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Daily Decision Alert: Vol. 14, No. 52 - March 17, 2006
Russian Says He Wasn't Bound by U.S. Law
Russian programmer Dmitry Sklyarov told a federal jury in San Jose, Calif., on Monday that he didn't really care whether he violated American law when he wrote a program stripping encryption off Adobe Systems' e-Book reader so users could print and copy electronic texts. Sklyarov testified in defense of his employer, software company ElcomSoft Co., in the first criminal trial testing the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act.CloudNine Releases OnDemand Version 11
CloudNine Discovery, a Houston-based provider of e-discovery applications and hosting services, has released version 11 of its OnDemand cloud-based online review tool.View more book results for the query "*"
Judge Allows Lawsuit Over Computer 'Spy' Program to Survive
An invasion of privacy claim involving the alleged interception and transmission of a Washington state woman's emails and communications to a company in Pennsylvania - via a "spy" program on a rent-to-own computer - cannot be dismissed based on lack of jurisdiction, a federal judge in Pennsylvania has ruled.Righthaven Affiliate Concedes That Brief Web Excerpt is Fair Use
The latest chapter in the Nevada federal court saga launched by aggressive copyright plaintiff Righthaven LLC is a concession by its affiliate, Las Vegas Review-Journal publisher Stephens Media, that a brief news article excerpt in an online forum is not copyright infringement.Justices to Take Pledge While Scalia Sits Out
The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday set the stage for a major First Amendment battle over the words "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance. Three years ago, Sacramento atheist Michael Newdow's pro se campaign to strike the words from the Pledge seemed merely quixotic. Now, the case is on the agenda for the nation's highest court, likely to be argued early next year amid an intense debate over issues of religion and patriotism in a time of war.Court orders new hearing for Ala. death row inmate
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court has ordered a new hearing for an Alabama death row inmate who missed a deadline to appeal when court notices to his lawyers at a big firm in New York were returned unopened.Trending Stories
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