Articles

Page 16 of 52

The archive and the state

Archives, the collection of files and materials (electronic or physical) stored and maintained for future reference, have an intimate connection with state power-after all, those who are in power fund and create them, leading archives to reflect the ideas, beliefs and sometimes contradictions of those who control them.

October 2010 / 3 min.


Fashion fakes: copyright, trademark and creativity

There is no protection from copying designs in the fashion industry, so how can police crackdown on knock-offs?

August 2010 / 2 min.


Measuring the impact of technology on the law

It’s difficult to come up with more quantitative measurements to look at how technology has impacted law. One could look at the development of new technologies (via patent applications, perhaps?) and then look to see how soon afterwards the invention began to show up in legal cases. Another interesting idea would be to see if changes in technology-the development of new citation systems, more rapid dissemination of decisions and publications, and later the creation of electronic repositories such as Lexis and Westlaw-had any impact on the way lawyers and judges developed law.

August 2010 / 3 min.


Juries and scientific expertise

In the American system (and, perhaps to a lesser extent, in all countries following the Anglo-American legal approach), science and scientific evidence emerges and is interpreted through the actions of the parties involved. Expert witnesses testify for a particular side, and are employed by a particular side.

August 2010 / 3 min.


Implications of the AP licensing scheme

So, the AP has in the past made a big deal about holding on to the rights to every tiny little bit of what they right (essentially denying that fair use even exists). Who better than those snarky peeps at Woot to call them on the implications of such a scheme?

July 2010 / 1 min.


The marketplace of ideas

Intellectual property, despite the name, doesn’t quite work like regular property. A look at intellectual property markets highlight problems with a pure free-market approach that aren’t necessarily visible with other markets.

June 2010 / 2 min.


The new world of self-publishing: it’s not just for vanity anymore!

It’s finally possible-although still hardly likely-to skip the traditional publishers altogether, publishing yourself (via Amazon, for example), and get discovered by fans directly.

June 2010 / 2 min.


Why not an open-access Law.gov to access public legal materials?

Carl Malamud’s vision of a new Law.gov “would give public easier access to all kinds of documents” – and not force us to rely on LexisNexis and Westlaw for access to what is, after all, public material.

June 2010 / 2 min.


Looking forward to reading the new Adrian Johns book

So illustrious a source as the Fred von Lohmann at the Electronic Frontier Foundation recommends the new book by Adrian Johns.

June 2010 / 1 min.


Was medieval Islamic culture inhospitable to science?

Myth #4 in Galileo Goes to Jail and Other Myths about Science and Religion is Syed Nomanul Haq’s article entitled “That Medieval Islamic Culture was Inhospitable to Science.”

June 2010 / 2 min.