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3 Count: Copyright Claims Onboarding

Plagiarism Today

1: Copyright Office Launches New Copyright Claims Board Website. Copyright Office announces that the Copyright Claims Board (CCB) has launched its new website, ccb.gov. government passed the Copyright Alternative in Small-Claims Enforcement Act of 2020 (CASE Act). Let me know via Twitter @plagiarismtoday.

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Early Pirate Bay Backer Carl Lundström Dies in Plane Crash

TorrentFreak

In 2004, Lundstrm met Neij at an exhibition and invited him to work for Rix Telecom. When changes to Swedish copyright law were announced in 2005, Lundstrm started to have doubts about the project. From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more. Perhaps even more than that.

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3 Count: Buying a Lemon

Plagiarism Today

1: Arizona Beats Back Copyright Challenge to Car-Dealer Data Law. First off today, Blake Brittain at Reuters reports that the State of Arizona has beat back a copyright challenge to a new car dealer data law as the 9th Circuit has rejected an appeal from software developers. Have any suggestions for the 3 Count?

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Same Old Spin: Why Access Copyright Needs a Reality Check on Canadian Copyright

Michael Geist

Last week’s Supreme Court of Canada copyright decision in Access Copyright v. York University has unsurprisingly been applauded by the education community, which having faced years of litigation launched by the copyright collective, now finds its position vindicated. The same was true after the Access Copyright v.

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Supreme Court of Canada on Copyright: “Copyright Law Does Not Exist Solely for the Benefit of Authors”

Michael Geist

For much of the past two decades, copyright groups have steadfastly sought to deny what the Supreme Court of Canada has repeatedly endorsed, namely that the purpose of Canadian copyright law is to serve the public interest by balancing users’ and authors’ rights. ” The decision – SOCAN v.

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Revisiting Alberta v Access Copyright: Resources for K-12 Educators in Canada

IPilogue

Photocopying classroom materials in a K-12 public school system may have seemed harmless and benign before the 2012 Supreme Court of Canada case, Alberta v Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency (Access Copyright). The decision reframes traditional teaching pedagogies by considering the artist and owner rights under copyright law.

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Michael Grecco v. University of Southern California

BYU Copyright Blog

University of Southern California November 04, 09:23 AM November 04, 09:23 AM In 2004, a photographer named Michael Grecco (Grecco or Plaintiff) created and registered several photos with the U.S. Copyright Office. He also alleges that USC utilized his photograph to promote the sale of goods and services within an educational context.