Posts Tagged ‘social networking’
The Pirate Bay Trial: Guilty As Charged
If you’ve been following The Pirate Bay trial, you know that the verdict is due today. Unfortunately for the Pirate Bay Founders, and quite surprisingly given that the charges were partly dropped at the very beginning of the trial, the court has found them guilty.
Early reports from Torrentfreak that the verdict has already leaked (ironically, many of the charges against The Pirate Bay have to do with leaked copies of copyrighted movies and music), and that the Pirate Bay has lost, were true. Torrentfreak has gotten the info with site founder Peter Sunde, who he has heard the verdict early from a “trustworthy source.”
“Nothing will happen to TPB, us personally or file-sharing whatsoever,” he assures us, but this is definitely a big blow to all BitTorrent trackers around the world, and it might set a precedent for all similar cases in the future.
Update: the official verdict is out, and all four of The Pirate Bay’s founders are found guilty in ‘assisting in making copyright content available’. Peter Sunde, Fredrik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm and Carl Lundström all receive one year in jail; they also must pay $3.6 million in damages.
Of course, this is not the end of this story. The Pirate Bay will appeal to the court, and there is a possibility that the verdict is reversed later. But the fact that the court has bought into the entertainment industry’s reasoning, which have at times been odd and unclear, is definitely not a good sign for The Pirate Bay.
On the other hand, even if The Pirate Bay loses the battle altogether and is forced to shut down further along the line, the entertainment industry has to understand that a thousand new pirate bays will sprout up everywhere. Can they sue them all? Or should they finally consider changing their business model and adapt to how Internet – the place that gives them previously unimaginable opportunities for reaching out to their customers – really works.
Tags: copyright, file sharing, piracy, the pirate bay, trial

Intelligent cat door utilizes Twitter, RFID masterfully
What goes well with a communication-enabled water dish? Why, a Twitter / RFID-enabled kitty door, of course! The so-called Tweeting Cat Door is undoubtedly the most hilarious, insightful and useful DIY contraption we’ve ever seen to wed RFID, social networking and computer programming. Essentially, this homegrown cat door was crafted to only open when Gus or Penny walks up with their super special RFID tags; once they approach, a mounted camera snaps a picture and uploads it (along with a quip) to Twitter. Don’t deny it — your feline is steaming with envy from the corner of your desk right now.
[Via Switched]
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets, Household
Intelligent cat door utilizes Twitter, RFID masterfully originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Apr 2009 00:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Chinese Social Networks ‘Virtually’ Out-Earn Facebook And MySpace: A Market Analysis
Editor’s Note: Social networks are taking off in China. The following guest post by George Godula. David Li, and Richard Yu explores how Chinese social networks are pursuing different business models than their American counterparts, relying more on micropayments and the sale of virtual goods. George Godula is the founder of Web2Asia, an East Asian incubator and also a consultancy for Western startups trying to enter markets in China, Japan and Korea. David Li is a developer of social networking applications such as Growing Gifts, and he also was the developer of OnChat, an early in-browser graphical avatar chat system. Richard Yu is a Seattle native living in China, where he consults for Shanghai-based web startups while writing his blog.
Despite China’s massively growing internet market, international giants like Google and Facebook are having trouble making gains with the 300 million Chinese online users. China’s netizens are on average very young – 66.7 % of them are younger than 29 years old and 35.2 % of them are teenagers—with social networking and entertainment applications being the most popular. Read the rest of this entry »
