The New York Times 2000 Amy Harmon |
Title | Subject | Authors |
Deal settles suit against MP3.com; online music service to pay record maker.(deal to pay Universal Music Group in copyright dispute) | News, opinion and commentary | Amy Harmon |
E-mail you can't outrun.(Research In Motion Blackberry wireless communicator, $349 to $499, plus $40 month service fee)(Company Business and Marketing)(Statistical Data Included) | News, opinion and commentary | Amy Harmon |
For many online music fans, court ruling is call to arms.(Company Business and Marketing) | News, opinion and commentary | Amy Harmon |
Free speech rights for computer code? Suit tests power of media concerns to control access to digital content.(Industry Trend or Event) | News, opinion and commentary | Amy Harmon |
Microsoft to back a browser keyword system.(RealNames Corp.)(Company Business and Marketing)(Statistical Data Included) | News, opinion and commentary | Amy Harmon |
MP3.com to restart its music service, for those willing to pay.(Company Business and Marketing) | News, opinion and commentary | Amy Harmon |
Music industry wins ruling in U.S. court; judge says MP3.com violated copyright law. | News, opinion and commentary | Amy Harmon, John Sullivan |
Potent software escalates music industry's jitters.(Napster, which catalogues, searches, and downloads MP3 music files on users computers across the Web)(Industry Trend or Event) | News, opinion and commentary | Amy Harmon |
Software that tracks e-mail is raising privacy concerns.(software that lets senders know when their e-mail is opened and whether it is forwarded) | News, opinion and commentary | Amy Harmon |
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