This Note will examine the efforts of the courts, the legislature, and the Federal Communications Com-mission (FCC) to apply the Copyright Act of 1909 to the technological developments of the twentieth century. It is submitted that the significance of Teleprompter lies not in the Court\u27s determination that there was no copyright infringement -for that finding will soon be negated by upcoming copyright law revision -but in the inability of the Court to discard past inflexible and unrealistic approaches to the 1909 Copyright Act. Offered is a different method of viewing cable communications in terms of the Copyright Act, which recognizes that black and white categorizations are inappropriate and hopefully accommodates the perplexing charac...
As cable television develops into a communications medium capable of providing a vast array of voice...
This Note argues that the Second Circuit’s interpretation of the Transmit Clause eviscerates the mea...
The unending stream of technological innovations that best exemplifies the electronic media has left...
This Note will examine the efforts of the courts, the legislature, and the Federal Communications Co...
The author examines the cable-copyright issue of whether Congress should impose full copyright liabi...
The way we consume media today is vastly different from the way media was consumed in 1976, when the...
The Cable Act of 1992 required, for the first time, that cable systems receive the consent of broadc...
This comment will reveal the limited application of the Capital Cities\u27 decision with a discussio...
The study aims to examine the terrestrial broadcasting retrans- mission issue of CATV and to suggest...
Cable television is an important communications medium that reaches into millions of households. In ...
On October 29, 1984, a new era began in the relationship between law and cable television. On that d...
The Supreme Court of the United States recently stunned the cable television industry with its decis...
This symposium Article analyzes the Ninth Circuit\u27s decision in A&M Records, Inc. v. Napster, Inc...
Since 1970, the FCC has prohibited all telephone companies from providing video programming in their...
The issues of access and cable television regulation pose serious constitutional questions. This art...
As cable television develops into a communications medium capable of providing a vast array of voice...
This Note argues that the Second Circuit’s interpretation of the Transmit Clause eviscerates the mea...
The unending stream of technological innovations that best exemplifies the electronic media has left...
This Note will examine the efforts of the courts, the legislature, and the Federal Communications Co...
The author examines the cable-copyright issue of whether Congress should impose full copyright liabi...
The way we consume media today is vastly different from the way media was consumed in 1976, when the...
The Cable Act of 1992 required, for the first time, that cable systems receive the consent of broadc...
This comment will reveal the limited application of the Capital Cities\u27 decision with a discussio...
The study aims to examine the terrestrial broadcasting retrans- mission issue of CATV and to suggest...
Cable television is an important communications medium that reaches into millions of households. In ...
On October 29, 1984, a new era began in the relationship between law and cable television. On that d...
The Supreme Court of the United States recently stunned the cable television industry with its decis...
This symposium Article analyzes the Ninth Circuit\u27s decision in A&M Records, Inc. v. Napster, Inc...
Since 1970, the FCC has prohibited all telephone companies from providing video programming in their...
The issues of access and cable television regulation pose serious constitutional questions. This art...
As cable television develops into a communications medium capable of providing a vast array of voice...
This Note argues that the Second Circuit’s interpretation of the Transmit Clause eviscerates the mea...
The unending stream of technological innovations that best exemplifies the electronic media has left...