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Tag Archives: Legal
University Creates iPhone Orchestra
iPhones are being used as musical instruments in a new class taught at the University of Michigan. The students who design, build and play instruments on their iPhones, will perform a free public concert on December 9. The course called "Building a Mobile Phone Ensemble" is believed to be the first of its kind. The class is taught by Georg Essl , a computer scientist and musician who has been working on developing mobile phones as musical instruments. "The mobile phone is a very nice platform for exploring new forms of musical performance," said Essl. "We're not tethered to the physics of traditional instruments. We can do interesting, weird, unusual things." "This kind of technology is in its infancy, but it's a hot and growing area to use iPhones for artistic expression." To build an instrument on an iPhone, the students program the device to play back as sound information it receives from one of its sensors. The touch-screen, microphone, GPS, compass, wireless sensor and accelerometer can all be changed so that when a user runs their fingers across the display, blow air into the mic, tilt or shake the phone, different sounds will come out of the device. The class requires some creativity and technological savvy according to Essl. "In order to come up with a creative piece you have to engage with the technology, but in order to make technology interesting, you also have to engage with the musicality. These are really hard to separate. We're trying to teach both," Essl said. Continue reading
Perfect 10 Comes Out Swinging at Google Again
Those who have been following the search industry for some time, may recall that Google had some legal issues with the (former) magazine Perfect 10 (nsfw). The company, which ceased publication of its magazine, but still operates on the web, has issued a press release saying that its five year battle with the search giant is "about to heat up." This week, Perfect 10 completed its filing of a motion for sanctions against Google in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. Perfect 10 is accusing Google of "widespread discovery abuse," which the company says includes multiple violations of three separate court orders. Perfect 10's legal feud with Google began back in 2004. The case dealt with Google's use of thumbnails from Perfect 10's site. It was essentially a question of whether or not that was considered fair use. Google had eventually lost the case, but the ruling against Google had been tossed out by an appeals panel . That was in 2007. However, it did not end there. Fast forward to now. "Google appears to have the view that it is above the law," says Perfect 10 President, Dr. Norm Zada. "We spent a great deal of time and effort obtaining Court orders requiring Google to produce documents critical to our case. In our view, Google has not complied with those orders." Perfect 10 says the case revolves around the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), which was passed by Congress in 1998 to address issues concerning copyright infringement on the Internet. "Under the DMCA, a search engine such as Google may receive limited immunity from monetary damages for copyright infringement if it complies with the requirements of the DMCA," Zada says. "The search engine must act expeditiously to remove or disable access to infringing material upon receiving notice of infringement from the copyright owner, and it must adopt a procedure so that copyright holders will not have to provide the search engine with notices about the same infringing material or the same infringers over and over." Perfect 10 says it has argued that Google has "failed to satisfy" these things. Perfect 10 says a judge ordered Google to produce its DMCA log, which the company says is defined as "a spreadsheet-type document summarizing DMCA notices received, the identity of the notifying party and the accused infringer, and the actions (if any) taken in response." Perfect 10 is insisting in its press release that Google has violated multiple court orders, and that Perfect 10 can't "fairly litigate the case" without such documents. Continue reading
Posted in Business, Legal, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged amp, case, congress, digital, fairly-litigate, immunity, internet, law, Legal, motion for sanctions, perfect, search, search industry, search-engine, time
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eBay Completes Skype Sale
It looks like the eBay-Skype spectacle has finally come to a close. Continue reading
Posted in Business, Legal, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged arguments, deals, ebay, investor group, josh silverman, Legal, like-the-ebay, percent stake, silver
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Big Retailers Took $792 Million for Sharing Credit Card Numbers
A U.S. Senate report has revealed that retailers (a number of which you may already know and trust), have accepted as much as $792 million to share customers' credit-card information with direct marketing companies. Could your card number have been one that was shared? Would you have known? The companies engaging in such practices have been getting away with it because of terms buried in fine print, where customers accept offers without having to share their credit card info themselves, placing a certain level of trust in the retailers that are profiting off of sharing their info. The executive summary of the Senate document reads as follows: In May 2009, Chairman Rockefeller launched an investigation into a set of controversial e-commerce business practices that have generated high volumes of consumer complaints. Since that time, Commerce Committee staff has been investigating three Connecticut-based direct marketing companies – Affinion, Vertrue, and Webloyalty – as well as the hundreds of online websites and retailers that partner with these three companies to sell club memberships to online shoppers. Although this investigation is not yet complete, it is clear at this point that these three companies use highly aggressive sales tactics to charge millions of American consumers for services the consumers do not want and do not understand they have purchased. Chances are, you've encountered the "offers" that utilize this strategy. TechCrunch provides a sample screenshot: So who are the companies that have been selling credit card information? Well, the following were paid over $10 million each to do so: - 1-800-Flowers.com - Buy.com - Classmates.com - Columbia House - Confi-Check - Expedia/Hotels.com - Fandango - FTD - Hotwire - InQ - Intellius - MovieTickets.com - Orbitz - Priceline - Redcats USA - Shutterfly - Travelocity - US Airways - VistaPrint Dozens more were paid between $1 and $10 Million. I won't name all of them (there is a full list here), but Yahoo is one of them. So is Avon, Barnes & Noble, eHarmony, Half.com, Pizza Hut, TimeLife, and Victoria's Secret. People have often expressed concerns about buying stuff online from brands that they haven't heard of. It turns out that some of the biggest brands are not exactly as trustworthy as some may have thought. Customers are not pleased. For the offending brands themselves, this has to be a PR and online reputation management nightmare. Read the whole report here (pdf) if you've got some time on your hands. Related Articles: > Continue reading
Posted in Business, Legal, Pay-Per-Click, Scams
Tagged big brands, Business, chairman, columbia-house, companies, government, investigation, Legal, online-websites, review and story, rewards, Scams, three-companies, yahoo
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Revised Google Books Settlement Still Has Critics
Another milestone in a significant legal dispute has passed; a revised version of the Google Books settlement was submitted to U.S. District Court late Friday. Continue reading
Posted in Business, Legal, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged authors guild, book, book retailers, books, brantley co, Business, department, district-court, individual, Legal, open books alliance, patron privacy, revised-version, settlement
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