- VICTORY! ACTA Suffers Final, Humiliating Defeat In European Parliament--But over the pond, Mexico signed ACTA though its Senate still needs to ratify it.
- ACTA IS BACK: Leaked docs show Canada/European Commission trying to sneak ACTA into Canada & back into Europe
- Don't believe every leak you read says EU Commission on CETA--"CETA text regarding the Internet is totally different from ACTA, the Commission said."
- SOPA IS BACK: Lamar Smith trying to quietly revive SOPA and cram it down the world's throats
- SOPA reborn by Congress as IPAA--And it's even worse.
- SOPA author wants to arrest journalists over leaks
- Canada: Copyright fees on music, video, struck down by top court--"The Supreme Court of Canada has decided that Internet providers do not have to pay copyright fees when their consumers download or preview music, and that teachers don't have to pay fees when they photocopy copyrighted materials for their students."
- Victory for Open WiFi: Judge Rejects Copyright Troll's Bogus "Negligence" Theory--The case was dismissed on preemption grounds.
- Supreme Court: RapidShare Liable For Copyright Infringement – Sometimes
- Censored by Copyright: Dan Bull video removed from YouTube after criticising copyright abuse
- Lawsuit Against BitTorrent Users Falters, Band Brands Action "Bullshit"--"A lawsuit against fans of the metal band All Shall Perish has faltered after it was revealed that the copyright troll plaintiff in the case has failed to register the required copyrights."
- Op-ed: MPAA/RIAA lose big as US backs copyright "limitations"
- U.K. Home Office won't block O'Dwyer extradition in copyright case
- U.S. Pursuing a Middleman in Web Piracy--"The government’s antipiracy case against Richard O’Dwyer is unusual because he did not publish pirated content himself but pointed the way for others." NYT
- Artists Score Victory in Mass-Piracy Lawsuit Against CBS, CNET
- US "Six Strikes" Anti-Piracy Scheme Will Roll Out Gradually
- Why we are breaking the Pirate Bay ban--"We must not hand courts and governments censorship powers without a public debate about digital rights."