We will be closed from 5pm Friday 23rd May for a public Holiday, re-opening at 8.30am on Tuesday 27th May. Any orders placed during this period will be processed when we re-open.
Internet Intermediaries and Copyright Law aims to analyse whether the European Union (EU) legal framework on copyright law and intermediaries is future-proof. All forms of online communications and interactions between people and companies on the Internet are facilitated by intermediaries – service providers whose decisions and policies have a shaping effect on the Internet, its users and the information shared on it. Today, because such intermediaries employ technologies that go well beyond the mere transmission and storage of information into new realms, potentially disrupting existing business models, a rethinking of existing relevant law is called for. The legal analysis and recommendations in this book put the topic of intermediary liability in the perspective of copyright law and offer a vision on how to regulate that liability.
What’s in this book: This book delves into the rules of copyright law and intermediary liability in Germany, the Netherlands, and the United States to see what can be learned from the experiences with intermediaries in these legal systems. In the context of an in-depth and up-to-date analysis, the author discusses such issues and topics as the following:
A focus on the strengths and weaknesses of the existing EU copyright law concerning Internet intermediaries in terms of how future-proof that law is includes detailed attention to legislation, regulation and case law.
How this will help you: With its deeply informed guidance with respect to the methods of regulation in a domain that is heavily influenced by technological developments, this book will be beneficial to policymakers, legislators, academics, judges and practitioners working in the area of copyright law as applied to the Internet. The detailed attention to the extent to which an intermediary can be held liable for copyright infringements in both the EU and the US will prove highly beneficial for in-house counsellors and advisors working for rights holder organizations and intermediary service providers.