An Ohio man is asking a federal judge to preserve data of the 66.6 million users of Megaupload, the file-sharing service that was shuttered in January following federal criminal copyright-infringement indictments that targeted its operators. . Represented by civil rights group Electronic Frontier Foundation, Kyle Goodwin wants U.S. District Judge Liam O The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . A resident of Ohio, supported by EFF, is advocating for judicial action to safeguard the information of 66.6 million Megaupload clients during ongoing litigation.. Megaupload Recovery, User Data Protection, Copyright Litigation. . Anthony Pell
A confidential briefing for the Attorney-General's Department, prepared by the Australian Institute of Criminology, lashes the music and software sectors. The draft of the institute's intellectual property crime report, sighted by The Australian shows that copyright owners "failed to explain" how they reached financial loss statistics used in lobbying activities and court cases. Figures for 2005 from the global Business Software Association showing $361 million a year of lost sales in Australia are "unverified and epistemologically unreliable", the report says. . BSAA chairman Jim Macnamara said the figure was an extrapolation, but other studies had supported it. "They're entitled to say they're not convinced, but not necessarily entitled to say it's unverified," he said. The study, which says some of the statistics used by copyright owners are "absurd", will be redrafted after senior researchers disagreed with its conclusions. The link for this article located at Australian IT is no longer available. . BSAA chairman Jim Macnamara said the figure was an extrapolation, but other studies had supported it. confidential, briefing, attorney-general's, department, prepared, australian, institute. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
MIT student Keith Winstein and alum Marc Horowitz say they're out to prove a point: Publishing code that decrypts and plays DVD movies is not a crime. In their case, they assert it's about teaching copyright issues and is . . . . MIT student Keith Winstein and alum Marc Horowitz say they're out to prove a point: Publishing code that decrypts and plays DVD movies is not a crime. In their case, they assert it's about teaching copyright issues and is thus protected under the First Amendment. Last week, a Web site published the pair's seven-line program, which unscrambles the protection around a DVD so quickly that a movie can play at the same time, although the film appears choppy. It's the shortest program to break DVD defenses to date. The link for this article located at ZDNet UK is no longer available. . Harvard researchers reveal that releasing smartphone encryption algorithms poses dilemmas for intellectual property rights and uncovers vulnerabilities.. DVD Security, Decryption Code, Digital Rights, Copyright Issues, Open Source Software. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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