MEDIA, COMMUNICATIONS & NET NEUTRALITY
- Chairperson, Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, Appointment Opportunity
- 18 bogus arguments about the CRTC and Super Bowl ads
- Outgoing Obama trade chief urges Canada to reverse Super Bowl ad decision
- Super Bowl Commercials Set to Air North of the Border
- NFL Gets Involved In Plan To Keep American Super Bowl Commercials Out Of Canada
- Report: President Trump Picks Former Verizon Lawyer Ajit Pai To Head FCC
- FCC Chairman Pai vows to close broadband “digital divide”: Pai voted against previous broadband expansion orders, but has plans of his own.
- FCC to be led by Ajit Pai, staunch opponent of consumer protection rules: Ex-Verizon lawyer Pai will take “weed whacker” to net neutrality under Trump.
- Comcast, AT&T, and ISP lobbyists are excited about Trump’s FCC chair: Ajit Pai repeatedly sided with ISPs on FCC rules, will be “formidable opponent.”
- GOP asks Ajit Pai to kill plan for helping customers avoid cable box rentals: Wheeler’s attempt to remake cable box market nears official demise.
- The U.S. Without Net Neutrality: How An Internet Nightmare Unfolds: Today, we take the freedom of the web for granted. Under Trump, maybe we shouldn’t
- Google and Netflix join fight against municipal broadband restrictions: Internet companies and advocacy groups battle Virginia anti-muni broadband bill.
- Google, Ting, Netflix Dare To Suggest That Maybe Giant, Anti-Competitive ISPs Shouldn’t Be Writing State Telecom Laws
- Netflix is so big that it doesn’t need net neutrality rules anymore: But small video providers still need network neutrality, Netflix says.
- Netflix May Not Be Worried About The Looming Death Of Net Neutrality, But Startups Should Be Terrified
- Netflix calls out HBO for not letting subscribers binge on new shows
- Trump voters need fast broadband and net neutrality too, Tom Wheeler says: Wheeler talks to Ars about “Cablewood,” competition, regulation on last day at FCC.
- Outgoing FCC Boss Reminds Trump Supporters That Net Neutrality Is Good For Them, Too
- When home Internet service costs $5,000—or even $15,000: We talked to two homeowners who grudgingly paid thousands to RCN and Comcast.
- AT&T raises phone activation fee another $5, now charges $25: $25 fee for AT&T users who bring own device or buy phone on installment plan.
- Through Price Hikes And Annoyance, AT&T Still Waging War On Unlimited Data Users
- The FCC Fines Straight Path $100 Million for Failing to Meet License Obligations
- The trouble for Canadian digital policy in an ‘America first’ world (Michael Geist)
- What’s in the box? Not a valid agreement to arbitrate! (Rebecca Tushnet)
DIGITAL
- Struggling Canadian News Agencies Ask Government For A ‘Google Tax’
- Canadian retailers will be able to offer discounts on ebooks by three major publishers: Competition Bureau takes fourth publisher HarperCollins to the Competition Tribunal
- Ex-Goldman Sachs programmer found guilty, again, of source code theft – Court: It’s silly to let Sergey Aleynikov go free just because he stole digital files.
- Apple sues Qualcomm, saying chipmaker withheld $1B as “extortion”: Suit claims payment was withheld after Apple talked to Korean regulators.
- Apple sues Qualcomm in China, expanding fight over patent licensing: Qualcomm is under legal attack, now in two of the world’s biggest markets.
- Section 230 Helps Snapchat Defeat Personal Injury Claim Due to ‘Speed Filter’–Maynard v. McGee
- Samsung chief avoids arrest in South Korean corruption scandal: The bribery investigation continues, but for now Lee Jae-yong remains free.
- California Man Brings Class Action Lawsuit Against Apple For Not Preventing Drivers From Doing Stupid Stuff
- Perfect 10 Loses Once Again, Sets More Good Copyright Precedent
- Amazon wants to skip to the end of EU’s e-book antitrust case: “We disagree with some of Vestager’s ideas,” says Amazon as it tables settlement offer.
- Snapchat To Enable Ad Targeting Using Third Party Data
- Netflix added over 7 million new subscribers last quarter
- How Social Cash Made WeChat The App For Everything: A centuries-old tradition gave rise to China’s most valuable company and captured the attention of everyone from teens to Silicon Valley.
- Facebook Journalism Project is Nothing But A Much-Needed PR stunt
- Source: Facebook encouraged Antonio Brown to do locker-room live broadcast
- Beyoncé, Jay-Z and Obama stock photo draws backlash
- Welcome to the world of trolling in virtual reality: Imagine being surrounded by hundreds of faceless avatars screaming at you.
- As PC sales shrink, the gaming PC market grows faster than expected: Report shows PC gaming hardware worth over $30 billion, well ahead of schedule.
- What the Five Year Anniversary of the SOPA/PIPA Blackout Can Teach Congress About Tech
- Copyright Office Says Current Law Addresses Concerns about Software-Enabled Consumer Products
- EU MEPs Call Again For ‘Robot Rules’ To Get Ahead Of The AI Revolution
- How artificial intelligence can be corrupted to repress free speech: It’s easier than you think, even here in America.
- Can We Balance Human Ethics With Artificial Intelligence?
- The Ethics and Governance of AI: On the Role of Universities (Urs Gasser)
- The Real Story Of 2016: What reporters — and lots of data geeks, too — missed about the election, and what they’re still getting wrong. (Nate Silver)
CREATIVITY
- Supreme Court Delves Into Question Of Whether Or Not You Can Trademark ‘Disparaging’ Terms
- Transcript of Oral Argument in In Re Tam
- Lee v. Tam post-argument (Rebecca Tushnet)
- Tiffany & Co. Successfully Asserts Trademark Infringement Claims Against Costco
- Trump Campaign Wants To Trademark ‘Keep America Great’
- CBS, Paramount Settle Lawsuit Over ‘Star Trek’ Fan Film
- CBS & Paramount Finally Settle With Fan Film Axanar
- Axanar Productions, Paramount, and CBS settle Star Trek copyright lawsuit: Axanar says it’s “not paying anything,” will turn its feature into two 15-minute shorts.
- CJEU rules that EU law does NOT prevent punitive damages in IP cases
- France: Any Alteration/Modification of a Work in Public Domain is Infringement of Moral Rights
- Sir Paul Will Not Let It Be: McCartney Makes Preemptive Strike Against Music Publishers to Reclaim His Copyrights
- Apple Sued Over Use of Jamie XX Song in iPhone Advertisement
- Is A ‘Fattened’ Version Of A Famous Jorge Luis Borges Story Artistic Re-Creation, Or Copyright Infringement?
- Author Sued for “Children’s Versions” of ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s,’ ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’
- Copyright Has A Real & Serious Free Speech Problem
- Want to double-down on fixing the Copyright Law? Fix ELUAs.
- Producers Pressured to Disavow
- Arrested Flag Burner Sues Arresting Officers
- Original “patent troll” law firm is shutting down: The Niro firm made tech companies shudder and made a few inventors wealthy.
- What does post-truth mean for a philosopher?
- What Do You Mean by ‘The Media?’: The term has been weaponized.
- Publisher printing more copies of George Orwell’s ‘1984’ after spike in demand
- The Top Ten TTAB Decisions of 2016 [Part 1]
SURVEILLANCE & PRIVACY
- Court ruling stands: US has no right to seize data from world’s servers – Outcome means hot-button privacy topic could reach US Supreme Court.
- State Appeals Court Says Unlocking A Phone With A Fingerprint Doesn’t Violate The Fifth Amendment
- China announces mass shutdown of VPNs that bypass Great Firewall: China says all VPN providers must get permission from government to operate.
- China Bolsters The Great Firewall, Cracks Down Harder On VPN Use
- Megaviral Meitu “beauty” app’s data grab is anything but skin-deep: Android version seeks intrusive permissions, sends lots of data to servers in China.
- Kaspersky Lab’s top investigator reportedly arrested in treason probe: Charges ignite concern that other researchers could be prosecuted as well.
- Chicago Mayor Promises To Turn Over Emails From His Private Accounts Following Courtroom Losses
- Snowden’s Favorite Email Service Returns, With ‘Trustful,’ ‘Cautious,’ And ‘Paranoid’ Modes
- CIA Slightly Scales Back Its Domestic Surveillance Powers In First Major Policy Update In Over 30 Years
- Proposed CIA Chief Seems Happy To Spy On Americans, Even If Using Info Hacked By Russians
- Ransomware app hosted in Google Play infects unsuspecting Android user: “All Your Data Is Already Stored On Our Servers!” malicious app warned.
- UK Government Refuses To Impose Privacy Rules On Surveillance Cameras In Hospitals
- Should Celebrities Be Able to Stop Fake News Sites Using Their Faces?
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