Peter Sunde, a co-founder of the Pirate Bay, said Monday that he. Pirate Bay has been enmeshed in legal disputes in recent weeks, ordered to shut down in the Netherlands and sued in Italy. Swedish firm Global Gaming Factory X has offered to buy the service for 60 million Swedish kronor ($7.8 million). Mr. Sunde has been the public face of the Pirate Bay amid its battles with anti-piracy groups. After a Swedish court found him and three other co-founders guilty of copyright infringement in April, he appeared in an online video holding a sign that said The link for this article located at WSJ is no longer available. . John Smith steps down as representative for OpenSea due to ongoing litigation and acquisition negotiations.. Pirate Bay, Legal Disputes, Digital Rights, Anti-piracy Challenges, Acquisition Talks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
This could set an interesting precedent. I understood that European adoption of open source was very high. In fact, higher than in some areas in the US. Is Red Hat fighting a losing battle? . The Red Hat group has asked a Swiss federal court to overturn a three-year contract issued to Microsoft by the Swiss Federal Bureau for Building and Logistics, to provide Windows desktops and applications, with support and maintenance, for 14 million Swiss Franc ( The link for this article located at eWeek Europe is no longer available. . The legal action initiated by Red Hat seeks to contest a Microsoft agreement in Switzerland, igniting worries about open source principles.. Red Hat Lawsuit, Microsoft Contract, Open Source Concerns. . Anthony Pell
The latest chapter in his decade-long battle began to unfold on Friday, when lawyers representing both the Department of Commerce and Bernstein, a University of Illinois associate professor of mathematics, statistics and computer science, prepared to ask federal district court judge . . . . The latest chapter in his decade-long battle began to unfold on Friday, when lawyers representing both the Department of Commerce and Bernstein, a University of Illinois associate professor of mathematics, statistics and computer science, prepared to ask federal district court judge Marilyn Hall Patel to grant a summary judgment. At stake: the last remnants of a system that once prevented U.S. citizens from releasing software code that creates secure, electronic communications. Bernstein is trying to eradicate the last of the export laws that previously kept Americans from distributing any work related to cryptography. It's a bit confusing to some in the cryptography arena who feel that the current laws allow anyone to distribute their programs without fear of reprimand. Bruce Schneier, security expert and author of Applied Cryptography, said the future battle over encryption won't be trying to free software code, but rather preventing corporations from using it to limit rights. The link for this article located at wired.com is no longer available. . The latest chapter in his decade-long battle began to unfold on Friday, when lawyers representing bo. latest, chapter, decade-long, battle, began, unfold, friday, lawyers, representing. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The film industry and a hacker publication will head back into court Tuesday in the DeCSS case, a legal dispute that could dictate whether it's legal to publish or link to certain materials online.. . .. The film industry and a hacker publication will head back into court Tuesday in the DeCSS case, a legal dispute that could dictate whether it's legal to publish or link to certain materials online. A panel of appellate judges will decide whether to uphold a lower court ruling preventing online hacker magazine 2600 from linking to code that theoretically could be used to crack DVD security. But legal experts say the case could have wide-ranging ramifications for linking, publishing and copyright on the Internet. "The courts have to craft a ruling that tells people when they may or may not publish certain content," said UCLA law professor and computer scientist Eugene Volokh. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . The film industry and a hacker publication will head back into court Tuesday in the DeCSS case, a le. industry, hacker, publication, court, tuesday, decss. . Anthony Pell
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