![]() consumers will be able to watch every match in real time, according to the article. The move marks the fist time ever that U.S. In an unprecedented move, sports giant ESPN will stream some 800 hours of live Wimbledom coverage, according to PaidContent. Those blocks have not been so successful.ĪDVERTISEMENT ESPN Wall-to-Wall for Wimbledon Internet Service Providers in the UK, Netherlands, Italy and Belgium have all been ordered to block the site. ![]() However, along with “information,” The Pirate Bay also facilitates the transfer of pirated movies, music, television programs and software - hence the pending jail terms for its founders. The appeal is based on Article 10 of the European Convention of Human Rights, which guarantees freedom to both receive and distribute information, Neij’s lawyer told TorrentFreak. They are not in jail yet, however, and are trying to take their case to one of Europe’s highest courts. Neij and Sunde have been given to 10-month and eight-month jail sentences, respectively. Peter Sunde and Fredrik Neij, the Swedish cofounders of the file-sharing site The Pirate Bay, will seek a hearing at the European Court of Human Rights, according to TorrentFreak. Pirate Bay cofounders seek hearing at human rights court It has been a litigious month for Apple, which on June 9 was hit with a US$2.3 million fine in Australia for erroneously labeling its most recent iPad “4G,” even though they would not work on 4G networks in Australia. judge ordered the CEOs of both Apple and Samsung to meet in order to hash out their two sides’ ongoing two-way legal battles. It was not immediately known how much Apple would have to pay, but Samsung told the BBC that it would seek “adequate compensation.” ![]() In this particular case, that technology related to connecting phones and tablets to the Internet. In an email to the BBC, South Korea-based Samsung said that the decision confirmed that Apple was again free-riding on Samsung technology. ![]() A court in the Netherlands has ordered Apple to pay damages to Samsung for infringing on a Samsung patent, according to the BBC. ![]()
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