News
10don MSNOpinion
A recent Supreme Court case marks the end of America’s three-decade experiment with extreme leniency.
For the first time, the Supreme Court is considering its opinion on the brief but powerful “26 words that created the internet.” Enacted in 1996, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act ...
Internet Archive Seeks Reversal in Book Scanning Suit: In a highly anticipated appeal brief, officials at the Internet Archive argued that district court judge John G. Koeltl misunderstood the ...
The challenge by conservatives to the program raised questions about how much Congress can delegate its legislative authority ...
Conservative groups challenged the program, contending that Congress exceeded its powers in enacting legislation that ...
The Internet Archive claimed digitizing the books was covered under a fair use provision of copyright law. As a result of the lawsuit, the Internet Archive claims more than 500,000 titles are no ...
The Internet Archive stopped defending its free digital library against a publisher-launched copyright suit and announced that it won’t ask the high court to review whether the depository is a ...
Washington — The Supreme Court on Friday upheld the Federal Communications Commission's multi-billion-dollar mechanism for expanding phone and internet access to rural and low-income communities ...
WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court on Wednesday seemed likely to uphold an $8 billion program that subsidizes high-speed internet and phone service for millions of Americans, which has been ...
“Internet Archive is asking this court to disregard the controlling law of this court, as well as the Supreme Court, and what it is seeking is a radical change in the law that, ...
The Internet Archive (IA) went before a three-judge panel Friday to defend its open library's controlled digital lending (CDL) practices after book publishers last year won a lawsuit claiming that ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results