One school of thought takes much of law and the legal system as essentially irrelevant to the process of technological evolution. This view takes as axiomatic that the rate technological change is always accelerating, that any firm or institution dependent on a given technology is therefore doomed to a rapid obsolescence. Law, at best, risks interfering with a natural progression toward a better technological future, hindering “the march of civilization.” This paper discusses the historical role of antitrust investigation in changing the course of technological development by focusing on the example of the IBM litigation (1969 - 1984). While widely derided and seen as a failure, this essay challenges the conventional wisdom and suggests, wi...
This article discusses how the law has approached disparate socio-technological innovations over th...
Commenting on the close relationship between technological and legal developments, Grant Gilmore onc...
Joel Reidenberg in his 1998 Article Lex Informatica observed that technology can be a distinct regul...
One school of thought takes much of law and the legal system as essentially irrelevant to the proces...
This Article identifies and analyzes an emerging trend in the legal regulation of high-technology in...
Technology has always been a motivating force of change in the law. The creation of new machines and...
Technologies like digital audio, the Internet, and broadband communications spur economic growth and...
Much has been written recently about new technology disrupting the traditional law firm model of pro...
US technological leadership and domination of the world economy were further enhanced by the extraor...
This Article argues that current intellectual property law is based on an inaccurate representation ...
Legal issues increasingly arise in increasingly complex technological contexts. Prominent recent exa...
Chroniclers of the development of public policy toward monopoly may someday regard the 1970\u27s as ...
Much has been written recently about new technology disrupting the traditional law firm model of pro...
The world we live in today is defined by three great arcs. The first is the world of semiconductors ...
Not since the 1911 breakup of the Standard Oil trust has a government antitrust case attracted as mu...
This article discusses how the law has approached disparate socio-technological innovations over th...
Commenting on the close relationship between technological and legal developments, Grant Gilmore onc...
Joel Reidenberg in his 1998 Article Lex Informatica observed that technology can be a distinct regul...
One school of thought takes much of law and the legal system as essentially irrelevant to the proces...
This Article identifies and analyzes an emerging trend in the legal regulation of high-technology in...
Technology has always been a motivating force of change in the law. The creation of new machines and...
Technologies like digital audio, the Internet, and broadband communications spur economic growth and...
Much has been written recently about new technology disrupting the traditional law firm model of pro...
US technological leadership and domination of the world economy were further enhanced by the extraor...
This Article argues that current intellectual property law is based on an inaccurate representation ...
Legal issues increasingly arise in increasingly complex technological contexts. Prominent recent exa...
Chroniclers of the development of public policy toward monopoly may someday regard the 1970\u27s as ...
Much has been written recently about new technology disrupting the traditional law firm model of pro...
The world we live in today is defined by three great arcs. The first is the world of semiconductors ...
Not since the 1911 breakup of the Standard Oil trust has a government antitrust case attracted as mu...
This article discusses how the law has approached disparate socio-technological innovations over th...
Commenting on the close relationship between technological and legal developments, Grant Gilmore onc...
Joel Reidenberg in his 1998 Article Lex Informatica observed that technology can be a distinct regul...