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Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Law
Virtual Intermediaries: Consumption Tax Problems In Japan, Europe, And The United States - The Case Of The Virtual Travel Agent, Richard Thompson Ainsworth
Virtual Intermediaries: Consumption Tax Problems In Japan, Europe, And The United States - The Case Of The Virtual Travel Agent, Richard Thompson Ainsworth
Faculty Scholarship
Marketplace technology is (inadvertently) chipping away at the effectiveness of consumption taxes – the Japanese Consumption Tax (CT), the European value added tax (VAT), and the American sales tax (ST) are all affected. Frequently a technology-patch or a law change can repair the tax-damage, but sometimes even though a patch or a change is known the design of the levy (or the politics behind the design) impedes application. This paper assesses these consumption taxes by considering the impact that virtual travel agents have had on revenue yields. The paper draws specific conclusions for the Japanese CT, because this consumption tax …
Sexting And Teenagers: Omg R U Going 2 Jail???, Catherine Arcabascio
Sexting And Teenagers: Omg R U Going 2 Jail???, Catherine Arcabascio
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Beyond Innovation And Competition: The Need For Qualified Transparency In Internet Intermediaries, Frank Pasquale
Beyond Innovation And Competition: The Need For Qualified Transparency In Internet Intermediaries, Frank Pasquale
Faculty Scholarship
Internet service providers and search engines have mapped the web, accelerated e-commerce, and empowered new communities. They also pose new challenges for law. Individuals are rapidly losing the ability to affect their own image on the web - or even to know what data are presented about them. When web users attempt to find information or entertainment, they have little assurance that a carrier or search engine is not biasing the presentation of results in accordance with its own commercial interests.
Technology’s impact on privacy and democratic culture needs to be at the center of internet policy-making. Yet before they …
The Internet Is A Semicommons, James Grimmelmann
The Internet Is A Semicommons, James Grimmelmann
Faculty Scholarship
The Internet is a semicommons. Private property in servers and network links coexists with a shared communications platform. This distinctive combination both explains the Internet's enormous success and illustrates some of its recurring problems.
Building on Henry Smith's theory of the semicommons in the medieval open-field system, this essay explains how the dynamic interplay between private and common uses on the Internet enables it to facilitate worldwide sharing and collaboration without collapsing under the strain of misuse. It shows that key technical features of the Internet, such as its layering of protocols and the Web's division into distinct "sites," respond …
Cloud Computing: Storm Warning For Privacy?, Nicole Ozer, Chris Conley
Cloud Computing: Storm Warning For Privacy?, Nicole Ozer, Chris Conley
Faculty Scholarship
“Cloud computing” - the ability to create, store, and manipulate data through Web-based services - is growing in popularity. Cloud computing itself may not transform society; for most consumers, it is simply an appealing alternative tool for creating and storing the same records and documents that people have created for years. However, outdated laws and varying corporate practices mean that documents created and stored in the cloud may not have the same protections as the same documents stored in a filing cabinet or on a home computer. Can cloud computing services protect the privacy of their consumers? Do they? And …