TalkingTech
The view from the top of IT with TechWorld Editor Rohan Pearce
The High Court of Australia in Canberra has dismissed an appeal by 34 film and television companies led by Roadshow Films against internet service provider (ISP) iiNet over alleged copyright infringement.
By Hamish Barwick | 20 April, 2012 10:50
Symantec today confirmed that the pcAnywhere source code published on the Web Monday by hackers who tried to extort $50,000 from the company was legitimate.
By Gregg Keizer | 08 February, 2012 06:12
A federal lawsuit filed in Massachusetts could test the question of whether individuals who leave their wireless networks unsecured can be held liable if someone uses the network to illegally download copyrighted content.
By Jaikumar Vijayan | 07 February, 2012 08:15
Network access control (NAC) is saving the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill $40,000 per year by keeping students from illegally using peer-to-peer file-sharing applications.
By Tim Greene | 30 September, 2011 01:31
The publisher of the uTorrent file-sharing program has admitted to suffering a major security breach that allowed attackers to substitute downloads of its client for malware pushing fake antivirus software.
By John E Dunn | 16 September, 2011 00:15
Since the beginning of 2010, a whopping 200,000 BitTorrent users have been sued in mass file-sharing lawsuits by copyright trolls, according to TorrentFreak.
By Sarah Jacobsson Purewal | 10 August, 2011 00:00
While many Aussie filmmakers are still struggling to reach a local audience who are often disengaged with traditional mediums of broadcasting, one new series has used Web generated content in an attempt to overcome such challenges.
By Lisa Banks | 09 August, 2011 14:30
Voltage Pictures, producers of the Oscar-winning 2009 film "The Hurt Locker," is suing 24,583 BitTorrent users for downloading the film.
By Sarah Jacobsson Purewal | 25 May, 2011 01:26
Cable killer or not, Netflix takes a big bite out of bandwidth every night in America.
By Jared Newman | 19 May, 2011 01:55
What do curse words, porn terms and the word BitTorrent have in common? They're all blacklisted from Google Instant.
By Jared Newman | 28 January, 2011 03:10
BitTorrent will work with a Taiwanese research institute to develop a certification scheme for local consumer electronics makers who want to put its filesharing applications in their products, a world first for the popular high-speed file-sharing protocol, the research institute said on Friday.
By Ralph Jennings | 07 January, 2011 22:05
Passwords used by people employed by US federal, state and local governments were among those disclosed by the Gawker hack over the weekend, according to a report by PBS NewsHour on Monday.
By Gregg Keizer | 14 December, 2010 08:31
Comcast wants to kill it, your next wireless router will probably have it built-in, and you can use it to download the entire GeoCities archive. BitTorrent has come a long way since its public release on July 2, 2001, but unless you're a regular media pirate, you probably haven't used it much. Read on to find out how it works and to clear up a few common misconceptions about it.
By Patrick Miller | 23 November, 2010 03:12
It was about a year ago that Yahoo!-hosted Geocities sites started going offline. For the majority of Internet users, this event was met with little fanfare; Geocities had long gone out of fashion as a free web host and been replaced by sites like Myspace, Facebook, Wordpress, and more recently, Tumblr.
By Chris Head | 28 October, 2010 10:00
The developers of the uTorrent file-sharing application have released an updated version that fixes a problem that could allow an attacker to load malicious code onto a user's computer.
By Jeremy Kirk | 30 August, 2010 04:31
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