This piece is the transcription of a conversation between two law faculty members speaking about moral rights in the digital age. Prof. Subotnik questions Prof. Ginsburg about some of the legal and technological developments that have occurred since Prof. Ginsburg’s 2001 essay, Have Moral Rights Come of (Digital) Age in the United States?. If moral rights have come of digital age, should their realization be achieved by conveying more information about the copy, or by controlling the copy itself? This question is now asked from the vantage point of 2012, ten years since Prof. Ginsburg first posed it
The article examines the attributes of moral rights, as found in copyright law, over works created a...
Now that Australia has its long awaited legislation protecting the moral rights of authors, a new ph...
ALAI-USA is the U.S. branch of ALAI (Association Littèraire et Artistique Internationale). ALAI-USA ...
This piece is the transcription of a conversation between two law faculty members speaking about mor...
A transcribed conversation about moral rights in the digital age — in respect of some of the legal a...
In recent years, commentators have developed a renewed interest in moral rights. Although there rema...
Moral rights are a valuable diamond for authors. But where did they start and why? Is there a differ...
Moral rights are a valuable diamond for authors. But where did they start and why? Is there a differ...
More than any other contemporary American legal scholar, Professor Merryman has drawn attention to t...
This paper is concerned with the impact of digital technology on the moral rights of authors. The ab...
At first sight in copyright, moral rights seem to form a less significant part compared with economi...
Over ten years ago in the Cardozo Arts and Entertainment Law Journal, I inquired whether authors’ “m...
Should the moral rights of authors be protected in works of new technology that are characteristic o...
Moral rights have not been so uniformly or widely adopted as economic copyrights for authors, perhap...
Background: The digital age has led to conceptual changes in human rights and their content, underst...
The article examines the attributes of moral rights, as found in copyright law, over works created a...
Now that Australia has its long awaited legislation protecting the moral rights of authors, a new ph...
ALAI-USA is the U.S. branch of ALAI (Association Littèraire et Artistique Internationale). ALAI-USA ...
This piece is the transcription of a conversation between two law faculty members speaking about mor...
A transcribed conversation about moral rights in the digital age — in respect of some of the legal a...
In recent years, commentators have developed a renewed interest in moral rights. Although there rema...
Moral rights are a valuable diamond for authors. But where did they start and why? Is there a differ...
Moral rights are a valuable diamond for authors. But where did they start and why? Is there a differ...
More than any other contemporary American legal scholar, Professor Merryman has drawn attention to t...
This paper is concerned with the impact of digital technology on the moral rights of authors. The ab...
At first sight in copyright, moral rights seem to form a less significant part compared with economi...
Over ten years ago in the Cardozo Arts and Entertainment Law Journal, I inquired whether authors’ “m...
Should the moral rights of authors be protected in works of new technology that are characteristic o...
Moral rights have not been so uniformly or widely adopted as economic copyrights for authors, perhap...
Background: The digital age has led to conceptual changes in human rights and their content, underst...
The article examines the attributes of moral rights, as found in copyright law, over works created a...
Now that Australia has its long awaited legislation protecting the moral rights of authors, a new ph...
ALAI-USA is the U.S. branch of ALAI (Association Littèraire et Artistique Internationale). ALAI-USA ...