Fr. 66.00

Information Technology and Traditional Legal Concepts

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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The internet has changed perceptions of privacy, criminality and ownership this book questions whether the underlying legal concepts should also change.
This book was published as a special issue of International review of Law Computers and Technology.


List of contents

1. Introduction: An uncomfortable marriage: The challenges ‘new’ technology is posing to ‘old’ or established legal concepts? Richard Jones and Roksana Moore
2. Law shaping technology: Technology shaping the law David Flint
3. Protecting ‘privacy’ through control of ‘personal’ data processing: A flawed approach Karen McCullagh
4. Is it possible to define ‘privacies’ within the law? Reflections on the ‘securitisation’ debate and the interception of communications Dan Ritchie
5. Children’s data protection vs marketing companies Emmanuelle Bartoli
6. The UK 2007–2008 data protection fiasco: Moving on from bad policy and bad law? Joseph A. Cannataci and Jeanne Pia Mifsud Bonnici
7. Is identity theft really theft? Clare Sullivan
8. ‘Spam, spam, spam, spam . . . Lovely spam!’ Why is Bluespam different? Eleni Kosta, Peggy Valcke and David Stevens
9. Agents, Trojans and tags: The next generation of investigators Wiebke Abel
10. Technology and the cultural appropriation of music Richard Jones
11. Decentralised P2P technology: Can the unruly be ruled? Hasina Haque
12. The future of copyright in the age of convergence: Is a new approach needed for the new media world? Neal Geach
13. Copyright, contract and the protection of computer programs Ruth Dawn Atkins

About the author

Richard Jones, Associate Editor, International Review, Law Computers and Technology has taught in areas of intellectual property and information technology law. He was invited by the Council of Europe to work in this area and awarded a Research fellowship with IBM to investigate legal expert systems. He was Chair of the British and Irish Legal Educational Technology Association (BILETA) and a Council member of the Society for Computers and the Law.
Roksana Moore, Lecturer in Law and Intellectual Property, School of Law, University of Southampton is researching in vendor liability for software defects. Her research interests also include software patents, ICT standardisation and traditional knowledge and intellectual property.

Summary

The internet has changed perceptions of privacy, criminality and ownership this book questions whether the underlying legal concepts should also change. This book was published as a special issue of International review of Law Computers and Technology.

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