Submitted via IRC for Fnord666
From Engadget:
It could soon prove expensive for media makers to chase online pirates in Canada. The country's Supreme Court has unanimously ruled that internet providers are entitled to "reasonable" compensation when asked to link pirates' IP addresses to customer details.
Voltage Pictures (the production firm behind The Hurt Locker) intended to sue roughly 55,000 customers of telecom giant Rogers for allegedly bootlegging movies, but balked when Rogers wanted to charge $100 per hour to comply with the requests for information. Rogers won the initial Federal Court case, but had to defend itself at the Supreme Court when Voltage appealed the case.
From TorrentFreak:
In a 9-0 decision, the Supreme Court ruled in Rogers' favor this week. The Internet provider is entitled to recover costs to link IP-addressed to customer details. Exactly how much will be determined in a future Federal Court hearing.
(Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 19 2018, @01:38AM (1 child)
With modern coding practices "Hello World" requires many, many, MB of code libraries, unicode support and a choice of fonts. Due to the ADA it also must output in braille, spoken text, ASL and sixteen different languages including spanish, portuguese, farsi, arabic, hebrew, jive, rap, redneck, and moron. Strangely, english is not a required language.
(Score: 2) by DannyB on Wednesday September 19 2018, @08:29PM
Check out the Java Enterprise Edition version of HelloWorld. [github.com]
Alas it is not multi threaded.
People today are educated enough to repeat what they are taught but not to question what they are taught.