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Information technology and traditional legal concepts

Information technology and traditional legal concepts
Information technology and traditional legal concepts
Information technology has served to revolutionise the use, exchange, and protection of information. The growth of the internet, the convergence of technologies as well as the development of user generated and social networking sites has meant that significant amounts of person data as well as copyrighted materials are now readily accessible. Within this changing cultural landscape the legal concepts of privacy, data protection, intellectual property and criminality have necessarily had to develop and adapt. In this volume a number of international scholars consider this process and whether it has merely been a question of the law adapting to technology or whether technology has been forced to adapt to law. Technologies have wrought a culture shift it is therefore apposite to ask whether legal concepts, as reflections of culture, should also change. It is in this volume where papers on privacy date protection, intellectual protection and cyber crime begin address this question.

This book was published as a special issue of International review of Law Computers and Technology.
0415614856
Routledge
Jones, Richard
b23db33c-778b-4560-9c06-eb8af3bc3fb6
Moore, Roksana
4768add9-37aa-4898-9d67-681b1c39e7fd
Jones, Richard
b23db33c-778b-4560-9c06-eb8af3bc3fb6
Moore, Roksana
4768add9-37aa-4898-9d67-681b1c39e7fd

Jones, Richard and Moore, Roksana (2010) Information technology and traditional legal concepts , Abingdon, GB. Routledge, 170pp.

Record type: Book

Abstract

Information technology has served to revolutionise the use, exchange, and protection of information. The growth of the internet, the convergence of technologies as well as the development of user generated and social networking sites has meant that significant amounts of person data as well as copyrighted materials are now readily accessible. Within this changing cultural landscape the legal concepts of privacy, data protection, intellectual property and criminality have necessarily had to develop and adapt. In this volume a number of international scholars consider this process and whether it has merely been a question of the law adapting to technology or whether technology has been forced to adapt to law. Technologies have wrought a culture shift it is therefore apposite to ask whether legal concepts, as reflections of culture, should also change. It is in this volume where papers on privacy date protection, intellectual protection and cyber crime begin address this question.

This book was published as a special issue of International review of Law Computers and Technology.

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More information

Published date: 10 November 2010
Organisations: Southampton Law School

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 338113
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/338113
ISBN: 0415614856
PURE UUID: 12767813-6596-46a3-b9f3-9be683046289

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Date deposited: 10 May 2012 10:49
Last modified: 22 Jul 2022 18:04

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Contributors

Author: Richard Jones
Author: Roksana Moore

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