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internet and technology laws in 2009

This is a discussion on internet and technology laws in 2009 within the Intellectual Property and Internet Law Forums forums, part of the Main Forums category; The 2009 edition of Issues In Internet Law: Society, Technology, and the Law has been updated with the latest cases and trends in Internet Law. Topics include Privacy (invasion of privacy, public records, workplace privacy, employer & ISP monitoring, data retention & data breaches, e-mail & chat room privacy, Web ...


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Old 09-24-2009, 07:28 PM
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Default internet and technology laws in 2009

The 2009 edition of Issues In Internet Law: Society, Technology, and the Law has been updated with the latest cases and trends in Internet Law. Topics include Privacy (invasion of privacy, public records, workplace privacy, employer & ISP monitoring, data retention & data breaches, e-mail & chat room privacy, Web site privacy policies, behavioral marketing, privacy and children); Free Speech (defamation, SLAPPs, gripe sites, blogs & vlogs, obscenity & pornography, harassment & hate speech, prior restraint & repression); Cybercrimes (spam, phishing, identity theft, spyware & malware, cyberstalking); Intellectual Property (copyright, trademark, patent, trade secrets, Creative Commons, linking, framing, file-sharing, fair use, public domain, work-made-for-hire, VARA, linking & framing, domain name disputes, keyword advertising, right of publicity); Web Contracts, Web Accessibility; Net Neutrality; Internet Interstate Commerce; Online Reputation Management; Podcasts; Social Networks; and many more subjects. Advances in technology have always changed societies, and there has never been as far-reaching and profound an advance as the Internet. Suppose you buy something online; was that online contract you clicked on really enforceable, even if you just scrolled down and did not read it? Is receiving pornography in office e-mail from your co-workers sexual harassment? Can a student be suspended for comments on her Web site about her teacher? Can stalkers find your personal information online? What can you legally put on your Web site? And what's not allowed? Do you really own your domain name? Can a library censor your Internet use? Do you know who's reading your e-mail? Is it legal to gambleonline? How "private" is your private information after you disclose it to a Web site? Can you get in trouble for making a gripe site about that business that ripped you off? Is a student exercising his First Amendment rights when he creates a hate Web site on a public school's Internet server? Did you know the Web sites you visit and the words you type into search engines are being logged? Do other countries address these issues differently from the U.S.? Which country's laws apply on the Internet? These are just some of the issues addressed in this book. Issues In Internet Law: Society, Technology, and the Law looks at emerging issues heading into or recently resolved by the courts. The new edition not only has an expanded glossary, but expanded topic, statute, and case indexes as well. Concisely written and covering a broad range of topics, this is the most current book of its kind in print Review comments: "Concise overview of Internet-related legal issues." (Law Library Journal) * "Although it deals with the complex legal issues surrounding the Internet, it is written in layman's terms and illustrated with 'ripped from the headlines' court cases." (Amazon) * "A valuable resource, well-researched and well presented." * "I want a copy on my bookshelf always within arm's reach." * "The anecdotal nature of the book made it very easy to understand the underlying legal concepts."
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Old 10-27-2009, 09:36 PM
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I'm glad to know that internet and technology has a law these will make to avoid abusing use of internet and technology in illegal cases.
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Old 12-05-2009, 11:27 PM
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Ya it will be great if they both get active on this forum...
and share their exp. with gaming...
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Old 12-15-2009, 02:59 AM
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It was brought to my attention today that some computers that I work on are constantly being remotely monitoredThe part that concerns me is that I was not aware of this, and there are no notifications of this monitoring anywhere in the building, organization policies, or the contract which I signed allowing me access to the computers.
It was further that the person monitoring my work was READING MY PERSONAL E-MAILS, some of which are legally not to be shared with any other parties Is this legal?
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Old 01-20-2010, 06:21 AM
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I'm glad there are now existing laws for internet and technology. Internet is not safe concerning security and reputation (as scandals are easily spread widely). No matter how good the developer is. There are still ways that the programs are hacked for programs are just up to 99% secured.
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Old 02-09-2010, 03:19 AM
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This is a good news that there is a law in internet and technology nowadays the online community is not safe there are lots of scams in the internet
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Old 02-22-2010, 08:18 AM
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Heavy fines and loss of internet connection are just two ways you could be penalised if anyone on your computer or network is found to be downloading files that breach copyright regulations. American readers contacted me outraged at what they see as the government limiting our freedom in the UK, following an article on the popular technology website Boingboing about the recent Digital Economy Bill. I promised no more acronyms today so I refuse to call it DEB!
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