Lawgarithms Links for 7/20/07
Now that I'm smitten with keeping a link blog, I'll endeavor once a week or so to cull through it for things I think might be of particular interest to Lawgarithms readers. So, here we go. I'm curious whether you find such undertakings useful or not, so there's a poll on just that subject at the end.
University of Kansas adopts one-strike policy for copyright infringement (Eric Bangeman/Ars Technica), from Techmeme
Report: DVR adoption to surge past 50 percent by 2010, from Digg / Technology
RIAA Accepts $300 Offer of Judgement In Carolina, from Slashdot by kdawson
False Copyright Claims, from Slashdot by kdawson
Judge Says No to RIAA Subpoena Request, from Slashdot by CowboyNeal
Court: Feds can Read E-mail, IP addresses without warrant is Legal, from Digg / Technology
Might Lawyers Adopt 'Radical Honesty'?, from Law.com - Inside Opinions: Legal Blogs by Robert J. Ambrogi
The “Secondary Liability” Theory on YouTube/iPhone, from TechCrunch by Michael Arrington
HOW TO - Put DVDs on the iPhone - the super simple way, from Digg / Technology
Harry Potter Leaked Via Handheld Camera, from Slashdot by kdawson
Rewritable Song Lyrics, from Slashdot by kdawson
The Bar Exam: And You Thought Your State Was Tough, from Abovethelaw.com
Funniest Law Blog, from Blawg Review by Editor
TorrentFreak Under Attack, from Digg / Technology
Dailymotion Loses Court Battle: Pays Damages to Indie Film Producers, from Mashable! by Kristen Nicole
Do Legal Blogs Even Matter to Attorneys?, from Sui Generis--a New York law blog by NBlack
Putting Canadian "Piracy" in Perspective - The Sources, from Michael Geist's Blog by Michael Geist
If These Jurors Could Talk, from Deliberations by Anne Reed
The Flat Legal Blogosphere, and What To Do About It, from Concurring Opinions by hoffman
Music file-sharers get boost in top EU court - Reuters.uk, from Google News - Sci/Tech
Unrelated miscellany, from IPTAblog by Andrew Raff
New EFF tee, from Boing Boing by Cory Doctorow
The First Online Law Degree, from Law.com - Inside Opinions: Legal Blogs by Robert J. Ambrogi
Lawrence Lessig, from Planet Intertwingly by Joi
Microsoft Excludes GPLv3 From Linspire Deal, from Slashdot by ScuttleMonkey
Digital Audio from Federal Courts, from The Connected Lawyer by Bryan
But You Can't Sue A Wire Service On Product Liability Grounds, from The Trademark Blog by Marty
Court decision poses serious privacy threat, from ZDNet Blogs by ZDNet Government
Open source content moves forward, from ZDNet Blogs by Dana Blankenhorn
Advocacy group cites top 50 pirated films, TV shows, from ZDNet News - News Page One by Reuters/Hollywood Reporter, for Reuters
Drawing That Explains Copyright Law, from Clock Tower Law Group's shared items in Google Reader by Erik J. Heels
Drawing That Explains Patent Laws, from Clock Tower Law Group's shared items in Google Reader by Erik J. Heels
SimplifyMedia: share iTunes with anyone, anywhere, from Boing Boing by Cory Doctorow
(Internet) users have no “reasonable expectation of privacy”, from Linuxchic.net - Because I Can by linuxchic
Do "Illegal" Codecs Actually Scare Linux Users?, from Slashdot by kdawson
Four things you may not know about technology Patent applications, from ZDNet Blogs by Russell Shaw
Copyright Board Gives Go Ahead to iPod Levy, from Michael Geist's Blog by Michael Geist
Limewire starts a music blog, from P2P Blog
Where do you prefer your data? At home or on the “Web Cloud”, from Web Strategy by Jeremiah by jeremiah_owyang
Ask.com First Major Search Engine to Allow Deletion of All User Search History, from Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim by andy.beal@gmail.com (Andy Beal)
MPAA Responds to Harry Potter Leak, from TorrentFreak by Ernesto
Richard Stallman Talks on Copyright V. The People, from Slashdot by CowboyNeal
RIAA Admits 'Stream-ripping' Is Not a Problem, from Digg / Technology
Webcasting reprieve carries a dangerous payload, from Boing Boing by Cory Doctorow
Nearly Ten Percent of Companies Have Fired Bloggers, Survey Claims, from Threat Level - Wired Blogs by Ryan Singel
Facebook and the law, from Vendorprisey by Thomas Otter (via Dan Farber)
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