This article examines the phenomenon of bloggers, social networkers and other online content creators who find themselves negotiating a position between their expectations of the internet as a system of places and the architecture of the internet as a limitless space, a non-place. The authors argue that conflicting notions of the internet constitute an uneven and contradictory internet imaginary, and shape experience online. The law, when confronted with the ambiguities and equivocations of the internet imaginary so far prefers to fall back on the simple idea of the internet as a public space, a space that is not protected from peering eyes and ears of outside observers, a space where activities cannot be made private (at least without spec...
The Abstract Book of the 25th IVR World Congress of Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy can be v...
There is a growing literature revolving around the role of non-state actors in the international law...
Privacy scholars have recently outlined difficulties in applying existing concepts of personal priva...
This article examines the phenomenon of bloggers, social networkers and other online content creator...
In this article we argue that the legal reshaping of public and private cannot at this stage be reco...
The purpose of this essay is to consider some characteristics ofUnited States privacy law that contr...
Traditional jurisprudence holds that a person who posts private information onto a social networking...
This Article reviews how the Internet and related developments-technological, social, and legal-have...
In this Article, Professor Schwartz depicts the widespread, silent collection of personal informatio...
Cyberspace was once thought to be the modern equivalent of the Western Frontier, a place where land ...
Cyberspace was once thought to be the modern equivalent of the Western Frontier, a place where land ...
Cyberspace was once thought to be the modern equivalent of the Western Frontier, a place where land ...
Part I of the Article will first look at the original privacy norms that emerged at the Web\u27s inc...
There is already evidence that “governmental mass surveillance emerges as a dangerous habit”. Despit...
There is already evidence that “governmental mass surveillance emerges as a dangerous habit”. Despit...
The Abstract Book of the 25th IVR World Congress of Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy can be v...
There is a growing literature revolving around the role of non-state actors in the international law...
Privacy scholars have recently outlined difficulties in applying existing concepts of personal priva...
This article examines the phenomenon of bloggers, social networkers and other online content creator...
In this article we argue that the legal reshaping of public and private cannot at this stage be reco...
The purpose of this essay is to consider some characteristics ofUnited States privacy law that contr...
Traditional jurisprudence holds that a person who posts private information onto a social networking...
This Article reviews how the Internet and related developments-technological, social, and legal-have...
In this Article, Professor Schwartz depicts the widespread, silent collection of personal informatio...
Cyberspace was once thought to be the modern equivalent of the Western Frontier, a place where land ...
Cyberspace was once thought to be the modern equivalent of the Western Frontier, a place where land ...
Cyberspace was once thought to be the modern equivalent of the Western Frontier, a place where land ...
Part I of the Article will first look at the original privacy norms that emerged at the Web\u27s inc...
There is already evidence that “governmental mass surveillance emerges as a dangerous habit”. Despit...
There is already evidence that “governmental mass surveillance emerges as a dangerous habit”. Despit...
The Abstract Book of the 25th IVR World Congress of Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy can be v...
There is a growing literature revolving around the role of non-state actors in the international law...
Privacy scholars have recently outlined difficulties in applying existing concepts of personal priva...