This Comment first explores how copyright law fails to protect content creators from a number of online uses of their content. It argues that where copyright law falls short, the almost-century-old doctrine of ¿hot news¿ misappropriation can help content creators address certain types of unfair competition. A federal statute codifying this doctrine would ultimately offer the most protection for content creators. This Comment argues, however, that such a statute must be limited in scope, and thus its utility would be likewise limited. Ultimately, if news gatherers wish to survive, they must adapt to the needs of consumers and challenge the prevailing idea that those who collect the news and disseminate it online require no compensation for t...
The “hot news” doctrine refers to a cause of action for the misappropriation of time-sensitive factu...
Countering the perception that speech limitations affecting distribution necessarily reduce access t...
Much has been written about the free speech quasi-jurisprudence being developed by social media plat...
This Comment first explores how copyright law fails to protect content creators from a number of onl...
Newspapers are in trouble. Circulation and advertising are down as readers shift from print to onlin...
As traditional media scramble to find ways to monetize online content, the ease of digital publishin...
Journalism is a public good. The Framers understood the importance of a free press in a self-governi...
This article asserts that newspapers\u27 quest for copyright protection was an early step onto a sli...
The author thanks Michal Gal, Rossana Ducato, Masako Wakui, and all the participants to the Ascola 2...
The newspaper industry has recently experienced economic difficulty. Profits have declined because f...
Despite its three hundred year existence, the American newspaper is being devastated as the Internet...
The newspaper industry has recently experienced economic difficulty. Profits have declined because f...
The creation of the World Wide Web was based on a concept of universality that would allow a link to...
Recent scholarship has argued that the constitutional guarantee of freedom of the press refers to sp...
While it has long been thought that news aggregators were protected from news providers by the fair ...
The “hot news” doctrine refers to a cause of action for the misappropriation of time-sensitive factu...
Countering the perception that speech limitations affecting distribution necessarily reduce access t...
Much has been written about the free speech quasi-jurisprudence being developed by social media plat...
This Comment first explores how copyright law fails to protect content creators from a number of onl...
Newspapers are in trouble. Circulation and advertising are down as readers shift from print to onlin...
As traditional media scramble to find ways to monetize online content, the ease of digital publishin...
Journalism is a public good. The Framers understood the importance of a free press in a self-governi...
This article asserts that newspapers\u27 quest for copyright protection was an early step onto a sli...
The author thanks Michal Gal, Rossana Ducato, Masako Wakui, and all the participants to the Ascola 2...
The newspaper industry has recently experienced economic difficulty. Profits have declined because f...
Despite its three hundred year existence, the American newspaper is being devastated as the Internet...
The newspaper industry has recently experienced economic difficulty. Profits have declined because f...
The creation of the World Wide Web was based on a concept of universality that would allow a link to...
Recent scholarship has argued that the constitutional guarantee of freedom of the press refers to sp...
While it has long been thought that news aggregators were protected from news providers by the fair ...
The “hot news” doctrine refers to a cause of action for the misappropriation of time-sensitive factu...
Countering the perception that speech limitations affecting distribution necessarily reduce access t...
Much has been written about the free speech quasi-jurisprudence being developed by social media plat...