- Wed Jul 21 2004 Federal court broadens DMCA safe harbors
Order in porn case carves out wider copyright protections for Net businesses.
- Sun Sep 20 2009 Scribd fires back, denies violating copyright
Social-publishing site accused in lawsuit of violating author's copyright says the company is comfortably docked in the DMCA's safe harbor.
- Mon Mar 10 2003 Tech's love-hate relationship with the DMCA
CNET News.com's Declan McCullagh uncovers a real divide between software and hardware manufacturers when it comes to the subject of what to do about legislation to combat Internet piracy.
- Wed Apr 1 2009 Is AT&T violating DMCA by not booting 'repeat infringers'?
DMCA doesn't require ISPs to forward warning letters, but they do. DMCA may require ISPs to terminate chronic copyright violators, but some don't.
- Sun Nov 22 2009 Ep. 1099: Secret ACTA treaty could break the Internet
Leaks from the secret negotiations of the ACTA treaty allege that ISPs worldwide would be required to lose safe harbor protections, implement three-strike anti-piracy policies and worse. We think this...
- Wed Nov 4 2009 BOL 1099: Secret ACTA treaty could break the Internet
Leaks from the secret negotiations of the ACTA treaty allege that ISPs worldwide would be required to lose safe harbor protections, implement three-strike antipiracy policies and worse. We think this is outrageous.
- Tue Apr 1 2008 Are mix tape sites on solid legal ground?
Can Muxtape, Mixwit, and others withstand the kind of scrutiny that the RIAA is sure to cast on them?
- Wed May 7 2008 Google will take Viacom suit to Supreme Court
Viacom's Redstone says he's standing up for the principle of copyright protection, but Google is willing to go all the way to the mat in its legal fight.
- Tue Sep 15 2009 Stunned film, music sectors react to Veoh decision
There's no disputing that a federal court's decision to offer safe-harbor protection for sites such as Veoh is a blow to the entertainment industry. But will it bring change?
- Sun May 4 2008 Google yanks open-source project after copyright complaint
A copyright complaint pushes Google to remove an open-source project to let Linux use proprietary video decoding software called CoreAVC.



