- TV Networks Say You're Breaking The Law When You Skip Commercials
- Tell Old Media to Keep Their Hands Out of Your DVR
- TV Network Exec Argues That Anything That Causes Cable Subscribers To Cut The Cord Is Illegal
- Shut up and take my money, HBO: Website pushes for standalone HBO streaming service
- The Reasons Why HBO Doesn’t Want Your Money
- HBO Says No Go To "Take My Money, HBO"
- Kim Dotcom wins right to FBI files
- MegaUpload asks U.S. court to dismiss piracy charges--"The cloud-storage service accused of piracy says the U.S. lacked jurisdiction and Justice Department lawyers 'should have known' that before taking down the service and throwing its founder in jail."
- Dotcom info not 'physical'--"FBI agents who copied data from Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom's computers and took it overseas were not acting illegally because information isn't 'physical material', the Crown says."
- Should Websites Charge A Fee To Process Copyright Takedowns?
- Undercover MPAA Agents Expose Alleged Movie Pirates
- Verizon Succesfully Defends Privacy of Alleged BitTorrent Pirates
- The Pirate generation: Are we 'unreasonable'?
- Study: Despite Tougher Copyright Monopoly Laws, Sharing Remains Pervasive
- Feds Urging Appeals Court to Reinstate $1.5 Million File-Sharing Verdict - against a Minnesota woman for sharing two dozen songs on Kazaa
- Bowing to U.S. pressure, Spain and Malaysia dropped from copyright blacklist--"After bowing to pressure from the U.S., Spain and Malaysia have been dropped from a high-profile copyright violations watchlist that officials use to pressure countries into changing their laws to align with U.S. intellectual property safeguards."
- The Game of ACTA: Mid-Battle Analysis, Next Actions--"After the well-received ACTA rejection by the three first committes in the European Parliament, things are looking hopeful to prevent this middlemen-regime treaty from ever becoming reality. But we’re not there yet; here’s where we are."
- Dead on arrival? Dutch Parliament kills ACTA before EU vote--"Dutch MPs have also ruled the government will never sign any such agreement."
- Germany increases USB flash drive tax by over 2000 percent
- Canada: Music played at public events to be subject to new copyright fees
- French court says YouTube not obligated to control content