Category «Internet»

RIAA Wins Battle With Verizon Over Customer Data

Judge John D. Bates, United States District Court for the District of Columbia, has ruled in favor of RIAA in their high profile case against Verizon to compel the ISP to provide personal data on customers’ use and online distribution of music obtained using P2P downloading applications. See Recording Industry of America v. Verizon Internet …

Subjects: Digital Rights, E-Commerce, Internet, Privacy

Cybercrime and the Courts

Appellate courts around the country are attempting to craft procedures that apply to the use of technology by cybercrime offenders once they leave incarceration. Disparate determinations are being made in regard to such offenders, allowing some to return to regular use of the Internet and e-mail, while others, such as notorious hacker Kevin Mitnick, was …

Subjects: Courts, Cybercrime, E-Mail, Internet

Politicians and Spam

The current issue of the Duke Law and Technology Report (2003 Duke L. & Tech. Rev. 0001), has an article by Mark Sweet, Political E-mail: Protected Speech or Unwelcome Spam? This link comes via politechbot.com, where Declan McCullagh has been discussing Sen. Joseph Lieberman’s use of bulk e-mail to promote his recently announced 2004 Presidential …

Subjects: E-Mail, Internet, Privacy

Broadband Usage Grows Again

According to this new Nielson-Netratings survey, broadband usage at home has increased by 59% in one year, accounting for more than 33 million users accessing the web via high-speed connections. Seniors, children, men and women have all increased broadband usage, whereas the pace of dialup connectivity is dropping.

Subjects: Internet

Journalists' Ethics Codes Online

Via CyberJournalist.net, here is a link to a guide for online journalists’ ethics codes from around the world. Organized by country and topic (accuracy, copyright, civil rights, privacy, etc.), this is a fascinating, and up-to-date resource.

Subjects: Internet

Net Libel Cases

The current issue of the ABA Journal eReport has a noteworthy article, Where in the World Wide Web to Fight, that weighs in on the growing concerns about jurisdiction and Internet libel cases. See my posting on the recent Australian case and the two U.S. cases here.

Subjects: Censorship, Internet