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Articles 1 - 9 of 9
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Can Coppa Work? An Analysis Of The Parental Consent Measures In The Children's Online Privacy Protection Act, Joshua Warmund
Can Coppa Work? An Analysis Of The Parental Consent Measures In The Children's Online Privacy Protection Act, Joshua Warmund
Fordham Intellectual Property, Media and Entertainment Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Climbing The Walls Of Your Electronic Cage, Steven Hetcher
Climbing The Walls Of Your Electronic Cage, Steven Hetcher
Michigan Law Review
Space. The final frontier. Not so, say the doyennes of the firstgeneration Internet community, who view themselves as the new frontiersmen and women staking out a previously unexplored territory - cyberspace. Numerous metaphors in the Internet literature picture cyberspace as a new, previously unexplored domain. Parallels are frequently drawn to the American colonies, the Western frontier, or outer space. In Code: And Other Laws of Cyberspace, Lawrence Lessig says, "Cyberspace is a place. People live there." In this place, we will build a "new society" (p. 4). A sense of this background is helpful in appraising Lessig's claims. He argues …
Freedom Of Speech, Cyberspace, Harassment Law, And The Clinton Administration, Eugene Volokh
Freedom Of Speech, Cyberspace, Harassment Law, And The Clinton Administration, Eugene Volokh
Law and Contemporary Problems
Volokh presents four cyberspace speech controversies that involve an interesting modern body of speech restrictions: hostile environment harassment law. These examples illustrate three things--in most of the controversies, the result should be driven not by the medium, but by the underlying free speech principles; that the Clinton Administration's role in these areas has been comparatively slight; and that each of the controversies shows that there is considerable truth to the much-maligned concept of the slippery slope.
Don’T Talk To Strangers: An Analysis Of Government And Industry Efforts To Protect A Child’S Privacy Online, Dorothy A. Hertzel
Don’T Talk To Strangers: An Analysis Of Government And Industry Efforts To Protect A Child’S Privacy Online, Dorothy A. Hertzel
Federal Communications Law Journal
Studies indicate that nearly two-thirds of children use the Internet. Children online users have created unique concerns for Internet providers and lawmakers. The collection, storage, and sale of a child online user's personal information without the child or parent's knowledge or consent has elicited much concern. Such a practice is commonplace in the world of the Internet. Congress, through the Child Online Privacy Protection Act, and the Internet industry have addressed how to curb this practice. In addition to these efforts, technological tools are currently available that block the transfer of personally identifiable information from the user to the computer. …
Two Schools Of Thought About The Political Psychology Of The Internet, Ibpp Editor
Two Schools Of Thought About The Political Psychology Of The Internet, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article describes and critiques two common assumptions about the psychopolitical consequences of continual modification and dispersal of the Internet.
Prosecuting Cyber-Pedophiles: How Can Intent Be Shown In A Virtual World In Light Of The Fantasy Defense?, Donald S. Yamagami
Prosecuting Cyber-Pedophiles: How Can Intent Be Shown In A Virtual World In Light Of The Fantasy Defense?, Donald S. Yamagami
Santa Clara Law Review
No abstract provided.
May Public Universities Restrict Faculty From Receiving Or Transmitting Information Via University Computer Resources? Academic Freedom, The First Amendment, And The Internet, Damon L. Krieger
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.
Cyberpredators: Police Internet Investigations Under Florida Statute 847.0135, Michael W. Sheetz
Cyberpredators: Police Internet Investigations Under Florida Statute 847.0135, Michael W. Sheetz
University of Miami Law Review
No abstract provided.
Will Internet Driven Concord University Law School Revolutionize Traditional Law School Teaching?, Robert E. Oliphant
Will Internet Driven Concord University Law School Revolutionize Traditional Law School Teaching?, Robert E. Oliphant
William Mitchell Law Review
No abstract provided.