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Articles about viacom: November 21, 2008

Apple Allows for Extended iTunes Movie Rentals, Doesn’t Tell Anyone

by Adam Fisher-Cox on Jan 25, 2008 at 12:50 PM

Rentals
Macworld’s Christopher Breen discovered quite by accident that Apple allows for you to keep your rentals longer than 24 hours.

Apparently, if you pause the movie, and keep it paused, you can finish watching it once you press play again, no matter how long after the expiration it is.

For instance, if you start watching a movie today, and then pause it, and then a month later click play again, your device will display a screen informing you that the rental has expired and you can either “Resume” or “Delete.“ Clicking “Resume” continues the movie, but it is un-pauseable and if you stop it, the movie will delete.

This is a nice little feature Apple has added in that basically ensures you get to see the whole movie as long as you only paused it. Breen notes that once he force-restarted his iPod, the rental was no longer there.

Read [Macworld]

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Apple is involved in a lawsuit… and it involves Murder!

by Adam Fisher-Cox on Dec 15, 2007 at 03:40 PM

American Gangster

Apple has been named as a defendant in a 13 page suit along with Viacom and subsidiary TV network BET, by James Prince and Thomas Randle, who claim they were falsely named as murderers.

It all started when Randle and Prince were shown alongside notorious Chicago gang leader Larry Hoover, with a voiceover caption naming them as “murderers,“ repeatedly in conjunction with the BET show “American Gangster.“ “American Gangster” profiles the rise and fall of notorious black criminals, and in an advertisement and then 3 more times in the actual episode, this photo was shown. The plaintiffs want the episode pulled, but both BET and Apple have refused to pull it from TV and iTunes respectively, which is how Apple is drawn into the case.

“Such patently false, inflammatory and defamatory publications have materially and substantially harmed the reputation of my clients personally and in the business area in which they operate,“ wrote the men’s attorney.

Prince and Randle both say that they had previously contacted Viacom and BET to inform them that they were using the photo without permission and that it was damaging to them and their careers, but the company did not listen.

Via [Apple Insider]

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