Radiohead and Nine Inch Nails have been taking turns giving the music industry the finger. The British band made headlines last October for releasing In Rainbows without the support (read: control) of a record label, and Trent Reznor's group followed suit with last month's Ghosts I-IV. The two bands have also been busy one-upping each […] Radiohead and Nine Inch Nails have been taking turns giving
Filtering sounds so wholesome. As with filtered water, Internet filtering backers suggest that their products simply keep the sludge from passing through, and who wants to drink unfiltered sludge? The big difference between the two kinds of filtering is that sludge can't use 128-bit keys and AES encryption to hide its sludgy nature; Internet traffic can. It's a key problem for any Internet filteri
When The Pirate Bay was raided back in 2006, three men were brought in for questioning, and the interrogations continued in the months that followed. The police’s goal was obviously to let the people behind the site confess to something they didn’t do. This led to a series of the most hilarious interrogation transcripts I’ve ever read. Not surprisingly, “the confessions” of the Pirate Bay three di
By Saul Hansell January 16, 2008 12:46 pm January 16, 2008 12:46 pm UPDATED /16, 3:22 PM If the issue behind our debate this week about copyright and piracy in the digital age is how much control creators should have over what happens to their works, one of the crucial extensions to that question is the matter of fair use. Remixing is a key part of today’s culture, as people use commercial music a
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