30 Mar, 2011  |  Written by  |  under News

BEIJING – Baidu Inc., which operates China's leading search engine, said Wednesday it has removed 2.8 million items from an online library after authors complained it was distributing their work without permission.

The company apologized last weekend to Chinese authors and said it would screen material on Baidu Library and remove unauthorized work.

Baidu removed 2.8 million items from the document sharing service's "literary works" section, said a company spokesman, Kaiser Kuo. He said that left about 1,000 works it believes are properly licensed.

Baidu hopes to discuss with authors possible arrangements to distribute their work and share the revenues, Kuo said.

"We really hope our actions will go far to assuage them and will form a foundation for us to have fruitful talks about ways to cooperate," he said.

Baidu has faced complaints by music companies, publishers and others that it facilitates the distribution of unlicensed material by linking to pirate websites that carry unauthorized copies.

This month, the U.S. Trade Representative's office cited Baidu in a list of 33 websites or public markets in China, Russia, India and other countries that it deemed "notorious markets" linked to sales of pirated or fake goods.

The latest dispute came after Baidu launched a series of new services last year that are meant to create a distinctive identity for a company long seen as an imitator of search giant Google Inc.

In a petition posted on the Internet on March 15, a group of Chinese authors complained that Baidu had "deteriorated into a burglar company that stole our property and stole out rights."

The dispute prompted Baidu CEO Robin Li to announce at an Internet conference this week in the southern city of Shenzhen that he would shut down the service if it could not be resolved, according to Kuo.

"We appealed Baidu to curb and correct their infringing activities. If they did so, we welcome it," said Yang Chengzhi, Communist Party secretary of the government-sanctioned China Writers' Association.

Baidu has more than 75 percent of China's search market, with Google in second place at just under 20 percent. Google's share has eroded since it closed its China-based search engine last March to avoid having to comply with government requirements to censor results.

Baidu says it will launch a system in May to screen material on Baidu Library and block the uploading of copyrighted works.

___

Baidu Inc.: http://www.baidu.com

Baidu Library: wenku.baidu.com

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23 Mar, 2011  |  Written by  |  under News

NEW YORK – A judge on Tuesday rejected a deal between Internet search leader Google and the book industry that would have put millions of volumes online, citing anti-trust concerns and the need for involvement from Congress while acknowledging the potential benefit of putting literature in front of the masses.

U.S. Circuit Judge Denny Chin in Manhattan said the creation of a universal library would "simply go too far," and he was troubled by the differences between Google's views and those of everyone affected by the settlement. Still, he left the door open for an eventual deal, noting that many objectors would drop their complaints if Mountain View, Calif.-based Google Inc. set it up so book owners would choose to join the library rather than being required to quit it.

The $125 million settlement had drawn hundreds of objections from Google rivals, consumer watchdogs, academic experts, literary agents and even foreign governments. Google already has scanned more than 15 million books for the project.

Google's managing counsel, Hilary Ware, called the decision disappointing and said the company was considering its options.

"Like many others, we believe this agreement has the potential to open up access to millions of books that are currently hard to find in the U.S. today," Ware said in a statement.

She said that, regardless of the outcome, Google would "continue to work to make more of the world's books discoverable online" through Google Books, a searchable index of literary works, and Google eBooks, which allows readers to access books wirelessly on digital devices.

The judge said the settlement that the company reached with U.S. authors and publishers would "grant Google significant rights to exploit entire books, without permission of the copyright owners." He was particularly critical of the access Google would have to so-called orphan works — out-of-print books whose writers could not be located — saying the deal gave the company "a de facto monopoly over unclaimed works."

That was one of the fears raised in 2009 by the Department of Justice when it concluded that the agreement probably violated antitrust law and could decrease competition among U.S. publishers and drive up prices for consumers.

The deal, the judge said, gives Google "a significant advantage over competitors, rewarding it for engaging in wholesale copying of copyrighted works without permission."

He noted that the case was not about full access to copyrighted works or the sale of them because Google did not scan the books to make them available for purchase, but he said the deal still would let Google sell full access to copyrighted works that it otherwise would have no right to exploit. The litigation focused on the use of an indexing and search tool.

The judge said Congress should ultimately decide who should be entrusted with guardianship over orphan books and under what terms, rather than the issue being resolved by private, self-interested parties.

He said Congress also could address the concerns of the international community of authors and publishers. He called it significant that foreign authors, publishers and even nations were saying the agreement violates international law. France and Germany had objected to the deal, along with authors and publishers in Austria, Belgium, India, Israel, Italy, Japan, New Zealand, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.

Department of Justice spokeswoman Gina Talamona said in a statement that the government was pleased with the ruling. The settlement, she said, "exceeded the scope of the underlying lawsuit on which it was based and created concerns regarding antitrust, class certification and copyright issues."

The president of the Authors Guild, an advocate for writers' interests in copyright protection and other issues, said the organization planned to talk with publishers and Google "with the hope that we can arrive at a settlement within the court's parameters that makes sense for all parties."

Guild President Scott Turow said the online library was "an idea whose time has come."

"Readers want access to these unavailable works, and authors need every market they can get," he said. "There has to be a way to make this happen. It's a top priority for the Authors Guild."

John Sargent, chief executive officer at Macmillan Publishers Limited, noted in a statement on behalf of publisher plaintiffs that the judge had invited the parties to request approval of a revised deal if they can reach one. He said the publishers were prepared to modify the deal and work to overcome the judge's objections.

He said the publishers wanted to "promote the fundamental principle behind our lawsuit, that copyrighted content cannot be used without the permission of the owner or outside the law."

The Open Book Alliance, a group that includes Google rivals Microsoft Corp., Yahoo Inc. and Amazon.com Inc., called the ruling "a victory for the public interest and for competition in the literary and Internet ecosystems."

Attorney Cynthia Arato, representing a number of leading foreign publishing societies and foreign book publishers that objected to the settlement, said it vindicates the important concerns of foreign rights holders.

"Their interests weren't adequately protected," she said. "It would be wrong for a U.S. court to allow one company to usurp their fundamental right to control their copyrighted works."

The judge acknowledged in his decision that there are many benefits to Google's project, including that libraries, schools, researchers and disadvantaged populations would gain access to far more books; that authors and publishers would find new audiences and new sources of income; and that older books — particularly those out of print — would be preserved and given new life.

The case developed after Google in 2004 announced it had agreed with several major research libraries to digitally copy books and other writings in their collections. The authors and publishers sought financial damages and a court order to block the copying when they sued Google in 2005 after Google failed to obtain copyright permission to scan the books.

A deal was first reached to settle the claims in 2008 and was tentatively approved by the judge in November 2009.

Since presiding over a hearing on the case in February 2010, the judge has been elevated to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. He acted in the role of a district judge to rule on the case.

At the hearing last year, the judge heard a lawyer for folk singer Arlo Guthrie and "Pay it Forward" writer Catherine Ryan Hyde say the library would exploit his clients with "woefully inadequate compensation" for "unknown and undisclosed uses."

Microsoft lawyer Tom Rubin said the deal "was structured to solidify Google's dominance."

Neither lawyer immediately returned requests seeking comment Tuesday.

Google lawyer Daralyn Durie testified at the hearing that fewer than 10 million of 174 million books in the world would be affected by the settlement and that 5 million of those affected were out of print. Google has estimated that about 130 million titles likely would get into its digital library.

___

Associated Press writers Hillel Italie in New York and Michael Liedtke in San Francisco contributed to this report.

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20 Mar, 2011  |  Written by  |  under News

Stocks



Sergey Aleynikov and his lawyer, Sabrina Shroff, depart from federal court in New York February 17, 2010. REUTERS/Chip East

Sergey Aleynikov and his lawyer, Sabrina Shroff, depart from federal court in New York February 17, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Chip East


By Grant McCool

NEW YORK |
Fri Mar 18, 2011 10:55pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A former Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) computer programer was sentenced to eight years in prison on Friday for stealing secret code used in the Wall Street bank's valuable high-frequency trading system.

Sergey Aleynikov, was arrested by the FBI and charged in July 2009 with copying and removing trading code from Goldman before taking a new job at Teza Technologies LLC, a high-frequency trading startup firm in Chicago.

A onetime collegiate-level competitive ballroom dancer, Aleynikov, 41, was convicted of trade secrets theft and transporting stolen property across state lines on December 10 after a two-week long jury trial in Manhattan federal court.

High-frequency, computer-driven trading has become an important and competitive business. The software codes that trade shares in milliseconds are closely guarded secrets.

"I very much regret the foolish thing of downloading information," the Russian-born father of three said at his sentencing on Friday. "Part of this information was proprietary to Goldman. I never meant to cause Goldman any harm or harm anyone at the bank."

Aleynikov's words fell short of U.S. District Judge Denise Cote's hopes for "an open and honest statement of responsibility" for his criminal conduct.

"You did not do that," said Cote, imposing a sentence of 97 months that was within the eight to 10 years recommended by the government. Cote also fined him $12,500.

Aleynikov's lawyer, Kevin Marino, had originally asked for a sentence of probation but in court on Friday he suggested two years was adequate for what he called Aleynikov's "foolish, tragic, horrible, ridiculous mistake."

Aleynikov has the right to appeal the sentence. His defense lawyers have argued that the matter belonged in civil, not criminal court.

U.S. prosecutor Joseph Facciponti said the stolen code was Aleynikov's "golden ticket" to Teza and "he stood to make millions more" there than he did at the bank. Facciponti said Aleynikov spent several months planning his move, eventually transferring 500,000 lines of Goldman Sachs source code to an outside server.

Cote had revoked the bail of Aleynikov, a dual citizen of the United States and Russia, on the grounds that there was a risk of him fleeing before sentencing.

Throughout the trial and sentencing phase, many comparisons were made with a similar case in the same courthouse against a former Societe Generale (SOGN.PA) trader, Samarth Agrawal.

The citizen of India was found guilty by a jury last November of stealing high-frequency trading code from the French bank before going to a new job. On February 28, a judge sentenced him to three years in prison and he will be deported when he completes his sentence.

The case is USA v Aleynikov, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, No. 10-00096.

(Reporting by Grant McCool; Editing by Tim Dobbyn)

original content on reuters

6 Mar, 2011  |  Written by  |  under News

SEOUL, South Korea – Unidentified attackers targeted more than two dozen South Korean government and private websites Saturday, a day after two waves of similar attacks, but officials reported no serious damage.

A total of 29 websites were hit Saturday in so-called "denial of service" attacks, in which large numbers of "zombie" computers try to connect to a site at the same time in an attempt to overwhelm the server, the Korea Communications Commission said.

Commission official Lee Sang-kug said the attacks were "so weak that no actual damage was detected so far." Lee said the commission would keep a close watch on the situation in coming days, but that the fallout was likely to remain limited because the government and computer security companies were well prepared.

Saturday's attacks on sites including South Korea's presidential office, the Foreign Ministry, the Defense Ministry, some financial institutions and U.S. Forces Korea followed two rounds Friday in which damage was also limited.

Lee said that 40 websites were originally targeted Friday, though only 29 came under actual attack. A total of 29 were targeted Saturday, he said.

The National Police Agency said the attacks originated from 30 servers in 18 foreign countries or territories including the United States, Israel, Russia, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Thailand, Japan, India, Brazil and Iran.

"We may find more servers behind this attack as it is only the beginning of the investigation," said Jung Suk-hwa, head of the agency's Cyber Terror Response Center. "Generally, there is someone else who controls all of these servers and we are working to figure out who it is."

In 2009, some government websites in South Korea and the U.S. were paralyzed by a similar type of attack that South Korean officials believed was conducted by North Korea. But U.S. officials have largely ruled out North Korea as the origin, according to cybersecurity experts.

South Korean media have previously reported that North Korea runs an Internet warfare unit aimed at hacking into U.S. and South Korean military networks to gather information and disrupt service.

Park Kun-woo, a spokesman for South Korean computer security company AhnLab, said Friday that China is also pointed to as a source of cyberattacks because a large amount of malware, or malicious software, originates from there.

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photo(AFP/File) - Home Secretary Theresa May addresses guests during a speech at Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) in central London on November 3, 2010. May on Tuesday dismissed fears that the government's new crime mapping website for England and Wales would send house prices plummeting in some areas of property-obsessed Britain.(AFP/File/Leon Neal)


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