Law and the Internet: A Framework for Electronic CommerceLilian Edwards, Charlotte Waelde Bloomsbury Academic, 2000 M11 7 - 396 páginas Following the very successful publication of their earlier book Law and the Internet (Hart Publishing,1997) the same editorial team have now assembled a number of specialist authors to write about those aspects of law which are of special importance to the burgeoning arena of electronic commerce. These issues can be grouped into three main sections, which is reflected in the organisation of this book: intellectual property; e-commerce; and content liability. Within these sections, each author provides an expert analysis of the underlying principles governing the law, an account of recent case law and policy developments, and a practical guide to the way the current law operates. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 69
... argued in the past that a credit card holder cannot use section 75 to make a claim against his bank where the goods ... argument is that in these circumstances the credit card transaction has not taken place under ' pre - existing ...
... argued that the applicability of the Convention still does not oblige an English court to deal with the infringement of a foreign copyright or trade mark . This argument is based on the distinction between jurisdiction and the ...
... argument . It is submitted that the distinction drawn by Lloyd J in the Pearce case between jurisdiction on the one hand ... argued that the alternative forum for trial is the country in which the right was created . The principle in Re ...
Contenido
The Real W W W | 17 |
Secrecy and Signatures Turning the Legal Spotlight on | 37 |
Payment in an OnLine World | 55 |
Derechos de autor | |
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