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No Cellphone Search Without Warrant, Supreme Court Rules

2014-06-26 18:43:56| TechNewsWorld

Police need a warrant to search the cellphone contents of people they have arrested, the United States Supreme Court ruled Wednesday. Warrantless searches, in essence, would impact privacy to a far greater extent than is acceptable. The ruling also applies to individuals stopped for questioning by the authorities, said Jake LaPerruque of the Center for Democracy and Technology.

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Supreme Court rules against Aereo in 6-3 vote, says online TV company violated broadcaster copyrights

2014-06-26 03:03:58| Apparel - Topix.net

The Supreme Court ruled on June 25, 2014 that a startup Internet company has to pay broadcasters when it takes television programs from the airwaves and allows subscribers to watch them on smartphones and other portable devices.

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US Supreme Court rules against Aereo, eviscerates the companys business model

2014-06-25 20:26:57| Extremetech

The Supreme Court has ruled that Aereo's antenna rebroadcasting service is illegal in its current form. This almost certainly means the death of the company -- but it also points to the need to reconsider copyright in the US.

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Supreme Court Sides With Broadcasters, Effectively Killing Aereo

2014-06-25 18:38:11| PC Magazine Software Product Guide

Essentially, the court did not buy Aereo's argument that it was providing customers with a private performance.

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Supreme Court rules Aereo violates copyright

2014-06-25 17:12:00| Telecompaper Headlines

(Telecompaper) US TV networks have won their lawsuit against the TV service Aereo. The Supreme Court ruled in a 6-3 vote that Aereo is in violation of copyright law when it streams free-to-air TV channels to consumers. Aereo provides a cloud DVR service, giving customers on-demand access to programming from the main channels in the US. It had refused to pay carriage fees to the broadcasters, saying customers had the right to receive the channels for personal use over the individual antennas used for the service. The court said Aereo is no different from other video providers such as cable networks, because the content it sends to viewers constitutes a "public performance", the Washington Post reported. Aereo had argued that its service was merely an extension of traditional cloud-based DVR services. Among the dissenting judges, Antonin Scalia compared Aereo to a "copy shop that provides its patrons with a library card". He argued that Aereo didn't transmit anything at all its customers play the content to themselves, and so couldn't have violated copyright law.

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