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Charleston Post and Courier
by press-robot Press“Music downloads: Stealing is stealing” by Phillip Robinson
OpenP2P
by press-robot Press“Taxing Questions: Are Compulsory Licenses a Solution to the P2P Debate?” by Miriam Rainsford
Slashdot
by press-robot Press“Magnatune – a Non-Evil Record Label?” by Slashdot staff
Village Voice
by press-robot Press“Wired to Wired” by Anya Kamenetz
Guardian UK
by press-robot Press“Auntie’s digital revelation” by Danny O’Brien
InternetNews.com
by press-robot Press“Semantic Web: Out of the Theory Realm” By Michael Singer
Join the "Copyleft, Right, & Center: Innovations in Law" online forum
by neeru UncategorizedFrom November 12th through 19th, Creative Commons will host a week-long online discussion entitled “Copyleft, Right & Center: Innovations in Law,” cosponsored by Eyebeam and the University of Maine. We’d like to invite you, members of the Creative Commons community, to participate in the discussion by joining the list. The resulting dialogue will be edited…
Berklee Shares Launches — Free Under Creative Commons
by glenn UncategorizedBerklee College of Music, the world’s largest independent music college and the premier institution for the study of contemporary music, today launched Berklee Shares, a groundbreaking new program that offers music lessons — free under Creative Commons licenses — and encourages musicians to share and distribute the lessons online. Berklee Shares consist of a growing…
UK passes law to create online archive
by matt UncategorizedLast week, British lawmakers passed a new bill to add electronic publications (including websites) as documents stored in national archives. This new law augments existing laws that cover all printed materials produced in the UK since 1911.
9th Circuit Rules on Sampling
by glenn UncategorizedThe U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit (in California) ruled yesterday that the Beastie Boys’ sampling of a three-note segment of James Newton’s composition to the song “Choir” did not infringe Newton’s copyright. The court ruled that the sample was a “de minimis” — or trivial — instance of copying and thus not…