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Keyword: hollywoodlawyers

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  • Digg losing control of their site (HD-DVD encryption keys were posted)

    05/01/2007 8:58:23 PM PDT · by HAL9000 · 165 replies · 5,536+ views
    InfoWorld ^ | May 1, 2007 | Kevin Railsback
    Excerpt - The folks at Digg.com have let the social news genie out of the bottle, and now they can't control it. Since the HD-DVD encryption code was discovered and published, readers at Digg have been repeatedly submitting stories with the 16 digit hex code in the titles and bodies. Just as quickly as these posts crawl up the Digg charts, admins seem to be deleting them. Just search Google for 09 F9 and you'll find the key. Will AACS send a Cease and Desist to InfoWorld because I posted the text "09 F9"? If so, we might as well...
  • Congress readies broad new digital copyright bill

    04/26/2006 5:59:45 AM PDT · by HAL9000 · 14 replies · 686+ views
    CNet News (excerpt) ^ | April 24, 2006 | Declan McCullagh
    For the last few years, a coalition of technology companies, academics and computer programmers has been trying to persuade Congress to scale back the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Now Congress is preparing to do precisely the opposite. A proposed copyright law seen by CNET News.com would expand the DMCA's restrictions on software that can bypass copy protections and grant federal police more wiretapping and enforcement powers. ~ snip ~ The proposed law scheduled to be introduced by Rep. Smith also does the following: • Permits wiretaps in investigations of copyright crimes, trade secret theft and economic espionage. It would...
  • Congress mulls revisions to DMCA

    05/19/2004 6:37:14 PM PDT · by weegee · 4 replies · 236+ views
    Staff Writer, CNET News.com ^ | Last modified: May 12, 2004, 10:05 PM PDT | By Declan McCullagh
    Congress has taken a step toward revising the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which has attracted extensive criticism over the past six years. A House of Representatives subcommittee convened Wednesday for the first hearing devoted to a proposal to defang the DMCA, a 1998 law that broadly restricts bypassing copy-protection technologies used in DVDs, a few music CDs and some software programs. Called the Digital Media Consumers' Rights Act, the amendments are backed by librarians, liberal consumer groups and some technology firms. But they're bitterly opposed by the entertainment industry, including Hollywood, major record labels and the Business Software Alliance. "It...