Annotated Bibliography: Digital Law
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Band, J. (1998). The Digital Millennium Copyright Act: A balanced result. Stanford Technology Law Review. Available at http://stlr.stanford.edu. Descriptors: Digital Millennium Copyright Act, U.S. Copyright Act for the Digital Age, World Wide Web, intellectual property, Internet treaties. This article assesses the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DCMA), the probable impact on copyright law and the Internet in coming years. Band argues that individual provisions of the Act are problematic and favor one sector of the information society over another. The technological protection provisions of the Act are its most controversial aspects. Graham, J. (2002). Preserving the aftermarket in copyrighted works: Adapting the first sale doctrine to the emerging technological landscape. Stanford Technology Law Review. Available at http://stlr.stanford.edu. Descriptors: first sale doctrine, Copyright Act, Internet privacy, automated copyright management systems, property rights of alienation. Graham discusses selected sections of the Copyright Act and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The focus of the article is on how the first sale doctrine is being adapted to a changing technological environment. The Internet is the focus of the article. Kiritsov, S. (2000). Can millions of Internet users be breaking the law every day? Stanford Technology Law Review. Available at http://stlr.stanford.edu.
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focused on copyright law in cyberspace will be undertaken to determine how the Internet has begun to shape copyright law in the United States and elsewhere.
Guiding Questions
Several questions will guide the proposed study. These questions are: 1) how many articles on copyright law in general have appeared in a select group of three publications available online; 2) of those articles, how many focus specifically on copyright law relevant to the Internet or the World Wide Web and intellectual properties presented in this medium; 3) what are the specific copyright concerns that have emerged with respect to online publications and other intellectual properties; 4) what laws, regulations, or other agreements have been developed in the United States and Australia with respect to copyright protections for online intellectual properties; and 5) what do scholars consider to be the strengths and weaknesses of the present online regulatory regime in the United States and Australia with respect to copyright law. These research questions emerge from the brief review of relevant literature that is presented below.
Delimitations and Limitations
The proposed study is subject to both delimitations and limitations. Under the rubric
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Some common words found in the essay are:
University Law, Law Technology, United Australia, Copyright Act, Framework Content, Review Available, Validity Bailey, Relationship Theory, Cavazos Miles, Timeline Feasibility, copyright law, content analysis, murdoch university, university law, murdoch university law, richmond journal law, journal law technology, law technology, richmond journal, journal law, bailey 1990, copyright act, intellectual property, stanford technology law, technology law review,
Approximate Word count = 6387
Approximate Pages = 26 (250 words per page)
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