public marks

PUBLIC MARKS with tags copyright & drm

October 2007

May 2007

Audible Magic

by cyberien
Protecting Creative Works Audible Magic provides registration services to owners of music. Registering your creative works in Audible Magic’s database will reduce chances for your works to be pirated over P2P networks or volume duplicated to media like CDs. Audible Magic’s patented media fingerprinting process provides the means to identify registered works. You supply copies of your audio content along with ownership and release information. Then your works will be fingerprinted and registered in Audible Magic’s rapidly growing database. Audible Magic’s database provides the basis for multiple anti-piracy services. Our customers include individual producers of media content, major and independent music industry labels, artist rights groups, royalty tracking organizations, new artist discovery organizations and disk replication companies worldwide. In the music industry, Audible Magic maintains one of the world’s largest databases of electronic fingerprints and copyright owner information, representing over 6 million sound recordings.

April 2007

EMI, Apple partner on DRM-free premium music - CNET News.com

by plasticdreams
Music label confirms that it will first sell higher-quality, copy protection-free digital music through iTunes Store.

March 2007

知的財産戦略本部会合(第16回)議事次第

by plasticdreams
知財じゃなくて利権財産の方がしっくりくる希ガス

Copyright War

by sergei76
News digest about copyright, DRM, patents, piracy etc.

February 2007

December 2006

November 2006

October 2006

June 2006

March 2006

IViR - Publications - Bernt Hugenholtz - 'Why the Copyright Directive is Unimportant, and Possibly Invalid.'

by digitalmonkey
"In fact, the Directive does not do much for authors at all. It is primarily geared towards protecting the rights and interests of the ‘main players’ in the information industry (producers, broadcasters and institutional users), not of the creators...

The big DRM mistake

by micah (via)
Digital Rights Managements hurts paying customers, destroys Fair Use rights, renders customers' investments worthless, and can always be defeated. Why are consumers and publishers being forced to use DRM?

Active users

krachot
last mark : 09/10/2007 07:24

cyberien
last mark : 12/05/2007 23:14

plasticdreams
last mark : 10/04/2007 16:29

adampieniazek
last mark : 02/04/2007 17:32

sergei76
last mark : 19/03/2007 07:09

qog
last mark : 02/10/2006 07:40

jackiege
last mark : 02/06/2006 10:27

digitalmonkey
last mark : 23/03/2006 13:58

micah
last mark : 02/03/2006 16:51