P2P File Sharing and Contributed by Organizations or Campuses

Students Flock to Web Sites Offering Pirated Textbooks

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Title:Students Flock to Web Sites Offering Pirated Textbooks (ID: CSD5498)
Author(s):Jeffrey R. Young (The Chronicle of Higher Education)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (09/04/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

A new survey of students found that about a quarter of them reported hunting for an illegal copy of a textbook from pirate Web sites.

The survey was small—only about 500 students from two colleges—but it is one of several indicators that downloading unauthorized textbooks is becoming commonplace at college campuses.

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Recording and Movie Industries Win Out Over Colleges in Higher-Education Bill

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Title:Recording and Movie Industries Win Out Over Colleges in Higher-Education Bill (ID: CSD5472)
Author(s):Andrea Foster (The Chronicle of Higher Education)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (07/30/2008)
Type:Blogs
Abstract:

"In the longstanding battle between the higher-education community and the entertainment industry over how aggressive colleges should be in trying to stop the swapping of music and video files over campus networks, the entertainment industry has prevailed. "

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Textbook Piracy Grows Online, Prompting a Counterattack From Publishers

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Title:Textbook Piracy Grows Online, Prompting a Counterattack From Publishers (ID: CSD5468)
Author(s):Jeffrey R. Young (The Chronicle of Higher Education)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (07/01/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

College students are increasingly downloading illegal copies of textbooks online, employing the same file-trading technologies used to download music and movies. Feeling threatened, book publishers are stepping up efforts to stop the online piracy.

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How It Does It: The RIAA Explains How It Catches Alleged Music Pirates

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Title:How It Does It: The RIAA Explains How It Catches Alleged Music Pirates (ID: CSD5430)
Author(s):Catherine Rampell (The Chronicle of Higher Education)
Source:The Chronicle of Higher Education
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (05/13/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

"To catch college students trading copyrighted songs online, the Recording Industry Association of America uses the same file-sharing software that online pirates love, an RIAA representative told The Chronicle at the organization's offices during a private demonstration of how it catches alleged music pirates."

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House approves MPAA-backed college antipiracy rules

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Title:House approves MPAA-backed college antipiracy rules (ID: CSD5327)
Author(s):Anne Broache (CNET News.com)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (02/07/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

The U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday overwhelmingly approved a higher-education funding bill that includes controversial new antipiracy obligations for universities.

The 354-58 vote to approve the College Opportunity and Affordability Act leaves intact an entertainment industry-backed provision, which makes up just a tiny part of a bill that has ballooned to more than 800 pages.

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Downloading by Students Overstated

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Title:Downloading by Students Overstated (ID: CSD5321)
Author(s):Andrew Guess (Inside Higher Ed)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (01/23/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

"In its campaign urging lawmakers and colleges to take the issue of on-campus illegal file sharing seriously, the Motion Picture Association of America has wielded an array of legal arguments, facts and statistics. It now appears that a central figure in that arsenal was high by a factor of three, galvanizing its opponents who maintain that colleges have been singled out unfairly as havens of downloading activity. "

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MPAA Admits Mistake on Downloading Study

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Title:MPAA Admits Mistake on Downloading Study (ID: CSD5322)
Author(s):Justin Pope (Associated Press)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (01/22/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

"In a 2005 study it commissioned, the Motion Picture Association of America claimed that 44 percent of the industry's domestic losses came from illegal downloading of movies by college students, who often have access to high-bandwidth networks on campus.

The MPAA has used the study to pressure colleges to take tougher steps to prevent illegal file-sharing and to back legislation currently before the House of Representatives that would force them to do so.

But now the MPAA, which represents the U.S. motion picture industry, has told education groups a "human error" in that survey caused it to get the number wrong. It now blames college students for about 15 percent of revenue loss."

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Suppression Technologies: Summary Observations from a Common Solutions Group Workshop

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Title:Suppression Technologies: Summary Observations from a Common Solutions Group Workshop (ID: CSD5323)
Source:Common Solutions Group
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (01/09/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

In an effort to better understand the technologies available for copyright infringement control, the Common Solutions Group invited leading vendors of detection and suppression technologies to present and discuss the architecture and implementation of their products at an intensive workshop held at Virginia Tech on January 9, 2008. This is their summary report.

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University of Wisconsin Student Orientation Video - Understanding File Sharing

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Title:University of Wisconsin Student Orientation Video - Understanding File Sharing (ID: CSD5324)
Source:University of Wisconsin
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (01/24/2008)
Type:Interviews/Podcasts/Videos
Abstract:

This is a University of Wisconsin student orientation video on the importance of understanding file sharing.

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FCC wants to know: Is degrading P2P traffic 'reasonable'?

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Title:FCC wants to know: Is degrading P2P traffic 'reasonable'? (ID: CSD5319)
Author(s):Anne Broache (CNET News.com)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (01/15/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

"As foreshadowed at the Consumer Electronics Show last week, federal regulators this week took the first formal step into investigating complaints about how Internet service providers, such as Comcast, manage peer-to-peer file-sharing traffic on their networks "

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