ISBN: 9780199548422
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Information Technology Law
The law and society
- Description
- Features
- Contents
- Authors
- Reviews
- Lecturer Resources
- Teacher Resources
- Student Resources
- Sample Pages
- ebook
Information Technology Law is the ideal companion for a course of study on IT law and the ways in which it is evolving in response to rapid technological and social change.
This ground-breaking new work is the first textbook to systematically examine how the law and legal process of the UK interacts with the modern 'information society' and the fast-moving process of digitisation. It examines the challenges that this fast pace of change brings to the established legal order, which was developed to meet the needs of a traditional physical society.
To address these issues, this book begins by defining the information society and discussing how it may be regulated. From there it moves to questions of internet governance and rights and responsibilities in the digital environment. Particular attention is paid to key regulatory 'pressure points', including:
DT copyright for digital products
DT identity fraud
DT electronic commerce
DT privacy and surveillance
Possible future challenges and opportunities are outlined and discussed, including e-government, virtual environments and property, and the development of web 3.0. Information Technology Law: The law and society covers all aspects of a course of study on IT law, and is therefore an ideal text for students. The author's highly original and thought-provoking approach to the subject also makes it essential reading for researchers, IT professionals and policymakers.
Online Resource Centre
This book is accompanied by an Online Resource Centre containing the following resources for students:
DT Regular podcast updates from the author
DT A selection of useful web links
DT A glossary of key terms
DT A link to the author's IT law blog
Part I Information and Society
1. The world of bits
2. The network of networks
3. Digitisation and society
Part II Governance in the Information Society
4. Regulating the digital environment
5. Digital ownership
6. Cyber-speech
7. Defamation
Part III Digital Content and Intellectual Property Rights
8. Intellectual property rights and the information society
9. Software
10. Copyright in the digital environment
11. Databases
12. Branding and trade marks in the information society
Part IV Criminal Activity in the Information Society
13. Computer misuse
14. Pornography and obscenity in the information society
15. Crime and law enforcement in the information society
Part V E-Commerce
16. Electronic contracts
17. Electronic payments and taxation
Part IV Privacy in the Information Society
18. Data protection
19. Data and personal privacy
Part VII Future Challenges for Information Law
20. The digital public sphere
21. Virtual environments
22. What way next?
Andrew Murray , Reader in Law, London School of Economics and Political Science