Book Details
Orange Code:91841
Paperback:303 pages
Publications:
Categories:
Sections:
1. Intellectual Property Rights: From Theory to Practical Implementation2. Intellectual Property Rights in Software — Justifiable from a Liberalist Position? Free Software Foundation’s Position in Comparison to John Locke’s Concept of Property3. Locke and Intellectual Property Rights4. Ideas, Expressions, Universals, and Particulars: Metaphysics in the Realm of Software Copyright Law5. Exporting Trademark Confusion6. Feminism and Copyright inDigital Media7. Recent Copyright Protection Schemes: Implications for Sharing Digital Information8. Trespass and Kyosei in Cyberspace9. New Threats to Intellectual Freedom: The Loss of the Information Commons through Law and Technologyin the US10. Would Be Pirates: Webcasters, Intellectual Property, and Ethics
Description:
Intellectual Property Rights in a Networked World is a collection of recent essays offering fresh perspectives on the scope and future of intellectual property rights. The tripartite division of the book is designed to make this inter-disciplinary topic more accessible and intelligible to readers of diverse backgrounds. Part I consists of a single essay that provides a broad overview of the main themes in intellectual property scholarship, such as normative intellectual property theory and the legal infrastructure for property protection. The second section of the book presents several essays that are intended to deepen the reader's understanding of intellectual property theory and show how it can help us to grapple with the proper allocation of property rights in cyberspace. And the final section further develops the themes in Part II but in greater detail and with a more practical orientation. While intellectual property rights create dynamic incentive effects, they also entail social costs, and they are sometimes in tension with the development of a robust public domain
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