Berkman Buzz: November 10, 2014
The Berkman Buzz is selected weekly from the publications and posts of Berkman Center people and projects. Vivek Krishnamurthy explains why the Aereo decision is bad for innovationFrom his BetaBoston article, "Aereo's saga signals a chilling effect for innovation" Kate Darling looks at content production incentives in the online adult entertainment industryFrom her paper in the Stanford Technology Law Review, "IP Without IP? A Study of the Online Adult Entertainment Industry" Matthew Battles talks about standards and the history of cooperative innovation
From his talk, "Bearing the Standards," delivered at Books in Browsers Sara Watson examines the term "privacy"From her AlJazeera America article, "'The issue formerly known as privacy'"
Sarah Genner shares her not-so-open-access experienceFrom her blog post Leora Kornfield looks at new media, breaking news, and the Jian Ghomeshi scandalFrom her blog post The Cyberlaw Clinic files a petition on behalf of medical device researchersFrom the Cyberlaw Clinic blog Ekho Moskvy Journalist Fired Over "Insensitive" Tweet, Radio Station's Fate In LimboFrom Tetyana Lokot's Global Voices article, "Ekho Moskvy Journalist Fired Over "Insensitive" Tweet, Radio Station's Fate In Limbo" | ||||
This Buzz was compiled by Gretchen Weber. To manage your subscription preferences, please click here. | ||||
The Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University was founded to explore cyberspace, share in its study, and help pioneer its development. For more information, visit http://cyber.harvard.edu. |