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Articles 301 - 325 of 325
Full-Text Articles in Law
Evolving Property Rights In Domain Names, Jeffrey R. Wiedmann
Evolving Property Rights In Domain Names, Jeffrey R. Wiedmann
Student Works
No abstract provided.
The Communications Decency Act And New York Times V. Sullivan: Providing Public Figure Defamation A Home On The Internet, 43 J. Marshall L. Rev. 491 (2010), Chris Williams
UIC Law Review
No abstract provided.
Downloading Personhood: A Hegelian Theory Of Copyright Law, Karla M. O'Regan
Downloading Personhood: A Hegelian Theory Of Copyright Law, Karla M. O'Regan
Canadian Journal of Law and Technology
This article will examine these responses, identifying the competing interests at work in both traditional copyright schemes and contemporary Internet-based criticisms, and put forth a theory of copyright law capable of ad- dressing the needs of these rival interests in an advanced technological era.
Part I delineates some of the more prominent theories copyright scholars have offered in response to the “IP-IT crisis.” Part II attempts to identify the source of these problems by first examining conventional justifications for copyright and the competing interests inherently at work in its conception. Part III identifies three specific factors I argue are particularly …
Strong Medicine: Patents, Market, And Policy Challenges For Managing Neglected Diseases And Affordable Prescription Drugs, Taiwo A. Oriola
Strong Medicine: Patents, Market, And Policy Challenges For Managing Neglected Diseases And Affordable Prescription Drugs, Taiwo A. Oriola
Canadian Journal of Law and Technology
The article is divided into six parts. Part one deals with the introduction, part two discusses the evolution of modern medicine and the socio-economic dynamics that shape the current prescription drug economics, part three discusses the pharmaceutical costs conundrum, part four analyses neglected diseases and the scale of the problem, part five discusses the role of patents on the pharmaceuticals costs trajectory and reviews literature on possible alternatives to promoting incentives for pharmaceuticals R&D, and part six sums up the discourse and reiterates the solutions to the problems identified.
The Canadian Public Domain: What, Where, And To What End?, Carys J. Craig
The Canadian Public Domain: What, Where, And To What End?, Carys J. Craig
Canadian Journal of Law and Technology
In this article, I explore the important body of scholarship that has emerged over this time on the substance, nature, and role of the public domain. I offer some concrete definitions of the public domain in the copyright context, identify some ongoing sources of debate in the literature, and highlight some particularly significant voices in public domain discourse. In doing so, my aim is twofold: first, I mean to present a fairly comprehensive, but concise, review of this academic movement that has been directed towards substantiating and politicizing the concept of the public domain; and second, I hope to re-situate …
Web 2.0 Regulation: A Risk Management Process, Pierre Trudel
Web 2.0 Regulation: A Risk Management Process, Pierre Trudel
Canadian Journal of Law and Technology
In order to describe the law relating to Web 2.0, we have to look at the normativity that really operates there. Effective norms engender strong enough risks for stakeholders that they find it in their interest to comply. State legislation is not the only thing that governs Internet activities; the normativity that governs the resources associated with Web 2.0 flows from what the technology permits and prohibits, and also largely from stakeholder practices. Configurations and practices create risk or shift risk onto others. However, state regulators may consider that the risks arising out of Internet activities are worrisome enough that …
Implications Of The Internet For Quasi-Legislative Instruments Of Regulation, Peter L. Strauss
Implications Of The Internet For Quasi-Legislative Instruments Of Regulation, Peter L. Strauss
Faculty Scholarship
It is a quarter century since I began telling my Administrative Law students that they had better be watching the Internet and how agencies of interest to them were using it, as they entered an Information Age career. The changes since then have been remarkable. Rulemaking, where the pace has perhaps been slowest, is now accelerating into the Internet, driven by a President committed to openness and consultation. This paper seeks little more than to point the reader toward the places where she can find the changes and watch them for herself.
Defending Disclosure In Software Licensing, Maureen A. O'Rourke
Defending Disclosure In Software Licensing, Maureen A. O'Rourke
Faculty Scholarship
For lack of our imagination, this article does not have the most scintillating title. However, the subject matter is critically important. We survey prominent kinds of disclosures in law and show why the disclosure tool, though subject to substantial criticism, is central to the legitimacy of any legal regime. Our working example is the American Law Institute’s “Principles of the Law of Software Contracts” (hereinafter “ALI Principles”).
The ALI Principles include three kinds of disclosure: disclosure of facts (concerning the quality of software),disclosure of terms (of standard forms), and disclosure of post-contract intentions (to pursue remote disablement of software). We …
Principles Of The Law Of Software Contracts: Some Highlights, Robert A. Hillman, Maureen A. O'Rourke
Principles Of The Law Of Software Contracts: Some Highlights, Robert A. Hillman, Maureen A. O'Rourke
Faculty Scholarship
The final draft of the Principles of the Law of Software Contracts ("Principles") was unanimously approved bythe American Law Institute membership in May of 2009. The goal of the project is to “clarify and unify thelaw of software transactions.” However, the Principles will not become law in any jurisdiction unless and until a court adopts them, so only time will tell whether the project will accomplish this goal. Nevertheless, one thing is certain. The current law of software transactions, a mish-mash of common law, Article 2 of theUniform Commercial Code, and federal intellectual property law, among other things, is in …
Questioning Cultural Commons, Lawrence B. Solum
Questioning Cultural Commons, Lawrence B. Solum
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
In Constructing Commons in the Cultural Environment, Michael J. Madison, Brett M. Frischmann, and Katherine J. Strandburg offer an innovative and attractive vision of the future of cultural and scientific knowledge through the construction of “cultural commons,” which they define as “environments for developing and distributing cultural and scientific knowledge through institutions that support pooling and sharing that knowledge in a managed way.” The kind of “commons” they have in mind is modeled on the complex arrangement of social norms that allocate lobstering rights among fishermen in Maine and extends to arrangements such as patent pools, open-source software development …
International Issues: Which Country's Law Applies When Works Are Made Available Over The Internet, Jane C. Ginsburg
International Issues: Which Country's Law Applies When Works Are Made Available Over The Internet, Jane C. Ginsburg
Faculty Scholarship
My topic is International Implications, a topic that would not exist but for the Internet. When access to archival materials was on a physical basis, patrons came to the archive and consulted the material on site; the material did not leave the archive, much less get sent overseas. Even digitized materials, if consulted on site, do not present the problems that arise if the archives puts this material on a website, which is accessible around the world, that ubiquity being the default condition ofthe Internet.
Let us consider some problems that might arise and which have international consequences. First of …
You Can Have It, But Can You Hold It?: Treating Domain Names As Tangible Property, Daniel Hancock
You Can Have It, But Can You Hold It?: Treating Domain Names As Tangible Property, Daniel Hancock
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Fraud, Fools, And Phishing: Mail Fraud And The Person Of Ordinary Prudence In The Internet Age, Lauren D. Lunsford
Fraud, Fools, And Phishing: Mail Fraud And The Person Of Ordinary Prudence In The Internet Age, Lauren D. Lunsford
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Privacy As Product Safety, James Grimmelmann
Privacy As Product Safety, James Grimmelmann
James Grimmelmann
Online social media confound many of our familiar expectaitons about privacy. Contrary to popular myth, users of social software like Facebook do care about privacy, deserve it, and have trouble securing it for themselves. Moreover, traditional database-focused privacy regulations on the Fair Information Practices model, while often worthwhile, fail to engage with the distinctively social aspects of these online services.
Instead, online privacy law should take inspiration from a perhaps surprising quarter: product-safety law. A web site that directs users' personal information in ways they don't expect is a defectively designed product, and many concepts from products liability law could …
Dr. Generative Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Iphone, James Grimmelmann, Paul Ohm
Dr. Generative Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Iphone, James Grimmelmann, Paul Ohm
James Grimmelmann
In The Future of the Internet--And How to Stop It, Jonathan Zittrain argues that the Internet has succeeded because it is uniquely "generative": individuals can use it in ways its creators never imagined. This Book Review uses the Apple II and the iPhone--the hero and the villain of the story as Zittrain tells it--to show both the strengths and the weaknesses of his argument. Descriptively and normatively, Zittrain has nailed it. Generativity elegantly combines prior theories into a succinct explanation of the technical characteristics that make the Internet what it is, and the book offers a strong argument that preserving …
The Challenges Of Internet To The Radio And Tv Regulation Systems(互联网对广电体制的挑战,Forthcoming), Henry L. Hu
The Challenges Of Internet To The Radio And Tv Regulation Systems(互联网对广电体制的挑战,Forthcoming), Henry L. Hu
Henry L Hu
No abstract provided.
Local Legislation On The Internet Content(地方互联网内容管理), Henry L. Hu
Local Legislation On The Internet Content(地方互联网内容管理), Henry L. Hu
Henry L Hu
No abstract provided.
The Culture War Of The Google Book Search Project(谷歌数字图书馆的文化战争), Henry L. Hu
The Culture War Of The Google Book Search Project(谷歌数字图书馆的文化战争), Henry L. Hu
Henry L Hu
No abstract provided.
Isp And The Internet Content Regulation(网络接入提供商与互联网内容治理), Henry L. Hu
Isp And The Internet Content Regulation(网络接入提供商与互联网内容治理), Henry L. Hu
Henry L Hu
No abstract provided.
The Generative Internet(创生性的互联网), Henry L. Hu
Real Name System On The Internet: Origins, Practices And Reflections(中国网络实名制管理:由来、实践与反思,Forthcoming), Henry L. Hu
Real Name System On The Internet: Origins, Practices And Reflections(中国网络实名制管理:由来、实践与反思,Forthcoming), Henry L. Hu
Henry L Hu
No abstract provided.
Online Promoter And Government Regulation(网络推手与政府管理), Henry L. Hu
Online Promoter And Government Regulation(网络推手与政府管理), Henry L. Hu
Henry L Hu
No abstract provided.
Law Of The Horse And Cyberlaw (‘马的法律’与网络法), Henry L. Hu
Law Of The Horse And Cyberlaw (‘马的法律’与网络法), Henry L. Hu
Henry L Hu
No abstract provided.
Apuntes Generales Sobre La Libertad De Expresión En Internet, Germán M. Teruel Lozano
Apuntes Generales Sobre La Libertad De Expresión En Internet, Germán M. Teruel Lozano
Germán M. Teruel Lozano
GENERAL NOTES ABOUT THE FREEDOM OF SPEECH IN INTERNET: This paper presents an overview of how Internet has revolutionized the setting of freedom of speech. In particular, it is focused in to main aspects: On one hand, the delimitation of freedom of expression in the new media, differentiating in particular between web pages dedicated to the dissemination of information, protected by the freedom of speech; and those that are intended to provide other telematics services, which should not have this protection. Secondly, it is also studied the legal status of this freedom when it is exercised through Internet.
Chapter 7 - Restricting Fair Use To Save The News, Ryan T. Holte
Chapter 7 - Restricting Fair Use To Save The News, Ryan T. Holte
Prof. Ryan T. Holte
Ryan T. Holte in “Restricting Fair Use to Save the News: A Proposed Change in Copyright Law to Bring More Profit to News Reporting” examines the present condition of the media and the economic and public policies behind protecting news. He further discusses current means of protecting information through copyright and misappropriation law, before proposing a change in the Copyright Act to better allow the news industry to reap profits from news reporting.