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

Kazaa Will Fight Infringement Lawsuit

Via ZDNet there is news that Sharman Networks, the investment consortium based in Sydney, Australia that owns the popular and controversial P2P software Kazaa will fight the copyright infringement lawsuit brought against them in the U.S. District Court, Central District of California (CV 01-08541-SVW, CV 01-09923-SVW) by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, after the court issued a 46 …

Subjects: Copyright, Digital Rights, E-Commerce

Google Responds to SearchKing Lawsuit

In typical fashion, you will not find any news releases from Google concerning legal issues actually posted on their own website. However, a number of tech publications, such as InfoWorld and PCWorld, have articles today stating that Google is fighting SearchKing’s preliminary injunction, arguing that the motion “contains only bare and conclusory allegations.” The text …

Subjects: Search Engines

Allen Introduces Bill on Net Taxes

This is actually a new posting on yet another net taxes moratorium bill, this one sponsored by Virginia Senator George Allen . “Senator Allen’s legislation will permanently ban taxes on Internet access, as well as taxes on Internet transactions by multiple jurisdictions, and discriminatory taxes that unfairly target Internet transactions.” The bill, the Internet Tax …

Subjects: Congress, E-Commerce, Legislation

Intel CEO and Digital Rights

The CEO of Intel, Craig Barrett, spoke about digital rights at the 2003 International Consumer Electronics Show. His comments sought to strike a balance between fair use rights for consumers who legally purchase digital services and media, and appropriate punishment for those “who grossly violate anybody’s content.”

Subjects: Copyright, Digital Rights

Growing Congressional Concerns About TIA

Senator Tom Harkin issued a written request on January 13 to Daniel K. Inouye Chair, Subcommittee on Defense U.S. Senate Committee on Appropriation, for a hearing to investigate the work of the Total Information Awareness Project. Quoting the Senator, “The Total Information Awareness project raises serious issues of privacy violations and legality, the choice of …

Subjects: Congress, Privacy

Microsoft Settles With California

According to a press release from plaintiff’s counsel Eugene Crew, Microsoft has agreed to a record settlement for a series of antitrust class action suits. California consumers and businesses will receive $1.1 billion for Microsoft products that they “purchased between Feb. 18, 1995, and Dec. 15, 2001, for use in the State of California.” Payment …

Subjects: Microsoft

Google v. SearchKing

The legal rangling between search engine giant Google and a search engine portal aggregator called SearchKing is playing out in the U.S. Western District Court of Oklahoma. The lawsuit by SearchKing revolves around the use of Googles’ Page Rank Algorithm, a system by which websites are displayed in response to Google queries based on popularity …

Subjects: E-Commerce, Search Engines

Popular Blog Stays in the News

InstaPundit, a weblog by University of Tennessee law professor Glenn Reynolds, has garnered significant recognition and praise from the mainstream press recently (one good example is here). The site is also a top destination for the blogging community. Reynolds offers opinions, facts, links, and interviews on a range of issues, including technology and the law, …

Subjects: Blogs