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BBC: Digital music's security flaws exposed - The secrets of digital music's anti-copying devices have been finally revealed by an American professor.
 
BBC: Legal challenge to US piracy law - Record makers are being sued by scientists who want to show up the holes in technology being used to protect music against piracy. By Mark Ward.
 
BBC: Security through censorship - The recording industry is trying to gag scientists who exposed the shortcomings of security systems used to protect online music.
 
Daily Princetonian: Copyright law may prevent computer science team from publishing MP3 research - This past October, associate computer science professor Edward Felten and a team of researchers were able to remove digital watermarks from digital audio files new watermarking technology developed by the industry not in use yet, a feat that would make the people at Napster smile. By Heather Aspras.
 
Daily Princetonian: Music industry warns Felten - Research team may not be able to publish digital watermark crack. By Joshua Tauberer.
 
EFF Topics: Felten, et al., v. RIAA, et al. - Document archive on the case of Felten v. RIAA, in which a Princeton University professor seeks to overturn the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA).
 
NYTimes: Record Panel Threatens Researcher With Lawsuit - The recording industry has threatened a Princeton computer scientist with legal action if his research group presents a paper at an academic conference this week describing how it is possible to circumvent an industry music-protection system. By John Markoff. [Free registration required.]
 
RIAA: Statement by Matthew Oppenheim on Professor Felten - Press release in which RIAA claims it never intended to bring legal action against Professor Felten, and that it "strongly believes in academic freedom and Freedom of Speech".
 
Reading Between the Lines: Lessons from the SDMI Challenge - Dr. Felten's website about the status of the SDMI paper threatened with a lawsuit under the DMCA by the RIAA.
 
Register: SDMI cracks revealed - The academic cracker crew led by Princeton University Computer Science Professor Edward Felten, which answered the HackSDMI public challenge of last September with 'unqualified' results, has received veiled threats of criminal prosecution under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) from the SDMI Foundation in hopes that the team will be cowed into withholding what it's learned from an upcoming computer science conference. By Thomas C. Greene.
 
Register: Felten spills the SDMI beans - Princeton University Professor Edward Felten, who led the team of researchers which successfully cracked the SDMI challenge, delivered his group's findings at the tenth annual USENIX conference in Washington Wednesday, and was not arrested. By Thomas C. Greene.
 
Register: Prof hushes SDMI crack on DMCA terror - Princeton University computer science professor Edward Felten, who has claimed to have helped crack the Secure Digital Music Initiative (SDMI) watermark challenge, now says he's withholding the details of his accomplishment on advice of legal counsel fearing he could open himself to prosecution under the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA).
 
Register: SDMI crack team launches preemptive suit - The Princeton University team which rose successfully to the SDMI challenge is asking the US District Court in New Jersey to issue a declaratory judgment absolving them of liability before releasing the results of their research into cracking several anti-piracy technologies. By Thomas C. Greene.
 
Register: SDMI crack team scurries away in fear again - Princeton University Computer Science Professor Edward Felten, who has credited himself and his team with cracking the Secure Digital Music Initiative (SDMI) Public Challenge, has once again wussed-out after threatening to do something frightfully daring like publish the results of his research. By Thomas C. Greene.
 
Register: Uni team claims SDMI cracked, and 'inherently vulnerable' - SDMI now looks comprehensively hacked, with the release of a report by a group of security and digital watermarking researchers claiming that they successfully beat the Hack SDMI challenge. By John Lettice.
 
Salon: Another crack in the SDMI wall - A team of researchers claims to have successfully hacked a digital music watermarking system. By Janelle Brown.
 
Salon: Is the RIAA running scared? - A fumbled attempt to silence a Princeton professor backfires on the recording industry. By Janelle Brown.
 
Slashdot: ACM vs. RIAA - The ACM position is: 'ACM believes that the application of any law to limit the freedom to publish research on computer technology will impose a cost not only on ACM's members, but also on the academic community, the process of scientific discourse, and society in general.'
 
Wired: Another Stain on Copyright Law - Once again, the law intended to promote the distribution of content on the Internet has instead been used to restrict it. By Brad King.
 
Wired: Code-Breakers Go to Court - After a team of academics who broke a music-watermarking scheme bowed to legal threats from the recording industry and chose not to publish their research in April, they vowed to "fight another day, in another way." By Declan McCullagh.
 
 

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