P2P File Sharing and RIAA

Recent resources tagged with P2P File Sharing and RIAA.

EDUCAUSE Takes Action on Higher Education Act

Created by Colleen Luckett (EDUCAUSE) on July 31, 2008

EDUCAUSE has joined other organizations in signing a letter from the American Council on Education to U.S. congressional leaders about requirements in the House and Senate joint committee report of the final version of the Higher Education Act (HEA) Reauthorization. The letter applauds certain provisions of the HEA but cites the drawback of “an extraordinary number of new reporting and regulatory federal requirements,” including those addressing peer-to-peer file sharing.

EDUCAUSE Now - Show #5 - P2P Update & Data-Rich Blogging

Created by Gerry Bayne (EDUCAUSE) on July 10, 2008

EDUCAUSE Now is a monthly podcast, focusing on the intelligent use of information technology in higher education. Each episode features a variety of stories, interviews, and views that relate to IT in higher education. Let us know what you would like to hear at podcast@educause.edu.

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This episode of EDUCAUSE Now features:

EDUCAUSE Now - Show #1 - Premiere Episode

Created by Gerry Bayne (EDUCAUSE) on March 13, 2008

Welcome to the premiere episode of EDUCAUSE Now!

EDUCAUSE Now is a monthly podcast, focusing on the intelligent use of information technology in higher education. Each episode features a variety of stories, interviews, and views that relate to IT in higher education. EDUCAUSE Now will also inform you about upcoming events, report on past events, and feature the movers and shakers in policy, teaching and learning, security, and a whole host of other important topics for our members. Let us know what you would like to hear at podcast@educause.edu.

This episode of EDUCAUSE Now features:

Tune In Jan. 23 for a Free Web Seminar on Evaluating the RIAA’s Legal Threats to Online Activity

Created by Peggy Kurkowski (EDUCAUSE) on January 16, 2008

ELive! LogoThe recording industry’s complaints against alleged music downloaders are just the tip of the iceberg in legal threats against online activity. In the five years of the Chilling Effects Clearinghouse, we have seen thousands of legal threats, with claims including trademark infringement, defamation, and copyright infringement. This seminar will discuss some of the range of complaints, both unwarranted and justified, and describe ChillingEffects.org’s resources for those trying to evaluate legal threats. In some cases, the web’s sunlight can help to melt meritless threats.

In this free January 23 EDUCAUSE LIVE! seminar, Legal Threats, Chilling Effects, and Warming the Air, presenter Wendy Seltzer, Fellow, Berkman Center for Internet & Society, and Visiting Professor, Northeastern University School of Law, will discuss these threats and how to evaluate them.

An interview with the misguided RIAA

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:An interview with the misguided RIAA (ID: CSD5314)
Author(s):Don Reisinger
Source:CNET News.com
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (01/15/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This is an unabridged transcript of Don Reisingers interview with the RIAA.

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The RIAA speaks--and it gets worse

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:The RIAA speaks--and it gets worse (ID: CSD5315)
Author(s):Don Reisinger
Source:CNET News.com
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (01/15/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

The RIAA has quickly become one of the most disliked organizations in the world. Working ostensibly with the interests of the artists in mind, the organization has single-handedly instituted a policy of lawsuits and education in an attempt to curb the piracy of music.

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Oregon Challenges RIAA's Tactics in Music Piracy Claim

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Oregon Challenges RIAA's Tactics in Music Piracy Claim (ID: CSD5287)
Author(s):Jaikumar Vijayan (PC World)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (12/14/2007)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

The Oregon state attorney general is resisting the music labels' demand for consumer identities, including 17 students at the University of Oregon.

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Swiftboating Higher Education on P2P: Why Higher Education Is Not the Real Problem, and Technology Is Not the Real Solution

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Swiftboating Higher Education on P2P: Why Higher Education Is Not the Real Problem, and Technology Is Not the Real Solution (ID: LIVE0723)
Author(s):Kenneth C. Green (The Campus Computing Project)
Origin:EDUCAUSE Live!, Web Seminars Contributed by EDUCAUSE (12/07/2007)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:

A steady stream of press releases from the MPAA and the RIAA about unauthorized peer-to-peer downloading suggests that college students are digital pirates and campus network officials are engaged in benign neglect. Yet ample evidence confirms that unauthorized P2P downloading is primarily a consumer market problem, not especially tied to college students on campus networks. Moreover, the media companies with strong ties to consumer broadband providers are themselves at least indirectly promoting unauthorized P2P activity. This is not new: Media companies have a long history of seeking remedy (and revenue) from Congressional action, rather than pursuing marketplace solutions.

This presentation will focus on how Big Music and Big Hollywood have targeted colleges and universities via press releases and Congressional lobbying initiatives while largely ignoring the much larger amount of unauthorized P2P file sharing taking place on commercial networks.

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Higher education funding controlled by RIAA/MPAA?

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Higher education funding controlled by RIAA/MPAA? (ID: CSD5248)
Source:the riddim meth0d
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (12/03/2007)
Type:Blogs
Abstract:

"On Nov 22 the House Education and Labor Committee approved H.R. 4137, the College Opportunity and Affordability Act (COAA). The name sounds like something everyone can support — but the devil is truly in the details. "

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Tune In Dec. 7 for a Free Web Seminar on the MPAA and RIAA Targeting of College Campuses and Students (updated topic)

Created by Colleen Luckett (EDUCAUSE) on December 03, 2007

ELIVE logoA steady stream of press releases from the MPAA and the RIAA about unauthorized peer-to-peer downloading suggests that college students are digital pirates and campus network officials are engaged in benign neglect. Yet ample evidence confirms that unauthorized P2P downloading is primarily a consumer market problem, not especially tied to college students on campus networks. Moreover, the media companies with strong ties to consumer broadband providers are themselves at least indirectly promoting unauthorized P2P activity. This is not new: Media companies have a long history of seeking remedy (and revenue) from Congressional action, rather than pursuing marketplace solutions.