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Comment Re:no love lost with Real Networks, BUT - (Score 1) 127

NO... The real truth to "why someone hasn't..." is because all of the likely suspects are camping outside of Jack Thompson's house/place of work... It's just plain poor luck that a fair portion of the Internet Radio listening community are video game players... And in that arena, there is currently more at stake, and bigger fish to fry.

Feed Man Charged With Putting TV Show He Found On The Web... On The Web? (techdirt.com)

Apparently federal authorities are charging a man in Chicago with copyright violations for uploading copies of Fox's TV show "24" to the web. There are a few things that don't make sense here. First, the article claims that the guy downloaded the shows off of a website before loading them onto a different website. While that still is copyright infringement, it's not clear why that's such a big catch for federal authorities that they're trumpeting it. The fact that he got the videos from another website also suggests that the "damage" done by this particular guy was probably negligible since the content was already available online elsewhere. On top of that, one could argue that it's unlikely the guy did much to damage the commercial viability of the show, since the show was eventually broadcast for free on TV. Yes, you could claim that people could watch the downloaded version without commercials -- but the same is true of anyone who watched the same show via their DVRs. However, now, the guy is facing three years in jail, which seems like quite an overreaction.
User Journal

Journal Journal: Goatse on the BBC! 2

ROTFL! (It got pulled rather quickly, but not before being shown on national TV. The background - people were asked to submit alternative logos for the 2012 London Olympics, given the actual design chosen has come in for quite a lot of criticism)

Media

Submission + - Daily Tech hunts payola among tech review sites

cheesecake23 writes: How often have you read a hardware review and thought: "no way was that an honest opinion, the reviewer was bought"? Well, the Daily Tech has gone undercover to find out whether or not payola is accepted among the 35 largest online English-language hardware review sites. Questions asked and answered:
  • How many sites would take money (or sell ads) in exchange for a product review? [Answer: 20 percent]
  • How many sites would additionally consider selling an Editor's Choice award? [Answer: none]
  • Were any world regions more "corrupt" than others? [Answer: no, 20-25% almost everywhere]
  • Does it depend on the size or age of the site? [Answer: read TFA]
Although no "bad guys" were explicitly revealed, the article contains enough information to make a white list of quite a few good guys. Let's see what Slashdotters can come up with. Let the finger-pointing begin!

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