The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) will force internet service providers (ISPs) to give up the details of copyright infringers so that rights holders can protect and enforce their copyright through criminal and civil means with few limitations, according to the intellectual property chapter released by WikiLeaks over the weekend. . The TPP, which reached agreement last week after talks had stalled for years over digital rights and other issues, will regulate trade between Australia, the United States, New Zealand, Canada, Singapore, Vietnam, Malaysia, Japan, Mexico, Peru, Brunei, and Chile. . The TPP requires internet providers to reveal the identities of those infringing copyrights, influencing the enforcement of digital rights.. Copyright Enforcement, ISP Regulations, Digital Rights, TPP Regulations. . Alex
A new system launched to curb online piracy of intellectual property is meant to be educational, not punitive, says the organization behind it. But suspended Internet service or slowing service to a crawl sounds pretty punitive to critics of the Copyright Alert System (CAS).. The Center for Copyright Information (CCI)'s move has ignited yet another debate over the best way to protect the owners of creative property without inhibiting the free flow of information and entertainment. CCI has also angered freedom of information advocates for another reason -- it makes Internet Service Providers (ISP) the first line of enforcement of alleged copyright infringement. The link for this article located at CSO Online is no longer available. . The initiative by the Intellectual Property Alliance sparks discussion regarding the balance between safeguarding artistic rights and ensuring public access.. Copyright Enforcement, Online Piracy, Intellectual Property Rights, ISPs, Information Advocacy. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Verizon Internet Services has released the names of four alleged music downloaders to the Recording Industry Association of America, but the music label group--which sued to get the names--isn't sure what it will do with them. Verizon turned over the . . . . Verizon Internet Services has released the names of four alleged music downloaders to the Recording Industry Association of America, but the music label group--which sued to get the names--isn't sure what it will do with them. Verizon turned over the names after an appeals court denied the company's request for a stay to challenge a law that allows the music industry to subpoena such information. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled on Wednesday. Verizon filed the appeal after a U.S. district judge ordered the ISP to turn over the names of two Verizon customers who had allegedly downloaded hundreds of songs through a peer-to-peer file-swapping service. An RIAA spokesperson says the industry group is weighing its options on what do with the names of the alleged downloaders. "In the next several days, we will evaluate how this ruling can best be incorporated into our overall enforcement program," the representative says. The link for this article located at PCWorld is no longer available. . Verizon Internet Services has released the names of four alleged music downloaders to the Recording . verizon, internet, services, released, names, alleged, music, downloaders, recording. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Copyright enforcement, the attempt by the entertainment industry to prop up their obsolete business models, is increasingly a danger to the legitimate use of information technology and, by extension, the future of the Internet community. . .. Copyright enforcement, the attempt by the entertainment industry to prop up their obsolete business models, is increasingly a danger to the legitimate use of information technology and, by extension, the future of the Internet community . The latest troubling development in copyright enforcement is a bill recently introduced in the Congress by Howard Berman (D-CA). This bill would allow copyright holders to disable computers used to illegally trade copyrighted material, such as music and movies. Copyright holders would be exempt from computer hacking laws, and allowed to disable P2P networks allegedly used in illegal file sharing by various technical means currently prohibited by existing computer crime laws. It would grant copyright holders legal carte blanche to ping, probe, scan, disrupt, attack, and crack remote computer systems or infrastructures to ensure no copyright infringements are taking place. Not only that, but under the bill, the copyright holder is not liable for any damages beyond $50 resulting from their on-line copyright enforcement. (For the full text of the proposed legislation, please click here.) Of course, a "copyright holder" can include just about anyone, from Hollywood's entertainment cartels to owners of Weblogs and to students posting essays on the Web. But what's good for the goose may not be good for the gander. The day after the bill's introduction in the US House, Jack Valenti, chairman of the Motion Picture Association, was quoted saying that "there are aspects of the bill we believe need changing as it moves through the legislative process." As a recent Register article notes, the sweeping powers and immunities of the Berman bill were most likely intended to apply only to large entertainment entities, not every copyright holder on theNet. The link for this article located at SecurityFocus is no longer available. . Copyright enforcement, the attempt by the entertainment industry to prop up their obsolete business . copyright, enforcement, attempt, entertainment, industry, their, obsolete, business. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The recording industry is experimenting with new technology it hopes can smother online song swapping by targeting music traders' computers directly. The record, movie and software industries have long pursued a controversial campaign that identifies people trading large numbers of songs . . . . The recording industry is experimenting with new technology it hopes can smother online song swapping by targeting music traders' computers directly. The record, movie and software industries have long pursued a controversial campaign that identifies people trading large numbers of songs though services such as MusicCity, OpenNap or Gnutella. Once the people are identified, the groups attempt to persuade Internet service providers (ISPs) to shut down those individuals' Internet connections. But copyright holders, including record labels, are now experimenting with new ways to cut down on copyright infringement. As described by sources at the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), one method uses software to masquerade as a file-swapper online. Once the software has found a computer offering a certain song, it attempts to block other potential traders from downloading the song. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . The recording industry seeks innovative tech solutions to combat online song swapping and copyright infringement.. music trading technology,copyright infringement,file-swapper,online copyright enforcement. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Internet music site EMusic.com has started its "acoustic fingerprinting" offensive in hopes of stopping music file-swapping service Napster from distributing its songs. Claiming Napster has rejected technical avenues that would stop Napster users from downloading its material, EMusic says it has . . . . Internet music site EMusic.com has started its "acoustic fingerprinting" offensive in hopes of stopping music file-swapping service Napster from distributing its songs. Claiming Napster has rejected technical avenues that would stop Napster users from downloading its material, EMusic says it has developed its own software to find its songs on the rogue service that infringe on the copyrights of its artists and partners. "All we really care about is that you can't find EMusic (material) on Napster or anywhere else, because we have exclusive rights to it," EMusic President and CEO Gene Hoffman told Newsbytes. The link for this article located at Computer User is no longer available. . SoundWave.net introduces advanced audio recognition technology to safeguard its original music tracks and preserve unique licensing rights against rival platforms.. Acoustic Fingerprinting, Copyright Enforcement, Digital Rights Management, File Sharing, Music Distribution. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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