Word: copyright
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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People are talking, talking about weekend magazines... It turns out we’re not the only ones who are unhealthily obsessed with writing about FM. We found (conveniently) 15 mentions of FM in other publications and have flouted copyright law, Crimson plagiarism standards and our own moral sensibilities to bring them to you: right here, right now. As always, anything for our readers...
...won’t affect student life at all. Most pirated films are pre-show DVD rips, supplied by people in the film industry, anyway,” he said. “I think we don’t need any more copyright laws as long as the film industry is making billions of dollars...
...apply here at all, because iTunes streams music rather than creating reproductions, and it seems pretty likely the law would consider making songs available in this way to be a “public performance,” a right reserved for the holder of a copyright...
...them, that is, except the experts. If you were to follow the legal debate on copyright law (and I’m going to bet that you don’t), no matter which side you latched on to you’d be convinced the creative apocalypse was near. Academic legal scholars such as the fellows at Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center for the Internet and Society are quick to caution that with extensions of the length of copyright and with legislative grants of additional powers that undermine the already weak fair use doctrine, the ability...
People tend to understand and accept the parts of the copyright law that make sense to them. And we tend to behave in ways we think it’s unlikely will get us into trouble. I would argue that as long as finding KaZaA users to sue remains as easy as shooting fish in a barrel, industry executives will probably not turn their efforts towards cracking down on college iTunes users or even Wirehog, unless they feel they can sue Apple or Mark Zuckerberg and get the software itself removed from the market...