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The Standard: Adobe Says It Has No Responsibility For Dmitry - The company says it has no responsibility for aiding Dmitry Skylarov, even though it was an Adobe complaint that led to the Russian programmer's arrest.
 
Washington Post: Jailed Under a Bad Law - Protecting intellectual property is a compelling government interest, but so is protecting academic inquiry, intellectual exchange and free speech. A better balance must be sought.
 
Wired: Adobe E-Book Hacker Released - A federal magistrate judge ordered that the Russian programmer -- whose arrest last month on copyright infringement charges sparked worldwide protests -- be freed Monday on $50,000 bail.
 
Wired: Congress No Haven for Hackers - Even as the world's geeks march against the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, key legislators and lobbyists are dismissing concerns about the controversial law as hyperbole. By Declan McCullagh.
 
Wired: Hacker Arrest Stirs Protest - When the FBI arrested a Russian programmer this week on charges of criminal copyright violations, the government unwittingly ignited a powder keg of outrage. By Declan McCullagh.
 
Wired: Release the Russian, Adobe Says - In a stunning turn of events, Adobe abruptly bowed to public outcry and recommended the release of a Russian programmer who was arrested for writing code-breaking software. By Declan McCullagh.
 
Wired: Rep: Give Fair Use a Fair Shake - Rep. Rick Boucher wants to spring a Russian programmer from jail. By Declan McCullagh.
 
Wired: Russian Adobe Hacker Busted - FBI agents have arrested a Russian programmer for giving away software that removes the restrictions on encrypted Adobe Acrobat files. By Declan McCullagh.
 
Wired: Sklyarov Release in Feds' Hands - America's geeks want Dmitry freed. By Declan McCullagh.
 
Wired: Sklyarov: A Huge Sigh of Release - Sklyarov -- a Russian computer programmer who was arrested in July for breaking American copyright law by writing a program to defeat Adobe Systems' E-Book copy-protection scheme -- was released on $50,000 bail. By Farhad Manjoo.
 
ZDNet: Adobe seeks release of Russian programmer - In the wake of worldwide criticism, Adobe Systems agreed Monday to withdraw from a case charging a 27-year-old Russian programmer with violations of the controversial Digital Millennium Copyright Act. By Robert Lemos.
 
ZDNet: Arrest fuels Adobe copyright fight - Attention, software pirates, security researchers and those out to prove a point: Adobe Systems doesn't pull its punches. By Robert Lemos.
 
ZDNet: FBI nabs Russian expert at Def Con - The FBI took a Russian encryption expert into custody Monday at his hotel in Las Vegas for allegedly publishing software that cracks a variety of methods used to secure e-books.
 
ZDNet: Protesters target FBI nominee over programmer's arrest - Supporters of a Russian programmer arrested on charges of violating a controversial U.S. copyright law took aim on Tuesday at the California prosecutor in the case who is President Bush's nominee to be next director of the FBI.
 
cluebot: Russian Hacker Arrested by FBI Goes Missing - Article and discussion forum.
 
digitalMass: Accused Russian programmer hopes for U.S. justice - Dmitry Sklyarov, the Russian software programmer who pleaded not guilty on Thursday to violating a controversial new U.S. copyright law, is taking a Zen approach to his fate, biding his time bike-riding and hoping his family can join him soon. By Elinor Mills Abreu.
 
free-sklyarov Mailing List - Mailing list for friends and supporters of Dmitry Sklyarov.
 
kuro5hin: Battle for the Heart of the Internet - If you're interested in helping to stop this injustice and let the Real World know that hackers will fight for what's right, there are a number of upcoming events that need your meatspace attendance and support. Editorial and list of August 2001 events.
 
kuro5hin: BusinessWeek: Sklyarov guilty as charged - The pro-copyright PR engine's running at full tilt, but minimal rationality, as evidenced by Alex Salkever's Don't Judge an eBook Case By Its Coverage Daily Briefing (BusinessWeek). Essay and discussion.
 
kuro5hin: Next Wave of Free Dmitry Protests: Monday July 30 - The Man Nobody Wants In Prison is still behind bars due to bureaucratic inertia. The folks in the Department of Justice need a push, and it's going to take a lot of us to push them.
 
 

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