Tuesday, February 17, 2009

VIDEO: FCC Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate at Penn Law

In December, FCC Commissioner Deborah Taylor Tate gave a presentation entitled "From the Boardroom to the Classroom: Piracy Impacts and Solutions." Her talk was sponsored by Penn Intellectual Property Group and the Center for Technology, Innovation, and Competition.

Commissioner Tate focused on industry innovations to guard against piracy, explained the effect of "net neutrality" on those efforts, and defined what the government's role should be in ensuring that intellectual property rights are not infringed upon in the digital communications age.

Video of Commissioner Tate's presentation is available here.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

It's All About Change: Fairey v. AP

Did Shepard Fairey, creator of the ubiquitous images that formed a central part of the Obama campaign, change a photograph by an Associate Press photographer enough to qualify for a fair use defense?

A federal judge in Manhattan will ultimately decide the issue, but both images are posted here so that you can draw your own conclusions (courtesy of the NY Times). Fairey has asked the court to grant a declaratory judgment against any potential copyright infringement claims advanced by the AP.

More about the case can be found via the New York Times, WSJ's Law Blog, and Am Law Daily.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

International: Software Pirates - where do they all come from?

The Pirate Bay has just released a Google-powered map that tracks the number of IP-infringing connections per country.

The TorrentFreak's "pirate bay map" records bittorrent communication, logging the locations to and from which its trackers are transferred. The map indicates the origin of the users who are connecting to its trackers, and it updates in real time.

According to the map at the time of this posting, the leader in traffic is China. The map indicates that 33% of all connections to the trackers originate from the .cn domain, which equals about 7 million peers. Considering that the site is officially blocked in China, these numbers are even more impressive.

Other Asian locations host massive amount of users as well, with 5.9% of connections coming from Taiwan and 4.2% from Japan.

The United States is a home to 8% of the users, and Sweden - the home of the Pirate Bay - hosted over 1% of them. Sweden had about 250,000 peers, which--out of a population of nine million --is not nearly as bad as some of the other countries.

In Europe, Spain has been the leading country, owning a little less that 5% of the connections.

The map is arguably only the beginning of a larger project to provide detailed statistics on the tracker’s users.

Read more here and here.