Wednesday, November 21, 2007
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Top Ten Reasons Why Ubuntu Is Best for Enterprise Use
http://www.cio.com/article/155753


Techdirt: Congress Moves Forward With Required University Subsidies To Napster, Ruckus
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20071115/173305.shtml
from the business-as-usual dept
Earlier this week, we wrote about how Congress had slipped a provision into the Higher Education Act that would require universities to put in place a plan to have published policies on unauthorized file sharing and to also "develop a plan" to offer "legal alternatives" such as Napster or Ruckus. Of course, some would point out that many file sharing systems, by themselves are legal. It's just that some people are using them for things that break the law. Really, what this bill represents is a gov't backed subsidy for Napster and Ruckus, forcing colleges to offer them even if their students don't want it. It's not clear, at all, why Congress should be in the business of demanding a particular type of music delivery system be offered on college campuses. The announcement of the bill resulted in plenty of attention, leading the House committee that was debating the Act to distribute a "fact sheet" that is anything but factual. It accused those criticizing the bill of being "supporters of intellectual property theft." That is not the case at all. In fact, it's rather insulting that Congress would automatically assume that anyone who questions why Congress is forcing universities to pay for commercial music distribution systems is a "supporter of intellectual property theft."
Of course, when the committee is calling anyone who opposes such a plan as being a supporter of theft, it's no surprise that they wouldn't take any of the criticisms seriously andmoved forward with the bill without any changes to the controversial section. They also dismissed the claims that universities who don't sign up for Napster or Ruckus would lose financial aid funding, though, that's clearly what the bill allows to happen -- and you know that the RIAA and MPAA (and Napster and Ruckus, for that matter) will push to make it a viable threat.
Either way, it would be nice for Congressional supporters to answer this simple question: Why is it any part of Congress's business to mandate that universities sign up for a commercial music distribution service?


MPAA Explains Why It's Okay To Tie Federal Funds To Blocking File Sharing
from the because-we-say-so,-dammit dept
While Congress' new bill on education funding may not be as bad as some are making it out to be, it still seems quite questionable that Congress appears to be regulating the idea that universities need to do the kind of marketing and educational campaigns that the recording industry cannot. We've asked supporters of the bill to explain how it could possibly make sense to mandate such things, and the MPAA's top lawyer, Fritz Attaway, has given his answer, claiming that it's because the internet is "used primarily to allow college students to traffic in infringing content," while being subsidized by gov't funds. It would be nice if Attaway or someone else at the MPAA could actually back up the claim that the primary use of the internet by students is infringement. While I wouldn't doubt that it's a popular use, to say that it's the primary use is hard to believe -- unless you count things like visiting Facebook pages, using Google and sending emails as "infringement." At the same time, this doesn't seem to support the reasons for this bill. After all, many kids on college campuses own cars -- and I'd imagine that most of those students break the speed limit frequently enough. Yet, we don't see any bills being proposed in Congress that would prevent financial aid funding unless universities start handing out more speeding tickets and put in place plans to offer public transportation. So why should they do that for copyright infringement?


Wednesday, November 21, 2007 10:45:25 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)    Disclaimer  |  Comments [3]  |  Related posts:
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Friday, November 23, 2007 8:40:46 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
MPAA University 'Toolkit' Raises Privacy Concerns
http://blog.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/2007/11/mpaa_university_toolkit_opens_1.html
The Motion Picture of Association of America is urging some of the nation's largest universities to deploy custom software designed to pinpoint students who may be using the schools' networks to illegally download pirated movies. A closer look at the MPAA's software, however, raises some serious privacy and security concerns for both the entertainment industry and the schools that choose to deploy the technology.
On Oct. 24, MPAA sent a letter to the presidents of 25 universities that the association has identified as top locations for the downloading of pirated movies over online file-sharing networks. In the letter, the group said it "has developed the University Toolkit, an application which can produce a report that is strictly internal and therefore confidential to illustrate the level of file sharing on [your school's] network. In addition, we will send a hard copy in the near future to your university's Chief Information Officer."
Annon
Friday, November 30, 2007 5:42:56 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Report Says MPAA's Piracy-Monitoring Software Can Expose Student Data to Hackers
A Washingtonpost.com blogger got some security experts to take a close look at the software that the Motion Picture Association of America is offering to college administrators to track illegal movie downloading on campus. And the analysis
http://blog.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/2007/11/mpaa_university_toolkit_opens_1.html?=rss&articleid=98786
uncovered some troubling details. The movie-industry group sent a letter in October to college presidents at 25 institutions it identified as hotbeds of piracy asking them to use software it developed called University Toolkit. The software includes tools that analyzes traffic on a campus network looking for suspicious downloading activity. The Washingtonpost.com report says that in his tests using the program in its default settings, the program loaded statistics about campus-network traffic to a Web page that was not well protected from hackers, unless college officials made sure to protect it with a firewall or set up a password. Angela B. Martinez, vice president for corporate communications at the MPAA, said in an interview Wednesday that the organization has worked quickly to address the issues raised in the report. For instance, now the software is set so that it requires users to enter a password in order to see data reports. "It's important to note that the program is in beta," she added. --Jeffrey R. Young
Friday, November 30, 2007 5:57:06 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
The University of Oregon filed a motion Wednesday with the U.S. District Court in Oregon to quash the recording industry's subpoenas seeking the names of 17 Oregon students it believes are swapping music online in violation of copyright law. The motion, a follow-up to another court document,
<http://www.p2pnet.net/stuff/hardy myers.pdf>
calls the subpoenas "overbroad and burdensome" and says the recording industry's request for information about students jeopardizes their rights to privacy and due process. To comply with the subpoenas, the motion states, Oregon would have to investigate whether the computers in question were connected to the university network and, if possible, locate their users. Oregon would have to identify the students who lived at or visited the places where the computers were located, and produce their names, addresses, and telephone numbers. "The university has an obligation to produce existing documents to comply with narrowly tailored third-party subpoenas, it does not have an obligation to investigate plaintiff's case or create discoverable material through such an investigation," the motion stated. --Andrea L. Foster
Andrea L. Foster
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