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Full-Text Articles in Law
Strategic Improprieties: Cultural Studies, The Everyday, And The Politics Of Intellectual Properties, Kembrew Mcleod, Ted Striphas;
Strategic Improprieties: Cultural Studies, The Everyday, And The Politics Of Intellectual Properties, Kembrew Mcleod, Ted Striphas;
Kembrew McLeod
No abstract provided.
Internet Distribution And The Worldwide Music Industry, Kembrew Mcleod
Internet Distribution And The Worldwide Music Industry, Kembrew Mcleod
Kembrew McLeod
No abstract provided.
Registracija Svobode Izrazanja®/Trademarking Freedom Of Expression®, Kembrew Mcleod
Registracija Svobode Izrazanja®/Trademarking Freedom Of Expression®, Kembrew Mcleod
Kembrew McLeod
No abstract provided.
Freedom Of Expression®: Resistance And Repression In The Age Of Intellectual Property, Kembrew Mcleod
Freedom Of Expression®: Resistance And Repression In The Age Of Intellectual Property, Kembrew Mcleod
Kembrew McLeod
No abstract provided.
Roundtable On Academic Publishing, Kembrew Mcleod
Roundtable On Academic Publishing, Kembrew Mcleod
Kembrew McLeod
No abstract provided.
Fair Use And Music Scholarship. Communication And Economy, Kembrew Mcleod
Fair Use And Music Scholarship. Communication And Economy, Kembrew Mcleod
Kembrew McLeod
No abstract provided.
Economic Aspects Of Intellectual Property, Peter Menell
Economic Aspects Of Intellectual Property, Peter Menell
Peter Menell
No abstract provided.
Freedom Of Expression Vs. Intellectual Property Rights: Does Copyright Kill Free Speech?, Kembrew Mcleod
Freedom Of Expression Vs. Intellectual Property Rights: Does Copyright Kill Free Speech?, Kembrew Mcleod
Kembrew McLeod
No abstract provided.
A Technological Theory Of The Arms Race, Lee B. Kovarsky
A Technological Theory Of The Arms Race, Lee B. Kovarsky
Lee Kovarsky
Although the 'technological arms race' has recently emerged as a vogue-ish piece of legal terminology, scholarship has quite conspicuously failed to explore the phenomenon systematically. What are 'technological' arms races? Why do they happen? Does the recent spike in scholarly attention actually reflect their novelty? Are they always inefficient? How do they differ from military ones? What role can legal institutions play in slowing them down? In this Article I seek to answer these questions. I argue that copyright enforcement and self-help represent substitutable tactics for regulating access to expressive assets, and that the efficacy of each tactic depends on …