RIAABusinessOpen Source 'Napster' Resurrected After 8-Year DormancyBy Eliot Van BuskirkBusinessTen Years After Napster, Music Industry Still Faces the (Free) MusicBy Eliot Van BuskirkBusinessEMI Drops Suit Against Grooveshark Music Service, Licenses It InsteadBy Eliot Van BuskirkSecurityJudge Refuses to Punish Lawyer for Anti-RIAA BloggingBy David KravetsSecurityDespite Winning $675,000, RIAA Fears Defendant is File SharingBy David KravetsSecurityLast-Ditch Effort to Scuttle RIAA File Sharing VerdictBy David KravetsSecurityFeds Support $1.92 Million RIAA File Sharing VerdictBy David KravetsSecurityJury Dings File Sharer $675,000, RIAA Prevails --UpdateBy David KravetsSecurityRIAA Seeks Up to $150,000 a Song in File Sharing TrialBy David KravetsSecurityRIAA File Sharing Trial Begins -- UpdateBy David KravetsSecurityGuns N' Roses Uploader Gets House Arrest, Will Make Anti-Piracy AdBy David KravetsSecurityBerkman Center Founder Denies Pretrial ShenanigansBy David KravetsSecurityRIAA Fears Thomas Keeps On File Sharing, Despite $2 Million VerdictBy David KravetsSecurityJudge Mulls Sanctions Against Berkman Center FounderBy David KravetsSecurityThomas Seeks New RIAA Trial; Says $1.92 Million Verdict 'Monstrous'By David KravetsSecurityRIAA Seeks Web Removal of 'Illegal' Court RecordingsBy David KravetsSecurityWill File-Sharing Case Spawn a Copyright Reform Movement?By David KravetsSecurityJury in RIAA Trial Slaps $2 Million Fine on Jammie ThomasBy David KravetsSecurityHigh-Court Nominee Mirrors Industry Copyright Stance -- UpdateBy David KravetsSecurityNew Jammie Thomas Lawyers Vow to Put RIAA on TrialBy David KravetsSecurityJammie Thomas Lawyer: Get Me Off This Case!By David KravetsSecurityNo Settlement in RIAA v. Jammie ThomasBy David KravetsBusinessNothing to See Here: RIAA Lawsuits ContinueBy Eliot Van BuskirkSecurityObama's 100 Days: High Marks for Science, Low for PrivacyBy David KravetsMore Stories