Copyright 2.0 Show - Episode 71
By Jonathan Bailey • Aug 11th, 2008 • Category: PodcastIt is Monday again and that means it is time for the Copyright 2.0 Show, complete with all of this week’s news, views and abuse!
It is Monday again and that means it is time for the Copyright 2.0 Show, complete with all of this week’s news, views and abuse!
It was another busy week for copyright news with a lot of new stories breaking including two interesting lawsuits and a major plagiarism scandal.
Jody Rosen thought he was breaking one of the largest plagiarism scandals in journalism history. However, he has also been attacked for a quip about bloggers that seems to have gone awry.
It’s time for another episode of the Copyright 2.0 Show as we cover a very busy week in copyright news with updates from around the world and right here in the United States.
Plagiarism Today has been getting some much needed attention over the past few days and now has a new Tumblr blog, a major update to the consulting page and a slew of smaller fixes.
Google has introduced it’s effort to take on Wikipedia, but much of the conversation around it has been about how it will hurt webmasters and could cause chaos in the search engine results.
Licensing one’s blog content, especially for money, has been a long-held dream of bloggers everywhere. However, it has been a largely elusive one, both for the bloggers and for the companies that have tried to make it come true.
It was a record-breaking week for copyright news as we worked to condense a 43-item linkroll into just 16 copyright stories. It wasn’t easy, but it is definitely entertaining.
It is a record-breaking linkroll this week with some 43 stories to help you get caught up on the week’s copyright news. Everything from copyright legislation to more on those Bratz dolls.
The photo sharing site Photobucket has a little-known provision that allows users to turn any image they see on the site into a t-shirt or sticker, all without payment or permission of the uploaded.