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  • Lost iPhone warrant withdrawn, Gizmodo agrees to cooperate in investigation

    by 
    Mike Schramm
    Mike Schramm
    07.16.2010

    The search warrant against Gizmodo editor Jason Chen has been withdrawn, the EFF reports today. Chen's house was searched a few months ago after the Gawker blog reportedly purchased the lost iPhone 4 prototype, but the San Mateo District Attorney has decided to drop the warrant and return all seized items to Chen. Gizmodo tells the Wall Street Journal that it has "reached an agreement" with authorities, and they confirm that the site will "cooperate with our investigation." That means, says the EFF, that the matter isn't completely over. There was some back and forth about whether the materials seized by authorities could have been so taken under journalist protection laws, and it's possible that the San Mateo DA simply withdrew the warrant in order to keep from violating any California shield laws. If the police still felt there was worthwhile evidence in Chen's possession, they could subpoena that material separately, thus going around any questions of journalistic protection. Indeed, as Gizmodo has already agreed to give the authorities materials that the court "deems relevant to the case," the investigation into the lost iPhone is not yet entirely over. But it doesn't seem likely that Gizmodo would face any charges -- if the police are still pursuing a case at this point (and that's a big if), it would seem to be against the iPhone's original finder, who may have broken the law by selling the iPhone to Gizmodo. We'll have to wait and see if any more charges are filed. [via TechCrunch]

  • Romero remains head of Slipgate following layoffs

    by 
    James Ransom-Wiley
    James Ransom-Wiley
    10.21.2009

    Parent publisher Gazillion Entertainment has confirmed that John Romero will remain with Slipgate Ironworks following a round of layoffs that struck the development studio this month, reports Joystiq sister site Big Download. As previously detailed, a smaller staff will be left intact to complete an unnamed MMO project, which has undergone a change in "format," according to Gazillion.Co-founded by Romero in 2005, Slipgate once boasted a staff of about 80 veteran developers -- now reportedly reduced to around 30 -- that had combined to work on 16 MMO titles for other studios. Their seventeenth and first MMO for Slipgate, however, remains an elusive undertaking.

  • Activision files trademark for 'Sledgehammer Games'

    by 
    Griffin McElroy
    Griffin McElroy
    09.12.2009

    Skilled internet sleuth supererogatory has uncovered an intriguing trademark filing from Activision, who recently reserved the name "Sledgehammer Games" for an unspecified purpose. Now, this could simply be the moniker of Activision's rumored San Mateo-based studio (whose help wanted ads were also uncovered by supererogatory) -- but we're optimistically holding out hope that the company is working on a Peter Gabriel-inspired minigame collection. We've contacted Activision to see if our wildest, stop-motion animated fantasies are about to come true.