Electronic Frontier Foundation: Verskil tussen weergawes

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Lyn 65:
*[[1996]] Die EFF is medestigters van TRUSTe, die eerste Privaatheidseël maatskappy saam met CommerceNet, 'n nywerheidskonsortium sonder winsbejag.
*In [[1998]], bou die EFF [[Deep Crack]], 'n masjien wat 'n [[DES]]-gekodeerde boodskap na slegs 56-ure ontsyfer het en wen daarmee [[RSA Security]] se DES Uitdaging.
*In [[1999]] loods EFF en Anonymizer die Kosovo Privaatheidsprojek, 'n anonieme en veilige epos en websnuffeldiens wat deur Alex Fowler en Patrick Ball bedink is om mense in Kosovo, Serbië en andere te beskerm wat oor die [[Oorlog in Kosovo]] berig het teen wraakaanvalle van Serbiese amptenare.
*Professor [[Edward Felten]]: [[DMCA]] usedword togebruik censorom hissy researchnavorsing tooor breakdie ontsyfering van die [[SDMI|Secure Digital Music Initiative]] (SDMI) uitdaging te sensor.
*November [[2002]]: Die [[2600: The Hacker Quarterly]] Tydskrif saak, [[Universal teen Reimerdes]]. Die EFF verloor sy appél voor die Appelhof in die V.S.A.
*November [[2002]]: Die [[2600: The Hacker Quarterly|2600]] Tydskrif saak, , 2600 Tydskrif word verhoed om skakels na die [[DeCSS]] kode te publiseer onder die voorwaardes van die [[DMCA]]-wetgewing.
*Ondersteun pogings om 'n databasis daar te stel oor die misbruik van intellektuele eiendom wetgewing en om moontlike slagoffers in te lig.
 
 
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*Professor [[Edward Felten]]: [[DMCA]] used to censor his research to break [[Secure Digital Music Initiative]] (SDMI)
*November [[2002]]: The [[2600: The Hacker Quarterly|2600]] Magazine case, [[Universal v. Reimerdes]]. EFF loses its appeal before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, establishing a legal precedent to permit prior restraint, a stunning blow to the First Amendment. 2600 Magazine is restrained from publishing links to the [[DeCSS]] code under provisions of the [[DMCA]] and declines to appeal to the Supreme Court.
*Supports the [[Chilling Effects Clearinghouse]] efforts to organize a database of IP law abuse and educate potential victims
*December [[2003]]: [[RIAA]] v. [[Verizon]], D.C. Cir. EFF supported Verizon in a successful challenge to a lower court ruling holding that the company must reveal the identity of a [[Verizon]] customer accused of copyright infringement using the [[peer-to-peer]] file-sharing software [[KaZaA]]. The DC Circuit Court of Appeals agreed with [[Verizon]] and EFF that the special subpoena provisions in the [[DMCA]] apply to potentially infringing material stored on an [[internet service provider|ISP]] server, not material stored on an individual's own computer.
*[[2004]]: DirecTV v. Treworgy, 11th Circuit. EFF helped defend "smart card" technology owner Mike Treworgy after [[DirecTV]] sued him based on the fact that he purchased hardware that could be used to intercept the company's satellite TV signals. Treworgy prevailed in the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, which found that [[DirecTV]] cannot sue individuals for "mere possession" of smart-card technology. In separate negotiations with [[DirecTV]], EFF succeeded in getting the company to drop its "guilt-by-purchase" litigation strategy altogether.