Search
Now showing items 1-10 of 28
Privacy 2.0
(University of Chicago Law School, 2008)
Lost in a Cyber Campus
(World Economic Forum, 2000)
How to End the Copyright Wars
(Nature Publishing Group, 2009)
Web Tactics
(Writers & Scholars International, 2009)
Robert Faris and Jonathan Zittrain chart the highs and lows for free expression online in 2009: from the triumph over Green Dam to cyber attacks.
Saving the Internet
(Graduate School of Business Administration, Harvard University, 2007)
The Internet goose has laid countless golden eggs, along with a growing number of rotten ones. But it's the rotten ones that now tempt commercial, governmental, and consumer interests to threaten the Internet's uniquely ...
A History of Online Gatekeeping
(2006)
The brief but intense history of American judicial and legislative confrontation with problems caused by the online world has demonstrated a certain wisdom: a reluctance to intervene in ways that dramatically alter online ...
The Future of the Internet and How to Stop It
(Yale University Press, 2008)
This extraordinary book explains the engine that has catapulted the Internet from backwater to ubiquity—and reveals that it is sputtering precisely because of its runaway success. With the unwitting help of its users, the ...
What the Publisher Can Teach the Patient: Intellectual Property and Privacy in an Era of Trusted Privication
(School of Law, Stanford University, 2000)
Individuals have long had the desire but little ability to control the dissemination of personal information about their health. Law has been a weak instrument for such control, given the articulate and powerful interests ...
Internet Points of Control
(Boston College Law School, 2003)
The online availability of pornography and unauthorized intellectual property has driven Internet growth while giving rise to efforts to make the Internet more regulable. Early efforts to control the Internet have targeted ...
Be Careful What You Ask For: Reconciling a Global Internet and Local Law
(Cato Institute, 2003)
As the Internet becomes part of daily living rather than a place to visit, its rough edges are smoothed and its extremes tamed by sovereigns wanting to protect consumers, prevent network resource abuse, and eliminate speech ...