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weaken: search

Rodents weaken, bust levee; deluge follows

Broadband Service Provider Trident SR Sdn. Bhd.

Verizon Aims to Weaken 700 MHz 'Open Access,' Google Cautions FCC

The FCC should condition the grant of 700 megahertz band “C”-block licenses to Verizon Wireless on the carrier’s acknowledgment that it can’t block applications on the handsets it sells to its customers, Google, Inc., said in a petition filed last week.

iPhone 3G to be in healthy supply as iPod touch supplies weaken

Apple should have ample stock of iPhone 3G when it touches down this month, according to analysts, who also note that Apple stands to make more from each device than once thought -- and that iPod touch stocks are continuing to run down ahead of a possible refresh.

Music Online Audioconference - Legal Scholar Questions Measures to "Streamline" Music Licensing

With new distribution channels for music come repeated calls for changes in the legal structure of intellectual property (IP) rights that apply to music. University of California, Berkeley Law Professor Robert P. Merges will present a paper on The Continuing Vitality of Music Performance Rights Organizations. He warns that proposals to change the existing music IP rights system could stunt creativity in the United States. and around the world. Merges warns that the more radical proposals would eviscerate or eliminate performing rights organizations, which could weaken all of the gains songwriters have made over the past century.

Leading Legal Scholar Questions Radical Measures to ''Streamline'' Music Licensing on the Internet

With new distribution channels for music come repeated calls for changes in the legal structure of intellectual property (IP) rights that apply to music. University of California, Berkeley Law Professor Robert P. Merges will present a paper on The Continuing Vitality of Music Performance Rights Organizations. He warns that proposals to change the existing music IP rights system could stunt creativity in the United States. and around the world. Merges warns that the more radical proposals would eviscerate or eliminate performing rights organizations, which could weaken all of the gains songwriters have made over the past century.


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