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Internet Domain Names, Trademarks And Free Speech |
Jacqueline D. Lipton, Professor of Law, Associate Dean for Faculty Development and Research, Co-Director, Center for Law, Technology and the Arts and Associate Director, Frederick K. Cox International Law Center, Case Western Reserve University School of Law, US
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| October 2010 |
c 336 pp |
Hardback |
978 1 84844 414 0 |
£79.95 |
on-line discount
£71.96 |
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‘The growth of the global information economy has opened up a series of conflicts between civil society advocates on the one hand, and commercial interests seeking to expand intellectual property rights on the other. Jacqui Lipton has provided a wide-ranging and thoughtful analysis of the clash between commercial values and broader social values unfolding within the administration of the Internet domain name system. Lipton’s analysis is both rigorous and balanced, evaluating the development of the ICANN dispute resolution system and its impact on national laws, as well as considering possible future directions in the regulation of domain name rights and different dignitary interests.’ – Jane K. Winn, University of Washington School of Law, US
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Contents: Preface Introduction 1. Overview of Domain Name Regulation 2. Competing Trademark Interests 3. Domain Names and Free Speech 4. Personal Names in the Domain Space 5. Political, Cultural and Geographic Identifiers in the Domain Space 6. The Boundaries of Bad Faith in the Domain Space 7. Domain Name Theory 8. Conclusions
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This book is part of the Elgar Intellectual Property and Global Development series. To view the rest of the series, please use the link.
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