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Submission + - Copyright Troll Ordered to Pay $119,000

Hugh Pickens writes writes: "Steve Green reports that newspaper copyright infringement lawsuit filer Righthaven of Las Vegas has been hit with an order to pay $119,488 in attorney's fees and costs in its failed lawsuit against former federal prosecutor Thomas DiBiase who was sued over allegations he posted a story without authorization on a murder case by the Las Vegas Review-Journal. US District Judge Roger Hunt dismissed Righthaven's suit against DiBiase this summer because Righthaven lacked standing to sue him under its flawed lawsuit contract with R-J owner Stephens Media. The DiBiase case was noteworthy because his attorneys at the EFF said DiBiase's nonprofit website, "No Body Murder Cases," performed a public service assisting law enforcement officials in bringing justice to crime victims — and that his post was protected by the fair use concept of copyright law. Case law created by the Righthaven lawsuits suggests DiBiase’s use of the story would be protected by fair use as it was noncommercial and judges have found there can be no market harm to Righthaven for such uses since there is no market for copyrights Righthaven obtains for lawsuit purposes. Although this was by far the largest fee award against Righthaven, it will likely will be dwarfed by an upcoming award in Righthaven's failed suit against the Democratic Underground."
Cloud

Submission + - Can Hyper-V finally best VMware? (networkworld.com)

Julie188 writes: "Hyper-V will get an overhaul as part of the release of Microsoft's Windows Server 8. At that time, it will offer features Microsoft claims that no one else in the market is doing — such as Share Nothing Live Migration, where virtual machines can be transfered from one server to another over just a network connection, no NAS or SAN required. Not surprisingly, VMware disagrees, saying there is nothing in the new version of Hyper-V that isn't available from VMware today. But it'll cost you, as these new Hyper-V features are not part of vSphere, but are only available as expensive add-ons from VMware."
Cellphones

Submission + - Nokia Unveils OLED Phone You Control by Bending (inhabitat.com)

jldailey618 writes: Nokia just unveiled an OLED smartphone that is controlled by flexing the device with both hands. By bending corners and pushing the sides inward and outward, the user can scroll, zoom, and select. Researchers would not discuss exactly how the processor behind the twisty screen functioned, but they did say that it would be compatible with most current operating systems.

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