Tag Archives: CopyrightInfringement

Editorial: Let Google be a little evil

Post Image

Google’s lawyers visited the Second Circuit Court of Appeals last week for a polite conversation with three judges and attorneys from the Authors Guild. You remember — the book-scanning thing? Yes, the case is 7 years old and still unresolved. Th…


YouTube still protected under DMCA, says Judge, Viacom sent packing

Post Image

YouTube trends may have changed over the last few years, but the company’s legal standing hasn’t: according to a federal judge, the DMCA still protects the streaming site from Viacom’s copyright claims. The ruling responds to Viacom’s appeal of a 201…


Google to pay $0 in damages to Oracle, wait for appeal

Post Image

After watching Judge Alsup strike down its patent and Java API infringement claims, Oracle seems to be cutting its losses, agreeing to accept $0 in damages from Google. Confused? So was the Judge, who reportedly responded to the proposal by asking, “…


Aereo gets unfair competition claim dismissed, still faces two claims of copyright infringement

Post Image

Aereo’s mini-antenna arrays started streaming OTA television broadcasts in Gotham a couple months ago in spite of the lawsuit filed by a few of New York’s local stations to stop them from doing so. Today, it was able to dismiss its opponents’ state l…


Viacom wins appeal against YouTube, gets another chance to prove copyright infringement

Post Image

It’s been almost two years since YouTube’s triumph in its copyright infringement case against Viacom. As is the way of things, Viacom appealed the decision, and now the Second Circuit Court of Appeals has decided to breathe new life into Viacom’s case…


Oracle and Google get a trial date, April 16th is the start of Android armageddon

Post Image

As regular readers of this site are well aware, Google and Oracle have had an ongoing legal spat for nearly two years now. In the time since the lawsuit’s filing, the legal claims have been narrowed, damages claims have been adjusted, reduced, and red…


Pirate Bay founders lose final appeal in Sweden, prison looms on the horizon

Post Image

It looks like Pirate Bay’s legal drama has finally come to a close in Sweden, where the Supreme Court today turned down the site’s final appeal. At the center of the case are the file sharing site’s founders — Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Carl Lunds…


In the wake of Megaupload crackdown, fear forces similar sites to shutter sharing services?

Post Image

The Feds put the smackdown on Megaupload and its whole executive team last week, charging them with criminal charges for copyright infringement and racketeering in addition to conspiracy to commit copyright infringement and money laundering. As a resu…


Federal domain seizure raises new concerns over online censorship

Post Image

It’s been a little more than a year since the US government began seizing domains of music blogs, torrent meta-trackers and sports streaming sites. The copyright infringement investigation, led by US Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) auth…


UK court orders ISP to block Newzbin 2 filesharing site within two weeks, Hollywood smiles

Post Image

Pirates just can’t catch a break these days. Way back in July, a British judge ordered telecom company BT to block its subscribers from visiting a site called Newzbin 2, on the grounds that the ISP had “actual knowledge” of customers using the platf…