Calvin alerts us to the news that, just days after dining with entertainment industry honcho David Geffen while on holiday, at the Rothschild family villa on Corfu, Lord Peter Mendelson, the UK's Business Secretary suddenly returned to the office and demanded that the Digital Britain report be beefed up to include criminalizing file sharing. Even the press reporting on this seem pretty skeptical of the reasoning behind it (which is a first). While a spokesperson for Mendelson insisted the wining and dining with Geffen had nothing to do with things, someone else in the office seemed to disagree: 'Until the past week, Mandelson had shown little personal interest in the Digital Britain agenda. Full story...
A bunch of folks sent over Jeff Jarvis' recent blog post entitled stop selling scarcity, which I actually think is slightly misleading.
In my experience, there is a group of photographers who are even more extreme in their copyright views than groups like the RIAA and MPAA.
With a new report coming out suggesting that Facebook sends more traffic to news sites than Google News, folks like Mathew Ingram are asking if Rupert Murdoch, the AP and others will be complaining about Facebook "stealing" their traffic and demanding to get paid.
TorrentFreak alerts us to an interesting case happening in Norway right now. Apparently, the most expensive movie ever produced in Norway was (shocking, I know) found on the internet soon after it was released.
We noted in the past how odd it was that AT&T blocked something like the place-shifting Sling Player from the iPhone, but allowed place-shifting streaming TV apps from partners like MLB.
This post is part of the IT Innovation series, sponsored by Sun & Intel. Read more at ITInnovation.
Obviously, we've been covering various stories of content creators who are making use of new methods and new ideas to build a successful business model in a very changed world.
Last week, in discussing its attempt to settle its lawsuit with Google over the Google book scanning project, the Authors Guild posted a rather interesting public letter, entitled To RIAA or Not to RIAA, That was the Question.
Last summer, due to a DDOS attack emanating from IP addresses connected to 4chan, AT&T temporarily blocked access to 4chan.
A whole bunch of you are sending in one of the first mainstream articles I've see on patents that gets almost (but not quite) everything right.