
FBI kicks appbucket in hopes of stamping out mobile app piracy
The FBI has successfully convicted the masterminds behind Appbucket, an Android free mobile app distribution application. As a relatively new arena for intellectual property, the mobile app market is still young and impressionable. Having been conceived fully in the digital age, there was no awkward period for mobile applications transitioning in from the physical world. Thus, given that the mobile app market naturally contains a mixture of free and paid apps, many consumers will take paid app illegally without a second thought. This makes the fight against mobile app piracy especially challenging.
While the Appbucket conviction and a few others like it (the FBI has also shut down SnappzMarket and recently charged four other similar pirate markets) are just small fish in the big IP crime pond, they are nonetheless important steps in the right direction as the Department of Justice continues to combat intellectual property crimes as a top priority.
Source: Mashable
DMCA: a weapon of wrongful destruction
Although enacted to create a self-policing mechanism for the use of copyrighted material online, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) has since become a nuisance for copyright holders and site operators. With its very lax notice and takedown provisions, Internet users can easily use these mechanisms to “exact revenge” on their online nemeses. One user bragged about getting Facebook to take down a page through a “well written and thought out mail,” without any proof of authority for requesting the takedown. In contrast, another user discussed the hoops through which she had to jump in order to get her website back up and running after one simple false report caused it to be removed for no reason.
As the provisions stand, on the front end, a user must simply allege that a site contains infringing content, and the site operator, the Facebooks and Youtubes of the digisphere, is required to take it down immediately without further investigation. But someone who wants their wrongfully removed webpage restored either must show proof that the site does not contain infringing content, or even worse, receive approval from the person that requested the takedown. The great minds in the tech world are currently debating how to come up with a better system, but until then, the DMCA remains a weapon of wrongful destruction.
Source: Torrent Freak
California fights back against Facebook
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission and California Attorney General filed arguments against a court-approved settlement that allows Facebook to post teenagers’ names and photos on products and companies that they have “liked” without explicit permission from their parents. The resolution of these arguments will determine whether the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), the federal privacy law that protects children under 13, precludes states from enacting legislation to protect teenagers in a similar fashion. The FTC and California Attorney General argue that both may mutually coexist without violating congressional intent, while Facebook contends that the law inherently preempts states from taking such action.
Source: Silicon Beat
State courts to cops: “hands off cell phones!”
In recent state court opinions in Washington and Texas, judges ruled against law enforcement agents who had searched through suspects’ cell phones without a warrant, showing that privacy laws are adapting to account for newer technologies. In Washington, the cases of State v. Hinton and State v. Roden, in which police apprehended a suspect’s cellphone and sent messages to both defendants arranging drug deals, demonstrated that a person’s text messages are entitled to privacy, just like written letters. The added mobility of a cell phone does not deny the expectation of privacy of one’s text messages, whether sent or received.
In Texas, the court held in State v. Granville that because mobile phones have extensive data storage capabilities, their contents to not lose their expectations of privacy, even after coming into control of law enforcement. Although a cell phone is usually on a person’s body when confiscated, it is still “not like a pair of pants or a shoe.”
Later this April, The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear two cases, Riley v. California and United States v. Wurie, on the same issue of cell phone privacy in a law enforcement context. It will also consider whether the Fourth Amendment protects against such unlawful searches.
Source: Electronic Frontier Foundation
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