Technologies like digital audio, the Internet, and broadband communications spur economic growth and foster new patterns of commerce and social interaction. But they also spawn disruptive innovations that force established industries to forge novel responses or risk falling by the wayside. The horse-and-buggy industry, vaudeville, and video-rental stores are but a few examples of thriving markets that found themselves on the scrap heap of obsolescence because they failed to react quickly to the devastating effects of new technology
U.S. patent law has made assumptions about where new inventions will be created, who will create the...
This article identifies and discusses three waves of technological disruption to the authority of la...
In this Essay, I argue that the law of goods does not need change in many of its elements despite cu...
Technology has always been a motivating force of change in the law. The creation of new machines and...
The forward march of technological progress demands a continuous reassessment of our current predica...
Joel Reidenberg in his 1998 Article Lex Informatica observed that technology can be a distinct regul...
Disruptive technologies displace established industries by creating innovative products that lead to...
One school of thought takes much of law and the legal system as essentially irrelevant to the proces...
Disruptive technologies displace established industries by creating innovative products that lead to...
This Article identifies and analyzes an emerging trend in the legal regulation of high-technology in...
In the past two decades, the concept of disruptive technology has gone from theory, to buzz word, to...
In an age of constant, complex and disruptive technological innovation, knowing what, when, and how ...
Legal issues increasingly arise in increasingly complex technological contexts. Prominent recent exa...
Much has been written recently about new technology disrupting the traditional law firm model of pro...
This article addresses the apparent inconsistency of the impact technology has on the "rights vocabu...
U.S. patent law has made assumptions about where new inventions will be created, who will create the...
This article identifies and discusses three waves of technological disruption to the authority of la...
In this Essay, I argue that the law of goods does not need change in many of its elements despite cu...
Technology has always been a motivating force of change in the law. The creation of new machines and...
The forward march of technological progress demands a continuous reassessment of our current predica...
Joel Reidenberg in his 1998 Article Lex Informatica observed that technology can be a distinct regul...
Disruptive technologies displace established industries by creating innovative products that lead to...
One school of thought takes much of law and the legal system as essentially irrelevant to the proces...
Disruptive technologies displace established industries by creating innovative products that lead to...
This Article identifies and analyzes an emerging trend in the legal regulation of high-technology in...
In the past two decades, the concept of disruptive technology has gone from theory, to buzz word, to...
In an age of constant, complex and disruptive technological innovation, knowing what, when, and how ...
Legal issues increasingly arise in increasingly complex technological contexts. Prominent recent exa...
Much has been written recently about new technology disrupting the traditional law firm model of pro...
This article addresses the apparent inconsistency of the impact technology has on the "rights vocabu...
U.S. patent law has made assumptions about where new inventions will be created, who will create the...
This article identifies and discusses three waves of technological disruption to the authority of la...
In this Essay, I argue that the law of goods does not need change in many of its elements despite cu...