04061nam 2200397 i 4500001001200000003000800012005001700020008004100037020002500078020002200103040003100125082001700156245001800173264010300191264001900294300005200313336002100365337002500386338002300411490004300434500001700477504005100494505123600545505125001781520015003031521001003181650005003191650006003241650004203301650005903343650004203402650004903444650006603493830004403559856006003603CCE20500989MnSgEFL20200716095525.0200716t20202020maua b 001 0 eng d a9781642656039 (pbk.) a1642656038 (pbk.) aMnSgEFLbengcMnSgEFLerda14a343.730921500aInternet law. 1a[Ipswich, MA] :bEBSCO Information Services, Inc. ; aAmenia, NY :bGrey House Publishing,c[2020] 4ccopyright 2020 axvi, 200 pages :bcolor illustrations ;c28 cm. atext2rdacontent aunmediated2rdamedia avolume2rdacarrier1 aReference shelf ;vvolume 92, number 4 aH.W. Wilson. aIncludes bibliographical references and index.2 aPreface -- The Communications Decency Act and Section -- Who Is Responsible for Online Content? -- The Trump-Twitter Fight Ropes in the Rest of Silicon Valley -- The Law That Made Facebook What It Is Today -- Biden Wants Sec. 230 Gone, Calls Tech "Totally Irresponsible," "Little Creeps" -- WSJ, WaPO, NYT Spread False Internet Law Claims -- The Fight Over Section 230-And the Internet as We Know It -- Net Neutrality -- Should the Internet Be a Public Utility? -- The Wired Guide to Net Neutrality -- FCC Chairman: Our Job Is to Protect a Free and Open Internet -- What the Microsoft Antitrust Case Taught Us -- How the Loss of Net Neutrality Could Change the Internet -- Net Neutrality May Be Dead in the US, but Europe Is Still Strongly Committed to Open Internet Access -- Digital Copyright Law and Open-Source Software -- The End of Private (Digital) Ownership? -- A Brief History of Open Source Software -- Reevaluating the DMCA 22 Years Later: Let's Think of the Users -- To Save Pepe the Frog from the Alt-Right, His Creator Has Invoked Copyright Law's Darker Side -- Twitter Blocks EFF Tweet That Criticized Bogus Takedown of a Previous Tweet -- In 2019, Multiple Open Source Companies Changed Course-Is It the Right Move?2 aWith Friends Like AWS, Who Needs an Open Source Business? -- Privacy and Cybercrime -- Hackers, User Rights, and Government Surveillance -- Senate Republicans Unveil COVID-19-Specific Privacy Bill -- Mixed Messages: Encryption Fight Pits Security Against Privacy -- One Man's Obsessive Fight to Reclaim His Cambridge Analytica Data -- A Dark Web Tycoon Pleads Guilty. But How Was He Caught? -- Hackers Will Be the Weapon of Choice for Governments in 2020 -- Proposed US Law Is "Trojan Horse" to Stop Online Encryption, Critics Say -- Does the CFAA Apply to Voting Machine Hacks? -- Helicopter Government? How the Internet of Things Enables Pushbutton Regulation from a Distance -- Doublecheck That Ballot: Controversial Voting Machines Make Their Primary Debut in South Carolina Zoombombing and the Law -- Digital Nationalism and the Splinternet From Unity to Division -- Society's Dependence on the Internet: 5 Cyber Issues the Coronavirus Lays Bare -- Battlefield Internet: A Plan for Securing Cyberspace -- The Rising Threat of Digital Nationalism -- Make the Internet American Again? -- Should the U.S. Reclaim Control of the Internet? Evaluating ICANN's Administrative Oversight since the 2016 Handover -- Bibliography -- Websites -- Index. aExplores evolving cyberlaw pertaining to such issues as data privacy, freedom of expression, intellectual property, e-commerce, and contract law.2 a10-A. 0aInternetxLaw and legislationzUnited States. 0aNetwork neutralityxLaw and legislationzUnited States. 0aIntellectual propertyzUnited States. 0aComputer securityxLaw and legislationzUnited States. 7aInternetxLaw and legislation.2sears 7aIntellectual propertyzUnited States.2sears 7aComputer securityxLaw and legislationzUnited States.2sears 0aReference shelf ;vvolume 92, number 4.40uhttps://online.salempress.com/doi/book/10.3331/RSAInLaw