Website Search Results

    Page 7 of 231 website results

    1. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 24 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      Since fair use is designed to be a balancing test rather than a bright-line rule, there is always an element of doubt, so this (...)

    2. The new, improved DMCA - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      As I said in my earlier post: “Brazil offers an international example of how to handle anti-circumvention the right way from the start, instead (...)

    3. The Goodson Blogson

      The new rule outlines six situations which are now exempted from the Digital Millennium Copyright Act’s prohibition against (...)

    4. CLE: The Learning Never Stops

      Comment 8 to the rule now reads, "To maintain the requisite knowledge and skill, a lawyer should keep abreast of changes in the (...)

    5. Getting first sale wrong - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Thus they have created the anomalous situation where a rights holder enjoys the full protection of U.S. law, but consumers who buy the (...)

    6. A masterpiece of misdirection - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      On February 28, the Authors Guild filed a memorandum in support of its “motion for partial judgment on the pleadings” in its lawsuit against the (...)

    7. The Goodson Blogson

      Molly Brownfield joins the Law Library staff on July 1. Molly previously worked as a reference librarian at the Rutgers School of (...)

    8. GSU appeal ruling - the more I read, the better it seems - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) on Who owns the law? Copyright News and Articles - Copyrightlaws.com: Copyright courses and education in plain (...)

    9. In the GSU case, the wheels keep turning - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) on Who owns the law? Copyright News and Articles - Copyrightlaws.com: Copyright courses and education in plain (...)

    10. Law and politics in the GSU case - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      They assert that the Judge impermissibly distinguished print from digital “course packs” and thereby violated the principle that copyright (...)

    More Search Options