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  • Supreme Court Has Ruled; Now Games Have a Duty
    By on July 1, 2011 | Comments Off  Comments

    What Supreme Court Ruling on Video Games Means? The court found that video games have the same First Amendment rights as other media.

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  • Swedish Court Orders Detention of Wikileaks Founder Assange
    By on November 18, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    An anonymous reader writes “Wikileaks founder Julian Assange is likely to be detained for questioning over his alleged connection to a rape case. The Director of Prosecution, Marianne Ny, has requested the District Court of Stockholm to detain Assange, claiming that they have not been able to meet with him to accomplish the interrogations. ‘I request the district court of Stockholm to detain Mr Assange in his absence, suspected of rape, sexual molestation (more…)

  • EFF: Supreme Court Should Uphold the First Sale Doctrine
    By on July 12, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    All kinds of products have some some bit or piece that could be copyrighted. But that is no reason to impose new restrictions on secondary markets for lawfully acquired products. We hope the Supreme Court realizes as much, and rejects the Ninth Circuit’s outrageous ruling.

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  • Federal Court Issues Permanent Injunction For Isohunt
    By on May 22, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    suraj.sun writes with this excerpt from NewTeeVee: “Judge Stephen Wilson of the US District Court of California, Southern District, issued a permanent injunction [PDF] against the popular torrent site Isohunt yesterday, forcing the site and its owner Garry Fung to immediately prevent access to virtually all Hollywood movies. The injunction theoretically leaves the door open for the site to deploy a strict filtering system, but its terms are so broad (more…)

  • Swedish Court Rules ISP Must Reveal OpenBitTorrent Operator’s Identity
    By on May 21, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    2phar writes “An ISP must hand over the identity of the operator behind OpenBitTorrent, a court in Sweden ruled [Wednesday]. The ISP must now reveal the identity of its customer, operator of probably the world’s largest torrent tracker, to Hollywood movie companies or face a hefty fine. ‘OpenBitTorrent is used for file sharing, and we suspect that it is the Pirate Bay tracker with a new name. It is added by default on all of the torrent tracker files (more…)

  • Sony taken to court over PS3 ‘Other OS’ removal
    By on May 2, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    Anthony Ventura filed a lawsuit in California, asking the judge for class-action status. The complaint quotes Sony executives on numerous occasions saying how vital and important the “Install Other OS” feature was to the game console (it’s a computer, remember?) and claims breach of contract, false advertising, and several other causes of actions

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  • Supreme Court To Consider First Sale of Imports
    By on April 27, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    Animaether passes along a legal tale that “doesn’t involve the kind of cutting-edge issues that copyright lawyers usually grapple with in the digital age [and] sounds like the kind of lawsuit that should have been resolved 200 years ago,” yet still “is very much a product of the Internet-driven global economy.” “Can copyright owners assert rights over imported goods that have already been sold once? That is the issue before the Supreme Court in Costco (more…)

  • Landmark Canadian Hyperlink Case Goes To Supreme Court
    By on April 4, 2010 | Comments Off  Comments

    An anonymous reader writes “Vancouver businessman Wayne Crookes is trying to reverse a decision by BC Supreme Court judge Stephen Kelleher that linking is not the same as publishing. He’s been given permission to appeal it to the Supreme Court of Canada. If he wins, it could mean the end of the net in Canada and will reverberate around the world. ‘The notion that someone might be considered a publisher merely by linking to someone else’s content, (more…)

  • U.S. Supreme Court rejects case about Redskins name
    By on November 16, 2009 | Comments Off  Comments

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. Supreme Court will not hear an appeal from a group of Native Americans who think the name of the Washington Redskins professional football team is offensive.

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  • Psystar Crushed In Court
    By on November 15, 2009 | Comments Off  Comments

    We’ve been following the case of Mac cloner Psystar for some time now. Apple was just handed a summary judgement over Psystar, and as usual Groklaw has the scoop. Here is the order (PDF), though PJ supplies it in text form at the link above. “Psystar just got what’s coming to them in the California case. … It’s a total massacre. Psystar’s first-sale defense went down in flames. Apple’s motion for summary judgment on copyright infringement and DMCA (more…)