Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Communications Law (26)
- Antitrust and Trade Regulation (12)
- International Law (8)
- Internet Law (8)
- Constitutional Law (6)
-
- Law and Society (6)
- First Amendment (5)
- Law and Politics (4)
- Legislation (4)
- Securities Law (4)
- Science and Technology Law (3)
- Administrative Law (2)
- Consumer Protection Law (2)
- Contracts (2)
- Courts (2)
- Criminal Law (2)
- Environmental Law (2)
- Juvenile Law (2)
- Labor and Employment Law (2)
- Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility (2)
- Litigation (2)
- Religion Law (2)
- Torts (2)
- Agriculture Law (1)
- Banking and Finance Law (1)
- Civil Law (1)
- Civil Rights and Discrimination (1)
- Criminology and Criminal Justice (1)
- Education Law (1)
- Keyword
-
- Globalization (5)
- Internet (5)
- Politics (5)
- Telecommunications Act of 1996 (5)
- FCC (4)
-
- Federal Communications Commission (4)
- Indiana University School of Law (4)
- Popular Culture (4)
- Cyberspace (3)
- Editor's Note (3)
- Federal Communications Law Journal (3)
- Law (3)
- Masthead (3)
- Right of privacy (3)
- United States (3)
- Book Review (2)
- Capital market (2)
- Competition (2)
- Constitutional law (2)
- Contracts (2)
- Defamation (2)
- First Amendment (2)
- Foreign investments (2)
- International law (2)
- Investment advisors (2)
- Morality (2)
- Political science (2)
- Privacy (2)
- Regulation FD (2)
- Religion (2)
Articles 1 - 30 of 61
Full-Text Articles in Law
Editor's Note, Deborah J. Salons
Editor's Note, Deborah J. Salons
Federal Communications Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Regulation Of Interactive Television In The United States And The European Union, Hernan Galperin, Francois Bar
The Regulation Of Interactive Television In The United States And The European Union, Hernan Galperin, Francois Bar
Federal Communications Law Journal
The broadcasting industry is rapidly entering the era of digitization, distributed intelligence, and interactivity. The case of interactive television offers an opportunity to investigate how desirable policy goals should be implemented in the post-convergence environment. This Article first reviews the evolution of the broadcasting industry through three successive models: the traditional "Fordist" television model, the current multichannel television model, and the emerging ITV model. Second, it characterizes the basic components of ITV and explores the concerns raised by the evolution of multichannel video programming distributors into ITV platform operators. Next, the Article reviews how regulators in the United States and …
The U.S. Supreme Court Addresses The Child Pornography Prevention Act And Child Online Protection Act In Ashcroft V. Free Speech Coalition And Ashcroft V. American Civil Liberties Union, Sue Ann Mota
Federal Communications Law Journal
Both the Child Pornography Prevention Act ("CPPA") and the Child Online Protection Act ("COPA") were intended by Congress to protect minors. The CPPA was intended to protect minors from the harmful effects of virtual child pornography. The COPA was intended to protect minors from pornography currently available commercially on the World Wide Web. However, in 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court addressed the constitutionality of both statutes: The Court struck down sections of the CPPA as overbroad and unconstitutional in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition. In Ashcroft v. ACLU, the Court upheld some sections of COPA as not unconstitutionally overbroad, but …
Making And Keeping Regulatory Promises, Warren G. Lavey
Making And Keeping Regulatory Promises, Warren G. Lavey
Federal Communications Law Journal
Multiyear regulatory commitments, or their absence, are an important part of the functioning of the telecommunications services and products industries. In this Article, Warren G. Lavey argues that, under some conditions, it is both possible and beneficial for regulators to commit to a well-defined, multiyear sequence of regulatory changes. First, this Article examines several examples of how efforts for comprehensive reform fared in real multiyear implementations. It also explores how some piecemeal regulatory changes evolved into efforts for comprehensive reform based on a well-defined sequence. This Article considers the effects of multiyear regulatory promises through analysis of several regulatory actions …
What’S In A Name?, Jonathan Zittrain
What’S In A Name?, Jonathan Zittrain
Federal Communications Law Journal
Book Review: Ruling the Root, Milton L. Mueller, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2002, 301 pages.
A review of Milton L. Mueller's Ruling the Root, The MIT Press, 2002. In the spring of 1998, the U.S. government told the Internet: Govern yourself. This unfocused order-a blandishment, really, expressed as an awkward "statement of policy" by the Department of Commerce, carrying no direct force of law-came about because the management of obscure but critical centralized Internet functions was at a political crossroads. In Ruling the Root, Mueller thoroughly documents the colorful history both before and after this moment of inflection, and gives …
Enhancing Competition:Are Proposed Federal Communications Commission Rules That Treat Local Exchange Carrier Access To Multiple Tenant Environments A Taking?, Kathryn Gordon
Federal Communications Law Journal
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 marked a fundamental change in the attitudes of Congress and the Federal Communications Commission toward local telephone exchange carrier policy. This change affected local exchange carriers in many ways, including their relationships with the owners of multiple tenant environments, such as office buildings and apartment complexes. Under the Act, FCC rulemaking increased competitive local exchange carriers' access to the facilities of incumbent local exchange carriers by removing competition barriers. However, owners of of multiple tenant environments can also act as barriers to local exchange carrier competition. This Note will first review the general purpose behind …
Veil Of Secrecy: Public Executions, Limitations On Reporting Capital Punishment, And The Content-Based Nature Of Private Execution Laws, Nicholas Levi
Veil Of Secrecy: Public Executions, Limitations On Reporting Capital Punishment, And The Content-Based Nature Of Private Execution Laws, Nicholas Levi
Federal Communications Law Journal
One issue that is often overlooked in the capital punishment debate is the policy to shield the public from the specifics of the application, administration, and resolution of the death sentence. First, this Note provides a brief historical and analytical account of capital punishment in this country, and ultimately argues that this historical backdrop forces courts to characterize regulations as content-based distinctions on free speech. Second, this Note provides a background of the methods of capital punishment from the time of the country's founding through the early parts of the twentieth century. Furthermore, this Note will address the emergence of …
A Right Without A Potent Remedy: Indiana's Bad Faith Insurance Doctrine Leaves Injured Third Parties Without Full Redress, Gregory A. Bullman
A Right Without A Potent Remedy: Indiana's Bad Faith Insurance Doctrine Leaves Injured Third Parties Without Full Redress, Gregory A. Bullman
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
"United We Stand": Managing Choice-Of- Law Problems In September-11-Based Toxic Torts Through Federal Substantive Mass- Tort Law, Kenneth G. Kubes
"United We Stand": Managing Choice-Of- Law Problems In September-11-Based Toxic Torts Through Federal Substantive Mass- Tort Law, Kenneth G. Kubes
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Rehnquist's Vietnam: Constitutional Separatism And The Stealth Advance Of Martial Law, Diane H. Mazur
Rehnquist's Vietnam: Constitutional Separatism And The Stealth Advance Of Martial Law, Diane H. Mazur
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Right Of The People To Keep And Bear Arms Shall Not Be Litigated Away: Constitutional Implications Of Municipal Lawsuits Against The Gun Industry, William L. Mccoskey
The Right Of The People To Keep And Bear Arms Shall Not Be Litigated Away: Constitutional Implications Of Municipal Lawsuits Against The Gun Industry, William L. Mccoskey
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Architexture, Akhil Reed Amar
Architexture, Akhil Reed Amar
Indiana Law Journal
Addison C. Harris Lecture, March 20, 2002
Wall Street V. Main Street: The Sec's New Regulation Fd And Its Impact On Market Participants, D. Casey Kobi
Wall Street V. Main Street: The Sec's New Regulation Fd And Its Impact On Market Participants, D. Casey Kobi
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Government Officials As Attorneys And Clients: Why Privilege The Privileged?, Melanie B. Leslie
Government Officials As Attorneys And Clients: Why Privilege The Privileged?, Melanie B. Leslie
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Supreme Court Takes On The First Amendment Privacy Conflict And Stumbles: Bartnicki V. Vopper, The Wiretapping Act, And The Notion Of Unlawfully Obtained Information, James M. Hilmert
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
"Whoever Fights Monsters Should See To It That In The Process He Does Not Become A Monster": The Necessity Of Maintaining And Narrowing The Welcomeness Requirement In Sexual Harassment Suits, Leigh A. Salmon
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Street Legal: The Court Affords Police Constitutional Carte Blanche, Wayne A. Logan
Street Legal: The Court Affords Police Constitutional Carte Blanche, Wayne A. Logan
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Editor's Note, Tom W. Brummett
Editor's Note, Tom W. Brummett
Federal Communications Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Concrete Barrier At The End Of The Information Superhighway: Why Lack Of Local Rights-Of-Way Access Is Killing Competitive Local Exchange Carriers, Christopher R. Day
The Concrete Barrier At The End Of The Information Superhighway: Why Lack Of Local Rights-Of-Way Access Is Killing Competitive Local Exchange Carriers, Christopher R. Day
Federal Communications Law Journal
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 contained the promise of a deregulated national telecommunications market with unfettered competition in both the local and long-distance telecommunications markets. Unfortunately, five years after the Act was signed, competition in local telephony is still not a reality in many areas. While some of the blame may be placed on failed business models and the withdrawal of venture capital from the market, a series of regulatory failures have also served to create an inhospitable environment for competitive local exchange carriers. One of the areas where this failure has been most evident is in governmental failure to …
An Efficiency Analysis Of Contracts For The Provision Of Telephone Services To Prisons, Justin Carver
An Efficiency Analysis Of Contracts For The Provision Of Telephone Services To Prisons, Justin Carver
Federal Communications Law Journal
As the numbers of prisons and prisoners continue to increase, so does the market for prison services. One of the more lucrative segments of this industry is the telephone market. To the extent that the services are provided to the prisoners, the relationship resembles a third party beneficiary contract, but due to the perverse financial incentives and the political climate surrounding prisons and prisoners, neither the state nor the private entity acts in the best interests of the consumers in particular or of society in general. This Article will analyze the efficiency of these contracts, introduce alternate arrangements, and compare …
Protecting The E-Marketplace Of Ideas By Protecting Employers: Immunity For Employers Under Section 230 Of The Communications Decency Act, Eric M.D. Zion
Protecting The E-Marketplace Of Ideas By Protecting Employers: Immunity For Employers Under Section 230 Of The Communications Decency Act, Eric M.D. Zion
Federal Communications Law Journal
While we credit employers that provide employees with free Internet access, such access comes at a price to the public because employers are one of the traditional defendents in defamation suits. Complicating matters, Congress enacted the Communications Decency Act. Its section 230 provides broad federal immunity for ISPs when defamatory material of a third party is published using their services. With the passage of section 230, Congress rendered employers immune for the same tort which they are so closely associated. Some argue that employers should not be capable of invoking the immunity because it would allow employers to defame with …
Why Adco? Why Now? An Econmic Exploration Of Industry Structure For The "Last Mile" In Local Telecommunications Markets, T. Randolph Beard, George S. Ford, Lawrence J. Spiwak
Why Adco? Why Now? An Econmic Exploration Of Industry Structure For The "Last Mile" In Local Telecommunications Markets, T. Randolph Beard, George S. Ford, Lawrence J. Spiwak
Federal Communications Law Journal
This Article discusses important economic characteristics of local exchange markets. First, this Article explains that entry into the market requires large fixed and sunk costs, making entry risky and necessitating scale economies. Consequently, only a few local access networks can supply the market. These networks cannot be small, however, because a large market share is required to realize sufficient scale economies to effectively compete with the ILEC and survive. Secondly, acquiring the needed market share may be difficult for entrants who either attempt to purchase unbundled network elements from the incumbent or attempt to build their own network from the …
Does Censorship Really Protect Children?, Michael Grossberg
Does Censorship Really Protect Children?, Michael Grossberg
Federal Communications Law Journal
Book Review: Not In Front of the Children, “Indecency,” Censorship, and the Innocence of Youth, Marjorie Heins, New York: Hill and Wang, 2001, 402 pages.
Marjorie Heins spent much of her career as a lawyer battling censorship with the American Civil Liberties Union. Today, she continues the fight as Director of the Free Expression Policy Project of the National Coalition Against Censorship. In an effort to understand the people who work to constrict the free flow of information, she stepped out of the trenches and into the library to do some research. Not In Front of the Children is the …
The Digital Divide And Courtroom Technology: Can David Keep Up With Goliath?, Michael E. Heintz
The Digital Divide And Courtroom Technology: Can David Keep Up With Goliath?, Michael E. Heintz
Federal Communications Law Journal
The federal judiciary recently embraced the technological revolution. Select courts are now equipped with state-of-the-art technology to aid in trial presentations. Before the judiciary made the improvements, litigants had to keep pace with the technological advancements themselves, often at a great cost. One might think that the recent technological improvements made to federal courtrooms would have widened the gap between large and small firms where the available resources are vastly different, but that is not the case. In fact, the installation of new technology into courtrooms serves to equalize what would otherwise be a "digital divide."
Part II of this …
Carnivore, The Fbi’S E-Mail Surveillance System: Devouring Criminals, Not Privacy, Griffin S. Dunham
Carnivore, The Fbi’S E-Mail Surveillance System: Devouring Criminals, Not Privacy, Griffin S. Dunham
Federal Communications Law Journal
On July 11, 2000, the FBI intorduced Carnivore, an Internet monitoring system. It was designed, and is used exclusively, to carry out court-ordered surveillance of electronic communications. It is a tangible, portable device, tantamount to a phone tap, that allows the FBI to intercept and collect criminal suspects' e-mail without their knowledge or consent. This Note addresses competing and parallel interests between the government and society to determine the legitimacy and necessity of Carnivore. The purpose of this Note is twofold: first, to demonstrate the need for Carnivore to enable law enforcement to keep up with criminals who utilize cyberspace …
Injunctive Relief In The Internet Age: The Battle Between Free Speech And Trade Secrets, Adam W. Johnson
Injunctive Relief In The Internet Age: The Battle Between Free Speech And Trade Secrets, Adam W. Johnson
Federal Communications Law Journal
The information revolution has led to technological innovations in the movement, storage, and dissemination of information. The Internet allows a person, with good or bad intent, to distribute information to millions of people. This ability raises serious implications when trade secret information is the subject of Internet postings. Once a trade secret becomes publicly available, it loses its legal secrecy, and special legal protection. Additionally, competitors and everyone else on the Internet can gain access to the information. For those who rely on trade secret protection to guard their inventions, this presents a growing concern.
This Note will illustrate the …
What Hope For The Future?: Learning The Lessons Of The Past, David Held
What Hope For The Future?: Learning The Lessons Of The Past, David Held
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
No abstract provided.
The Globalization Of Antitrust Enforcement: Governance Issues And Legal Responses, Lucio Lanucara
The Globalization Of Antitrust Enforcement: Governance Issues And Legal Responses, Lucio Lanucara
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
No abstract provided.