Set for TV and FIlm - 0 views

  •  
    "Surveys have found the number of people who think digital copyright infringement is wrong has increased from 34% in 2007 to 54% in 2010." The keyword here being "think." Just because we know it's wrong doesn't mean we'll stop doing it.
Amanda Marie

A Sensible Compromise | Opinion | The Harvard Crimson - 0 views

  •  
    Harvard students rally alongside the MPAA.
Amanda Marie

The State of The Music Industry & the Delegitimization of Artists (TuneCorner) - 0 views

  •  
    Really neat series, lots of information...!
Andrea R.

Black and white and grey all over - Yale Daily News - 0 views

  •  
    It appears that even professors often overlook the legality of distributing copyrighted materials. Although it's no question that fair use applies to a small excerpt or one chapter of a book, the legality of distributing multiple chapters or an entire work is, what this article calls, "cheating a legitimate economic interest." Students might disagree based on the cost of textbooks and course readers, though from the standpoint of the publisher and author, if an academic intends to use an entire work, it should not be copied, but purchased as the entire original work.
Amanda Marie

Info/Law » Copyright Trolling and Copy-Cluelessness - 0 views

  •  
    More Righthaven trolling.
1 - 18 of 18
Showing 20 items per page