Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- American Library Association v. Pataki (1)
- Asahi Metal Industry Co. v. Superior Court (1)
- Babcock v. Jackson (1)
- Burnham v. Superior Court of California (1)
- CD-Rom (1)
-
- CISG (1)
- Calder v. Jones (1)
- Convention on the International Sale of Goods (1)
- Copyright (1)
- Copyright Act (1)
- Copyright Preemption (1)
- Direct Access (1)
- Dormant Commerce Clause (1)
- EDI (1)
- ETA (1)
- Electronic Data Interchange (1)
- Green Paper (1)
- Gun Free School Zone Act (1)
- Helicopteros Nacionales De Colombia v. Hall (1)
- Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing Co (1)
- Lex Mercatoria (1)
- Maryland v. Wirtz (1)
- McGee v. International Life Insurance (1)
- NII (1)
- National Information Infrastructure (1)
- Pennoyer v. Neff (1)
- Pres-Kap Inc. v. System One (1)
- Statutory Efforts (1)
- UNCITRAL (1)
- United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Contracts
Y2k …Who Cares? We Have Bigger Problems: Choice Of Law In Electronic Contracts, Aristotle G. Mirzaian
Y2k …Who Cares? We Have Bigger Problems: Choice Of Law In Electronic Contracts, Aristotle G. Mirzaian
Richmond Journal of Law & Technology
Every day it becomes more certain that the Internet will take its place alongside the other great transformational technologies that first challenged, and then fundamentally changed, the way things are done in the world.
Contracts, Copyright And Preemption In A Digital World, I Trotter Hardy
Contracts, Copyright And Preemption In A Digital World, I Trotter Hardy
Richmond Journal of Law & Technology
Copyright is designed to provide some form of protection against unauthorized use of original informational materials. The rapid shift of information production and distribution to electronic form, with its corresponding ease of copying, naturally makes copyright-dependent industries nervous. Much talk in the news and on the "net" these days is about the future of copyright law, a law developed in an age of print and now perhaps too tied to that medium to have ready application to today's information technology.