Zune DRM Cracked!
July 15th, 2007 . by joe
Well, it had to happen some day. The Zune DRM Stripper removes the DRM from music squirted to you and music you bought at the Zune Marketplace.
Link, Download Link [ Via /. ]
July 15th, 2007 . by joe
Well, it had to happen some day. The Zune DRM Stripper removes the DRM from music squirted to you and music you bought at the Zune Marketplace.
Link, Download Link [ Via /. ]
July 5th, 2007 . by joe
A court in Belgium has ruled that an Internet Service Provider bears the responsibility for stopping illegal file-sharing on its network. Although the ruling was made in Belgium, it relies on the E.U. copyright directive and may set precedent for the entire Union according to IFPI, an organization that represents the recording industry world wide.
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The suit was brought by a group representing Belgian authors an composers (SABAM) against ISP Scarlet, formerly Tiscali. In 2004, the SABAM received an injuction against the ISP, which assigned an expert whose investigation provided 11 ways to prevent infringement across the network. The judge agreed and Scarlet has 6 months to enact anti-piracy measure or face fines of up to $4,300 per day.
March 20th, 2007 . by joe
February 25th, 2007 . by joe
I personally think that we need a permanent boycott of the RIAA. With solutions such as eMusic, who needs the RIAA.
Alright, we’ve been following the RIAA’s increasingly frequent affronts to privacy and free speech lately, and it’s about time we stopped merely bitching and moaning and did something about it. The RIAA has the power to shift public policy and to alter the direction of technology and the Internet for one reason and one reason alone: it’s totally loaded. Without their millions of dollars to throw at lawyers, the RIAA is toothless. They get their money from us, the consumers, and if we don’t like the way they’re behaving, we can let them know with our wallets.
With that in mind, Gizmodo is declaring the month of March Boycott the RIAA month. We want to get the word out to as many people as humanly possible that we can all send a message by refusing to buy any album put out by an RIAA label. Am I saying you should start pirating music? Not at all. You can continue to support the artists you enjoy and respect in a number of ways.
