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Intellectual Property and the Digital Economy

Published:01 April 2000Publication History

ABSTRACT

New laws are proposed or adopted frequently to strengthen intellectual property rights. Contract and technical protections are strengthening intellectual property protection as well. This past year saw adoption of new trademark domain name cybersquatter legislation, significant developments in the legal protection for the contents of databases, approval of a new licensing law for computer information, and more legislation and caselaw on digital copyright issues, not to mention endorsement of e-commerce and business method patents that will have substantial impacts on computers, freedom and privacy. Some have even proposed giving individuals property rights in their personal information as a way to protect privacy. What are the commercial imperatives seeming to drive toward ever stronger intellectual property rights? How valid are they? What price does society pay for ever stronger intellectual property rights? Is it worth it?

  1. Intellectual Property and the Digital Economy

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    • Published in

      cover image ACM Conferences
      CFP '00: Proceedings of the tenth conference on Computers, freedom and privacy: challenging the assumptions
      April 2000
      351 pages
      ISBN:1581132565
      DOI:10.1145/332186

      Copyright © 2000 ACM

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      Association for Computing Machinery

      New York, NY, United States

      Publication History

      • Published: 1 April 2000

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