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Anonymous Claims it Hacked a Justice Department Site The Department of Justice is looking into the unauthorized access of a website server. www.pcworld.com
Anonymous Claims It Hacked a DOJ Site The U.S. Department of Justice said Tuesday it was looking into the unauthorized access of a website server in its statistics wing, after hacker group Anonymous... www.pcworld.com
'The Truth Is, It Doesn't Work' - CD Projekt On DRM In the third and final part of a wide-ranging interview with CD Projekt Red, the leaders of the developer and its sister company, the digital store GOG.com, discuss DRM. www.forbes.com
Anonymous claims it has hacked a DOJ site The US Department of Justice said Tuesday it was looking into the unauthorized access of a website server in its statistics wing, after hacker group Anonymous claimed to have collected and released 1.7GB of data from it. rss.feedsportal.com
Copyright cartel: want to cut filesharing by 40%? Here’s how The copyright industry could dramatically reduce piracy if it gave consumers what they wanted, research from Essential shows. Read more on the blog... Read more on the blog... Read more on the blog... Read more on the... Read more on the blog... feeds.crikey.com.au
Guide to 2012 western Montana summer camps Summer is coming – we promise. That means no school for the kids, which means lots of opportunities to attend summertime camps. missoulian.com
How to fight back against privacy pirates Have you Googled yourself lately? Is the information about you accurate or full of inconsistencies, both of which can be devastating? www.cio.com.au
Why the death of DRM would be good news The decision by Tor Books to ditch digital rights management signals the beginning of the end of the ebook format wars At the end of April, Tor Books, the world's largest science fiction publisher, and its UK sister company, Tor UK, announced that they would be eliminating digital rights management (DRM) from all of their ebooks by the summer. It was a seismic event in the history of the ... www.guardian.co.uk
Using other people’s In reply to iiNet Decision Good News For ISPs : Using other people’s intellectual property without their permission or payment is stealing. Mere ownership of a computer does not exempt anyone from ethical conduct. The judges’ semantic dancing is dismaying, while the ISP may be likened to “a fence”—a distributor of goods knowing them to be stolen. newmatilda.com
Half of PC users are pirates, says study "Over half of PC users worldwide have admitted to using pirate software last year, according to a study by the trade group Business Software Alliance. BSA's ninth annual Global Software Piracy Study has shown a sharp increase in software piracy, especially among emerging economies. In the UK, more than one in four programs users installed in 2011 were unlicensed." If people decide en masse not ... osnews.com
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