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U2 manager Paul McGuinness lashes out at Google over music piracy sites U2 manager Paul McGuinness has slammed Google as "a monopoly" and criticised the way it displays illegal download sites in search results. Related Stories Game reviews: Resident Evil Revelations, Kingdom Rush, German Truck Simulator Twitter faces user backlash over move to censor messages BBC iPlayer to launch on Sky Anytime+ Net closes on cyber-snoopers Facebook - eight years to make $100bn rss.feedsportal.com
RIAA, Universal Music, DOJ Sites Hacked After Megaupload Bust Hacktivist organization Anonymous has taken credit for the online attacks. www.billboard.com
Five Tips For Disruptive Startups Trying To Deal With Old School Entertainment Executives Grooveshark walks us through some strategies. finance.yahoo.com
2012 Grammy Awards: What Time and TV Channel is Music's Biggest Night On? The 2012 Grammy Awards are Sunday night. Here's all the information about what time and TV channel music's biggest night is on. www.ibtimes.com
How sites like MegaUpload make millions from pirated video MegaUpload makes money the same way many legitimate sites do--through search, social media, ad networks, and online payment processors. news.cnet.com
Super Bowl was no windfall for communities outside Indianapolis The banners went up. The restaurants staffed up. Hotels filled up. In some cases, big pricey entertainment tents went up. www.indystar.com
SOPA Protest 2012: A Case For File Sharing, Legal or Illegal I get to the bottom of what file sharing means for the actual market of intellectual property. www.ibtimes.com
The Golden Age Of Music: The Civil Wars The Civil Wars talk about music and piracy in the age of the internet and social media. www.forbes.com
Today in the Bloggernacle: Power of music, trials and testimony ThePianoGuys masterfully combine Beethoven with OneRepublic in an incredible new music video. And a blogger kindly offers a... www.deseretnews.com
Digital music improving, just as Neil Young wants You can stream it for free on YouTube or pay for higher quality via iTunes or Rdio - either way, consumers will get the music they want www.theglobeandmail.com
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