Max Dornseif: Court: leave unobserved areas for pedestrians.
Aftenposten, via Wendy: DVD-Jon wins new legal victory.
Highly impressive, via IP: The Empire That Was Russia.
In ALAC matters, there are now some at-large structures.
Andy Newton: ICANN and the Whois Task Force(s).
Another blog to watch: Andy Newton's grumpOps.
Furdlog: Wright brothers time-travel to MIT?
Edward Hasbrouck @ The Practical Nomad: More on EU passenger data transfers to the USA.
Frits Bolkestein: EU/US talks on transfers of airline passengers' personal data.
Financial Times: EU to concede to demands for information on air travel.
Ed Felten: Abusable Technologies Awareness Center.
Max Dornseif: Government mandated blocking of foreign Web content.
Wendy Seltzer gives the best explanation of the end-to-end principle (and its importance) that I've seen so far: Please keep our Internet simple.
Alexander Svensson has successfully finished his studies. Congrats!
Washington Times: Bug devices track officials at WSIS.
EFF on RIAA's latest hiring: If they really wanted to solve their file-sharing problems, the RIAA should have considered hiring someone with a business plan rather than a baton and a bulletproof vest.
For all the stuff I missed on December 9, please go to Bret Fausett.
Washington Times: U.N. control of Web rejected.
NY Times, from Geneva: Paul Twomey, the president of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, found out what it feels like to be voiceless.
Susan Crawford: Listening to the Names Council.
Lawrence Lessig, in reply to a letter from SCO: More SCO fud, this time insulting the constitution.
Wendy Seltzer snapshots the current state of WIPO II: ICANNography. Welcome back to blogging!
Karl-Friedrich Lenz on trademarking "Für Elise": Owning Beethoven.
Michael Geist on governments and ccTLDs: Think Web's virtually government free? Think again;
Governments and Country-Code Top Level Domains: A Global Survey.
Susan Crawford: Someone Must Be In Charge.