Ross said MSNBC had pulled the Palladium story, not Newsweek. Other Levy stories remain available on MSNBC. A search on MSNBC for "Palladium" produces Steven Levy's chat about Palladium:
http://www.msnbc.com/m/nw/talk/archive.asp?lt=062502_levy Still, it may policy for MSNBC to pull Newsweek stories after a few days that don't contribute to the MS shine. Further still, shine thine eyes on this line-up of TCPA wiseguys: Date: Fri, 12 Jul 2002 18:39:50 -0500 From: Jolley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: [dvd-discuss] Technology Admin comments To: dvd-discuss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Message-id: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> The US Dept. of Commerce Technology Administration is inviting the public to make comments for the upcomming Workshop on Digital Entertainment and Rights Management. The workshop will be held on July 17. http://www.ta.doc.gov/comments/comments.htm Co-chairs Bond and Rogan will be joined by: - Jack Valenti, of Motion Picture Association of America - Rhett Dawson, of Information Technology Industry Council - Joe Tasker, of Information Technology Association of America - Mitch Glazier, Record Industry Association of America - Jon Potter, Digital Media Association - Stewart Vendery, Vivendi Universal - Preston Padden, Disney - Mike Miron, ContentGuard - Rick Lane, News Corp - Gordon Lyon, NIST - Rob Reid, Listen.com - Phillip Maggi, Computer Systems Policy Project - Tim Sheehy, IBM - Andrew Moss, Microsoft - Ted Cohen, EMI - Doug Comer, Intel - Bob Schwartz, McDermott, Will & Emery (representing CEA and the Home Recording Rights Coalition.) They are asking for comments on the following: * The effectiveness of efforts to pursue technical standards or solutions that are designed to provide a more predictable and secure environment for digital transmission of copyrighted material; * Major obstacles facing an open commercial exchange of digital content; * What a future framework for success might entail; * Current consumer attitude towards online entertainment.