What Will 2009 Bring to Filesharing and Technology? Drew Wilson | December 31, 2008 It’s the end of 2008 as we know it, but what will 2009 bring? We look at the past for clues into the future.
Thai Internet Website Blacklist Leaked Drew Wilson | December 28, 2008 It may be another way to prove the futility of an internet blacklist mandated by the government.
British Minister In Discussions With Obama to Filter Internet to ‘Protect the Children’ Drew Wilson | December 28, 2008 Britain and the United States next in line to filter the internet while saying the internet is nothing more than a broadcaster?
Major Search Engines Sued for Copyright Violations Drew Wilson | December 26, 2008 Two major websites are currently under the legal gun for allegedly assisting copyright infringement.
ACTA Negotiations Will Continue into 2009 Drew Wilson | December 23, 2008 ACTA negotiations will continue it’s usual secrecy into 2009 after wrapping up in Paris. Reportedly, they will continue negotiations in Morocco.
Is It Right to Consider the Internet as Little More Than a Broadcaster? Drew Wilson | December 20, 2008 There is a growing trend to define the internet as little more than a “broadcaster”, but isn’t it a bad thing to start considering the internet little more than just another TV station?
French Government Wants to Tax the Internet Drew Wilson | December 17, 2008 It seems that the French government wants to treat the internet like a broadcaster and tax it accordingly.
OiNK Admin Appears Before British Court Drew Wilson | December 13, 2008 The administrator of OiNK, the once popular private BitTorrent website, as well as five others, have appeared before court recently. No plea has been entered by Ellis.
60 Year-Old Australian’s House Raided Over Re-Posting YouTube Clip Drew Wilson | December 12, 2008 There’s always the passing thought of getting raided for uploading copyrighted works, but over a viral video originally on YouTube?
British Government Announces Support for Copyright Term Extension Drew Wilson | December 11, 2008 In a move that sent shock waves around the internet, Culture secretary Andy Burnham announced that he supports extending the UK copyright term from 50 to 70 years.