How do you take something back online? The question comes up in the unlikely form of a withdrawn blog post by Times religion correspondent and blogger Ruth Gledhill.[The post was originally written in response to an obituary by Church Times columnist Andrew Brown - background at his blog.]The withdrawn post was then reproduced at another religious affairs blog, the Voice of Iyov.A commenter, claiming to be Gledhill, requested it be taken down:I appreciate your coverage but would really rather prefer you did not reproduce an entire blog that I wisely had second thoughts about. I suspect the... Go to original article ...
The appeals of last year's Copyright Royalty Board decision on the royalties paid for the use of sound recordings by Internet radio stationscontinue on, and one recent filing raises interesting questions ofwhether or not the CRB was properly appointe Go to article ...
Media Wonk normally tries not to get in the middle of pissing matchesbetween other bloggers. But having disgorged at length on the economicsof online music in my last postI'm going to risk sticking my nose ever so gingerly into the lengthyexchange on Go to article ...
In papers filed in U.S. District Court in Manhattan late Friday, YouTube owner Google said Viacom's $1 billion copyright lawsuit threatens the very way hundreds of millions of people exchange information over the Internet.According to the Associated Go to article ...