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I interviewed director Grant Marshall about how he pulled off producing the first broadcast quality music video shot entirely on cell phones for the Presidents of the United States of America.
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Lawrence Lessig kicked off this year's O'Reilly Open Source Conference with a question for technologists everywhere. As we quickly hand over our rights and freedoms under the guise of Copyright Law, "what have you done?"
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Based on the Recommendation of the Register of Copyrights (Marybeth Peters), the Librarian of Congress (James H. Billington) has formally rejected the CARP Panel's determinations for webcasting rates. The Librarian of Congress now has until June 20, 2002 to issue his final determination.
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Marc Stiegler's presentation on the E Development platform and "capability secure" browsers and desktops caught the attention of many an E-Tech conference goer. (Paul Prescod, Wes Felten, Aaron Swartz and myself, just to name just a few...)
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321 Studios has filed a complaint against the movie studios in a defensive measure that challenges the constitutionality of the DMCA.
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CodeCon 2002: Let the games begin!

This weekend's CodeCon 2002 is the premier event for developers of P2P, cypherpunk and network/security applications, as well as real-world applications that support individual liberties.
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Dmitry Sets the Record Straight

Dmitry Sklyarov, his past, present and future employer (Elcomsoft), and Elcomsoft's attorney clarify a few facts about their cases and the agreement Dmitry made with the U.S. Attorney's office.
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Dmitry Buys Some Time With Testimony

Dmitry Sklyarov's case has been deferred until the case against his former employer, Elcomsoft, is resolved -- or one year (whichever is longer) in exchange for his testimony.
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Hilary Rosen delivered an enlightening talk at the O'Reilly Peer-to-peer and Web Services Conference about the evolution of the relationship between the recording industry and Peer-to-peer technologies.
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RIAA Threatened By Anti-Terrorist Law

Under the Uniting and Strengthening America Act (USA Act), 'collateral damage' inflicted by virus-like software used to seek out and delete infringing files on a home user's computer (non-infringing files deleted by accident) would constitute an act of terrorism.

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