Rapidshare's future in doubt following legal defeat

The popular file-sharing service may be forced to shut down if it can not control the uploading of pirated music to its service after a German court ruling.
The German equivalent of the RIAA, GEMA, won a legal battle in district court in Düsseldorf last week which found that Rapidshare should be held responsible for the uploading of infringing material to its site.
EU court: ISPs need not always disclose subscribers' names

A European Court of Justice ruling this morning appears on the surface to reaffirm the rights of Internet users from having their data subpoenaed in civil trials. But a deeper read of the ruling shows the high court left the matter wide open.
The right of privacy among Internet users trumps the rights of copyright holders to pursue prospective infringers, at least insofar as civil matters are concerned. This was the finding this morning, Belgium time, of the European Court of Justice, in a ruling stating that member states need not compel a defendant ISP in a copyright infringement trial to turn over data on its members to an aggrieved plaintiff.
UK retailer Woolworths moves Blu-ray exclusively

With Blu-ray rapidly gaining momentum in the next-gen DVD war, UK retailer Woolworths has announced it will stop stocking Toshiba's HD DVD format in stores.
HD DVD players will still be available from its online store after March, which is when the company will sell Blu-ray players exclusively in its 820 locations throughout the UK.
VCs now wait for 'blockbuster hits' before investing in Internet content

At a major gathering of the leaders in Internet content production this morning, producers learned why it may be tougher than ever before to receive first-stage funding. Today, their shows need to already exist...somehow.
NEW YORK CITY (BetaNews) - A cornucopia of Internet content producers, from the somewhat-known to the wholly unknown, arrived here for an online media conference produced by industry publication AlwaysOn. They met with representatives of some of the nation's biggest venture capital firms, and the news they got this morning may have been sobering.
O2 beefs up iPhone plans in UK to boost sales

British cellular carrier O2 has overhauled its iPhone plans in a likely effort to make the device more appealing to a broader customer base.
In addition to currently available plans, O2 has introduced a new heavy usage plan for customers who may use their iPhones more frequently. Also, customers of one of its plans will be moved down to a less expensive tier.
DVI appears to be losing to HDMI and DisplayPort

While the resolution of the high-def disc format war may end up with few consumers winning, if any, another battle may have bigger consequences: It's about high-bandwidth digital interfaces for connecting PCs, consoles, and displays.
This battle pits the old-guard DVI (digital visual interface) against newer rivals HDMI (High-Definition Multimedia Interface) and DisplayPort in the industry race for connecting PCs and other devices over high bandwidth networks.
Gartner analyst: HD DVD has until the end of 2008

A Gartner analyst today predicted that, based on the numbers of movies expected to be available for the two warring high-def disc formats, that HD DVD will once and for all lose out to Blu-ray by the end of this year.
"Gartner expects that, by the end of 2008, Blu-ray will be the winning format in the consumer market, and the war will be over," according to Gartner analyst Hiroyuki Shimizu, writing in Gartner's Semiconductor DQ report today.
FTC decision favors standards over patent holder

In an historic decision that split the FTC almost down the middle, it has issued a complaint against a patent holding company allegedly that apparently sued computer and network manufacturers for having followed the Ethernet standard.
Where does a patented idea end and a standard begin? Judging from public forums alone, you'd think the two ideas would be polar opposites. But business deals between patent holders and standards groups tend to muddy the waters, and last week, one very important example of such an agreement came to a head before the US Federal Trade Commission.
Qtrax hits roadblock in effort to launch legal P2P

The self-proclaimed legal file sharing service is either not so legal or not so sharing: None of the big four music labels have agreements with the service, according to news reports.
Qtrax had planned to launch at midnight Monday, but with its latest round of troubles, it missed its initial launch date. All four major record producers say that while they are in negotiations with the service, none of them have signed final agreements.
German police consider surveillance through Skype

Leaked classified documents could point to a Skype and SSL intercepting system that could be launched in southern Germany next month.
In the wake of a foiled terrorist plot against U.S. installations in Germany in September, discussions began over granting police more freedom in surveillance. Federal interior minister Wolfgang Schäuble, member of the Christian Democratic Union, proposed a surveillance method that would involve the use of Trojan horses, allowing police to remotely and secretly search terror suspects' hard drives. Interior ministers failed to come to a conclusion regarding the legality of such a practice.
Nokia's factory move from Germany to Romania hits more snags

After a high-level meeting today, Nokia has agreed to serve on a joint task force to review its decision to close a cell phone plant in Bochum, Germany. Meanwhile, Nokia's cheaper facility under construction in Romania is in trouble.
With Finnish-based Nokia reaching somewhat of a surprise agreement today to work with German officials on a joint task force, the high-tech vendor's plans to move cell phone production from Bochum, Germany to the more economical Romania have meanwhile been running into construction snags.
Sweden to indict Pirate Bay owners by end of month

The Pirate Bay's days are increasingly looking numbered as Sweden will move this week to press charges against its owners for copyright infringement.
Charges will be filed in a district court in the country on January 31. If the owners are successfully convicted, they may be forced to pay fines and spend up to two years in jail.
Three 'big four' record labels sign with Sony Ericsson

Yesterday, Swedish mobile phone company Sony Ericsson announced deals had been inked with 10 major record labels, adding over 5 million tracks to the company's forthcoming over-the-air download music store.
The new partner labels include: Sony BMG, Warner Music Group, EMI, and The Orchard, as well asIODA (independent online distribution alliance), mobile marketing company The PocketGroup, South Asia's Hungama, European digital download label X5 Music, Scandanavian major label Bonnier Amigo, and UK-based mobile music source Vidzone. Deals with additional regional labels are currently being negotiated.
Nokia moves quickly into the mobile software development space

Nokia today announced it will acquire Trolltech, a Norwegian company with more than 5,000 customers relying on its commercial- and open source-licensed software used by well-known companies.
Trolltech is best known for its Qt and Qtopia services, widely used in the free and open source software markets. The Qt software package is designed to allow developers to create and update GUIs for mobile phones. It currently can be found in KDE, Opera, Skype, Google Earth, and other programs requiring cross-platform functionality. Nokia plans to promote the Qt technology under the Trolltech banner in the future, in the open source and commercial sectors.
New mobile browser enables Flash video through server-side rendering

While the mobile phone industry scrambles to adopt faster graphics platforms for rendering video, a startup may have bypassed everyone with an approach so simple, you wonder why nobody tried it already.
In a development that could very well turn the whole mobile rendering technology argument on its ear, a startup company founded just last June called Skyfire emerged from stealth mode this morning with a private beta of a Web browser for mobile phones whose graphics are rendered through a proxy located at the company's servers.
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