Posts in the Internet Law Category at Barry Law – DC government contracts, licensing, cyberlaw and intellectual property attorney, Page 2

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SOPA and PIPA are not dead. More action needed

Despite recent hearings in which sponsors admitted that more research is needed, these bills are far from dead and are still being pushed hard by special interest groups. Make no mistake, these bills require content filtering and blocking of certain

Posted in Copyright, Intellectual Property, Internet Law, Trademark

Perhaps We’ll See New TLDs After All

Despite a last ditch effort by various special interest groups to delay the release of new gTLDs (generic Top Level Domains such as .com), ICANN seems to be standing fast in its plan to move forward with the plan. Many

Posted in Intellectual Property, Internet Law, Trademark

SOPA stopped – for now…

ue to a massive effort on the part of many thousands concerned with Individual and small business rights on the Internet (and even some large businesses and Internet pioneers too), SOPA has been stopped for now. But we know this

Posted in Copyright, Intellectual Property, Internet Law, Trademark

An Open Letter From Internet Engineers to the U.S. Congress | Electronic Frontier Foundation

Please read and consider this carefully. I was honored to be allowed to sign this letter, and believe every word of it. One correction, InterCon was the first INTERNET applications company on the Macintosh platform, not the first applications company.

Posted in Copyright, Intellectual Property, Internet Law, Trademark

Adding Serious Teeth to the Badness Inherrent in SOPA and PROTECT-IP

The message that should be sent loudly and clearly to both the government and the Content Cartel is that you can’t have it both ways. Either intellectual property should be treated identically to real property, including penalties for its theft

Posted in Copyright, Intellectual Property, Internet Law

KeepTheWebOpen.com – Lawmakers Asking For Our Help

In a very interesting maneuver, several legislators have banded together to offer an alternative to PROTECT-IP and SOPA, called OPEN. They have drafted legislation that they offer as a starting point, and are asking for the people to weigh in.

Posted in Copyright, Intellectual Property, Internet Law, Trademark

How is a Song Unlike a Purse?

Not surprisingly, the huge backlash against SOPA has produced a set of compromises. But are they still missing the point? Can we afford to continue treating intellectual property the same way as we treat physical goods? Is it time to

Posted in Copyright, Intellectual Property, Internet Law, Trademark

So What’s So Bad About SOPA?

This piece, excellent work as usual by Jonathan Zittrain et al, explains more about why SOPA is so very dangerous to the Internet as we know it, and to all the innovation that has created it, and could be created

Posted in Copyright, Intellectual Property, Internet Law

Quite the interesting theory of copyright law…

The world wide marketplace has also brought about a virtually instantaneous method of complaining about products and services that the consumer feels are sub-par. In the “olden days,” you had to use word of mouth to pass around that a

Posted in Copyright, Internet Law

Why Privacy Still Matters

Yes, you may be able to get away with quite a lot if you bury things in the fine print. For example, there are the Terms of Use agreements from Verizon and AT&T that basically state that you have to

Posted in Internet Law, Misc
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