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Recent Posts
- DOJ Takes Extraordinary Step in Seizing AP Phone Records
- Speak, and Speak Immediately: The Risen Subpoena, the Executive Branch, and the Reporter’s Privilege
- DoJ Ignores FOIA Requirements and Congressional Intent, Continues to Deny Fee Waivers to Bloggers
- The Case of the Misleading Wired Headline: The Importance of Legal Reporting Getting It Right
- Broken Promises: A Lack of Executive Branch Transparency in Obama’s First Term
Twitter ‘dates
- Media letter to DOJ: Stronger laws needed to protect reporters on.msnbc.com/19sOjUw via @msnbc-- 2 days ago
- DOJ Takes Extraordinary Step in Seizing AP Phone Records tinyurl.com/cqbd2xv #firstamendment #freepress #subpoena #doj-- 4 days ago
- DOJ Takes Extraoridinary Step in Seizing AP Phone Records wp.me/pY5oJ-RR-- 4 days ago
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Tag Archives: DMCA
It’s American Censorship Day: Why Congress Wants to Blackout the Net
by Matthew L. Schafer On Wednesday, the House Judiciary Committee held a hearing on H.R. 3261, the Stop Online Piracy Act (“SOPA“). The House Judiciary Committee hosted six witnesses, five of which testified in favor of the law, one of which … Continue reading
Posted in First Amendment, Media Policy
Tagged DMCA, First Amendment, Free Press, Free Speech, House Judiciary Committee, Protect IP, SOPA
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Youtube on lawsuit win: “Important victory” for billions of people
by Matthew L. Schafer Just over three years after Viacom International filed a complaint against Youtube, Inc. for allegedly infringing on Viacom’s copyrighted material, Youtube was handed a victory by a federal court. In the Opinion and Order of the … Continue reading
Posted in First Amendment, Internet Policy
Tagged Copyright, Court Case, DMCA, Internet, Viacom, Youtube
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