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 Topic: NewsThe new items published under this topic are as follows.
The first Multi-Drive Blu-Ray system with both duplication and recording functionality has begun shipping from Microboards Technology.
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DRM-buster DVD Jon has a new target in his sights - the company behind the propietary format and DRM loving iTunes and iPod. He has reverse-engineered Apple’s Fairplay and is starting to license it to companies who want their media to play on Apple’s devices.
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Toshiba has launched a slimline HD DVD drive for notebook computers in a bid to boost support for the next-generation optical disc format. The drawer-mechanism unit not only reads and writes all ther usual DVD and CD formats, but also HD DVD recordable and rewriteable media.
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Lite-On IT plans to begin volume production later this quarter, according to industry sources.
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The leader of the pro-filesharing Swedish Pirate Party is co-ordinating a pan-European electoral assault for 2009's European Elections.
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Apple is apparently leaning on Hollywood studios telling them to co-operate better with its plans for global domination of online distribution of flicks.
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Another file-sharing software maker has been found guilty of causing copyright infringement. A US judge has said the Morpheus software produced by StreamCast breaks the law.
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A Mandarin-dubbed version of Superman Returns is to be released early on DVD in China to deter piracy.
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According to reports, HP has introduced three high-definition products based on the Gen-Next HD-DVD digital media format.
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Microsoft has filed a federal lawsuit against an alleged hacker who broke through its copy protection technology, charging that the mystery developer somehow gained access to its copyrighted source code.
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A long-running digital music royalties spat between record companies and organisations collecting on artists' behalf has been settled.
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Microsoft has said its new Zune music player will be sold at a price matching Apple's market-leading iPod and, as a result, lose money this Christmas.
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In response to the the newly adopted, very controversial DADVSI French law, three French DRM activists have turned themselves in to Police for breaking the new law.
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Sony's new PS3 games will cost punters a little more than a pretty penny when the machine is finally released. According to Japanese site Impress Watch, citing "multiple information sources", PS3 games will be concentrated in the £39-52 range. Currently only bigger titles on the PS2 reach the £39 mark.
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Philips has revoked CD-R disc patent licenses for CMC Magnetics and Ritek, the top two producers of optical discs in Taiwan, as well as Prodisc Technology and Lead Data, two second-tier makers, according to a list of CD-R licensees published on Philips Intellectual Property & Standards' (PIPS') global website.
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An international group of computer security experts and human rights workers has released an anonymous, fully portable web browser based on Mozilla Firefox. The Torpark browser comes pre-configured and requires no installation. It runs off a USB memory stick, and claims to leave no tracks behind on the browser or computer.
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Fox is running a 30-second television spot with just one static image in an effort to reach viewers who fast forward through ads using digital video recorders like TiVos.
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Although CMC Magnetics stressed that its Thailand plant operation has not affected by the recent Thailand coup, industry players still worry that the supply of CD-R may be aggravated amid a seasonal increase in demand.
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Panasonic has unveiled what it claims is the world's first Blu-ray Disc (BD) recorders that can play back BD-Video discs.
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A pair of in-house Warner engineers have developed and filed a patent for a triple format disc. The disc is of great interest, as it can store Blu-ray, HD DVD and standard DVD content, all on the same disc on the same side!
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