Word: copyrighter
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...they are protected by a foreign patent or not. The problem has been made worse because China emerged as an economic power around the time when information technologies created highways over which ideas could easily traverse the planet. Just as railroads and telegraphs in the mid-19th century made copyright and patent theft commercially important, so the Internet and associated information technologies redefined the market for inventions. Communications networks allow a tech employee of a Zhuhai company to search patent registrations internationally and look for legal vulnerabilities. IT also made the promulgation of digital content instantaneous and cost-free. Movies...
...Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) announced yesterday the second set of copyright infringement lawsuits against students of 33 schools, including one user at Harvard, according to RIAA spokeswoman Jenni R. Engebretsen...
Faculty of Arts and Sciences spokesman Robert P. Mitchell said yesterday, “Students are given ample warning...about illegally downloading copyrighted information, and are made aware of the fact that they can be sued individually for copyright infringement for downloading or making available copyrighted files—such as music, movies, television programs, or games—without the permission of the copyright owner...
...Students are also warned that if they are sharing copyrighted files over the internet, they can be sued at any time by the copyright holder, whether or not they have received a warning letter from Harvard,” said Mitchell. “Harvard sends warning letters to students in order to ensure that Harvard complies with the requirements of the federal Digital Millennium Copyright Act. This process does not protect students who use Harvard’s internet connection to engage in copyright infringement...
...breathe easy along with James Murphy and Jimmy Tamborello’s copyright lawyers. The synth-pop trappings are there, to be sure, but they’re never a pose, and “Twins” doesn’t aspire to the club. On the best songs—which is to say, all but one or two on this consistently great album—those nods to the ’80s brilliantly showcase Barnes’ superlative songwriting. The lighter-than-air loops and disco-ball riffs seem a natural extension of Barnes?...