2,174 research outputs found

    Spartan Daily, April 25, 1994

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    Volume 102, Issue 54https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/8554/thumbnail.jp

    State of Play V: Building the Global Metaverse

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    Welcome to the State of Play Conference Presented by: Institute for Information Law and Policy New York Law School The Berkman Center for Internet & Society Harvard Law School Nanyang Technological University Trinity University Information Society Project Yale Law School August 19-22, 2007 at Marina Mandarin Hotel 6 Raffles Boulevard Marina Square Singapore 039594https://digitalcommons.nyls.edu/iilp/1122/thumbnail.jp

    The BG News January 21, 2011

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    The BGSU campus student newspaper January 21, 2011. Volume 101 - Issue 84https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/9348/thumbnail.jp

    Development of a Teacher Guideline for Wisdom Education Management in Teaching and Learning in Yunnan’s Secondary Schools

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    The purposes of this study were to survey current situations of teachers on wisdom education in teaching and learning in secondary schools in Yunnan, China, and to propose a teacher guideline for wisdom education in teaching and learning and evaluate its effectiveness in view of experts. This research adopted two sets of questionnaires of quantitative methodology as data collection methods, one was for surveying 100 secondary school teachers in terms of wisdom education teaching and learning preparation ability, wisdom education teaching and learning implementation ability, wisdom education teaching and learning evaluation reflection ability, wisdom education teaching and learning innovation ability; and another was for verifying the effectiveness of the proposed guideline by views of 5 experts based on the criteria of 4 abilities, including the preparation, implementation, evaluation reflection and innovation abilities of wisdom education in teaching and learning. Firstly, the survey results showed that the overall four components of wisdom education in teaching and learning was at a high level with the mean score of 3.96. Secondly, the expert reviews showed that the effectiveness of the wisdom education guideline for teachers in teaching and learning was very positive and enlightening

    The Copyright Divide

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    Most recently, the recording industry filed 261 lawsuits against individuals who illegally downloaded and distributed a large amount of music via peer-to-peer file-sharing networks, such as KaZaA, Grokster, iMesh, and Gnutella. Although the industry\u27s recent approach was controversial and resulted in major criticisms from legislators, academics, civil libertarians, consumer advocates, and university officials, the copyright holders\u27 aggressive tactics are not new. In fact, copyright holders have been known for using, or encouraging their government to use, coercive power to protect their creative works. Only a decade ago, the U.S. copyright industries have lobbied their government to use strong-armed tactics to coerce China into protecting intellectual property rights. Succumbing to U.S. trade pressure, the Chinese authorities eventually raided pirate factories and handed out harsh penalties, including the death penalty and life imprisonment in severe cases, on their citizens. The similarities between the RIAA and China stories were more than a coincidence and could be further linked to a third story. That story took place two centuries ago when the United States was still a less developed country. At that time, book piracy was rampant, and the United States was considered one of the most notorious pirating nations in the world. This Article brings together, for the first time, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century America, twentieth-century China, and twenty-first-century cyberspace and analyzes them using a cross-cultural, cross-systemic, cross-temporal, and cross-sectoral approach. This Article not only highlights the striking similarities among the three stories, but also argues that these similarities provide insight into the war on piracy, intellectual property law reforms, and international harmonization efforts

    The BG News April 7, 2010

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    The BGSU campus student newspaper April 7, 2010. Volume 100 - Issue 129https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/9232/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, March 7, 1994

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    Volume 102, Issue 27https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/8527/thumbnail.jp

    The Copyright Divide

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    Most recently, the recording industry filed 261 lawsuits against individuals who illegally downloaded and distributed a large amount of music via peer-to-peer file-sharing networks, such as KaZaA, Grokster, iMesh, and Gnutella. Although the industry\u27s recent approach was controversial and resulted in major criticisms from legislators, academics, civil libertarians, consumer advocates, and university officials, the copyright holders\u27 aggressive tactics are not new. In fact, copyright holders have been known for using, or encouraging their government to use, coercive power to protect their creative works. Only a decade ago, the U.S. copyright industries have lobbied their government to use strong-armed tactics to coerce China into protecting intellectual property rights. Succumbing to U.S. trade pressure, the Chinese authorities eventually raided pirate factories and handed out harsh penalties, including the death penalty and life imprisonment in severe cases, on their citizens. The similarities between the RIAA and China stories were more than a coincidence and could be further linked to a third story. That story took place two centuries ago when the United States was still a less developed country. At that time, book piracy was rampant, and the United States was considered one of the most notorious pirating nations in the world. This Article brings together, for the first time, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century America, twentieth-century China, and twenty-first-century cyberspace and analyzes them using a cross-cultural, cross-systemic, cross-temporal, and cross-sectoral approach. This Article not only highlights the striking similarities among the three stories, but also argues that these similarities provide insight into the war on piracy, intellectual property law reforms, and international harmonization efforts

    Berita Volume XXX, Number 2 (2006)

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    Table of Contents Editor’s note...1 Periodicals... 1 Books... 9 Conferences & Calls for Papers...12 Amnesty International...12 Prospectus...12 Research Staff...12https://ohioopen.library.ohio.edu/berita/1016/thumbnail.jp
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