Entertainment
Law Reporter
www.EntertainmentLawReporter.com
February/March Volume 28 Number 9
In
the Law Reviews:
The
Fact & Fiction of Grokster & Sony: Using Factual Comparisons to Uncover
the Legal Rule by Tiffany Parcher, 54
UCLA Law Review 509 (2006)
Comm/Ent:
Locking
Down the Library: How Copyright, Contract, and Cybertrespass Block Internet
Archiving by Rebecca Bolin, 29/1
Comm/Ent:
A
Minor Conundrum: Contracting with Minors in
Digitized
Scholarship and the “Library” Concept: Allowing the History of the Library
Exemption to Inform How We View Google’s Digitized Library
by Kodj Gbegnon, 29/1 Comm/Ent: Hastings Communications and Entertainment Law
Journal (2006)
Amending
Its Anti-Paparazzi Statute: California’s Latest Baby Step In Its Attempt to
Curb the Aggressive Paparazzi by Lisa
Vance, 29/1 Comm/Ent: Hastings Communications and Entertainment Law Journal
(2006)
Faulting
San Andreas: The Call to Arms for Sensible Regulation of Violent Video Games
by Jessica Williams, 29/1 Comm/Ent:
Entertainment
Law Review, published by Thomson, Sweet and Maxwell, www.sweetandmaxwell.co.uk,
has issued Volume 18, Issue 2 with the following articles:
The
Contemporary Consumption of Counterfeit Goods
by Lisa Lovell, 18/2 Entertainment Law Review 45 (2007) (for website, see above)
In
Conversation with Professor Eric Barendt: Hatred, Ridicule, Contempt and Plain
Bigotry by Tony Martino, 18/2
Entertainment Law Review 48 (2007) (for website, see above)
Hello!,
Nike and Kazaa: Bargaining in the Shadow of Intellectual Property Law
by Megan Richardson and Arlen Duke, 18/2 Entertainment Law Review 56 (2007) (for
website, see above)
The
Importance of the Jameel Case by David
Hooper, 18/2 Entertainment Law Review 62 (2007) (for website, see above)
Big
Brother is Midleading You… by James
Grant, 18/2 Entertainment Law Review 65 (2007) (for website, see above)
It
Ain’t Over Until the VAT Lady Sings
by Amy Boyles and Aredhel Darnley, 18/2 Entertainment Law Review 66 (2007) (for
website, see above)
Prize
Competitions and Free Draws: Interactive Quiz Shows and Complex Lotteries
by Oliver Bray, 18/2 Entertainment Law Review 68 (2007) (for website, see above)
The
ECJ has No Doubts over Community Exhaustion
by Maria Mercedes Frabboni, 18/2 Entertainment Law Review 70 (2007) (for
website, see above)
Book
Review: New Directions in Copyright Law Volume 2
by Christina Michalos, 18/2 Entertainment Law Review 73 (2007) (for website, see
above)
Vanderbilt
Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law has published Volume 9,
Number 1 with the following articles:
The
Privacy Gambit: Toward a Game Theoretic Approach to International Data
Protection by Horace Anderson, Jr., 9
Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law 1 (2006)
Equal
Protection in the World of Art and Obscenity: The Art Photographer’s Latent
Struggle with Obscenity Standards in Contemporary America
by Elaine Wang, 9 Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law 113
(2006)
The
“Public Use” of Private Sports Stadiums: Kelo Hits a Homerun for Private
Developers by Cristin Hartzog, 9
Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law 145 (2006)
Creative
Industries in Developing Countries and Intellectual Property Protection
by Lauren Loew, 9 Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law 1717
(2006)
Warring
Ideologies for Regulating Military Blogs: A Cyberlaw Approach for Balancing Free
Speech and Security in Cyberspace by
Julia Mitchell, 9 Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law201
(2006)
A
Winner is Who? Fair Use and the Online Distribution of Manga and Video Game Fan
Translations by Jaime Muscar, 9
Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law 223 (2006)
Napster’s
Second Life?: The Regulatory Challenges of Virtual Worlds
by Viktor Mayer-Schonberger & John Crowley, 100 Northwestern University Law
Review (2006)
Copyright
Misuse v. Freedom of Contract: And the Winner Is…
by Jennifer R. Knight, 73
Copyright
on Catfish Row: Musical Borrowing, Porgy and Bess, and Unfair Use
by Olufunmilayo B. Arewa, 37
There’s
No “I” in “League”: Professional Sports Leagues and the Single Entity
Defense by Nathaniel Grow, 105 Michigan
Law Review 183 (2006)
The
Flip Side of Privacy: The Right of Publicity, the First Amendment, and
Constitutional Line Drawing-A Presumptive Approach
by Russell S. Jones, Jr., Creighton Law Review’s Privacy Law Survey 939 (2006)
MGM
v. Grokster: Judicial Activism or a Good Decision?
by Andrew Beckerman-Rodau, 74/4 University of Missouri-Kansas City
Denver
University Law Review has published Volume 84, Issue 1 with the following
articles:
Working
Together in a Digital World: An Introduction
by Michael S. Mireles & Viva R. Moffat, 84
How
Digital Rights Management Will Save Authorship in the Age of the Internet
by Ralph Oman, 84
Anticircumvention
and Anti-anticircumvention by Peter K.
Yu, 84
The
“Rootkit Debacle”: The Latest Chapter in the Story of the Recording Industry
and the War on Music Piracy by Megan M.
LaBelle, 84
Remembering
the Public Domain by Christine D.
Galbraith, 84
Locks
& Levies by Jeremy F. deBeer, 84
Denver University Law Review 143 (2006)
Beyond
Copyright: Managing Information Rights with DRM
by Viktor Mayer-Schoenberger, 84
Third-Party
Copyright Liability After Grokster by
Alfred
University
of Illinois Journal of Law, Technology & Policy has published Volume
2005, Issues 1 and 2 with the following articles:
Click
the Mouse and Bet the House: The United States’ Internet Gambling Restrictions
Before the World Trade Organization by
Jonathan Schwartz, 2005/1 University of Illinois Journal of Law, Technology
& Policy 125 (2005)
Is
Interoperability Just for Those Who Can Hack It? The Application of the DMCA
Interoperability Exceptions in the Consumer Electronics Industry
by James L. Davis, 2005 University of Illinois Journal of Law, Technology &
Policy 141 (2005)
Moral
Rights and Digital Art: Revitalizing the Visual Artists’ Rights Act?
by Kristina Mucinskas, 2005/2
The
DMCA Anti-Circumvention Provisions and the Region Coding System:
A
Helpful Loss? The Implications of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, Inc. v. Grokster,
Ltd. on Future Distribution of Products Capable of Infringing Uses
by Charles Ingrassia, 2005/2 University of Illinois Journal of Law, Technology
& Policy 357 (2005)
Mistrust-Based
Digital Rights Management by Randal C.
Picker, 5 Journal on Telecommunications & High Technology Law 47 (2006)
(published by University of Colorado School of Law)
From
Wifi to Wikis and Open Source: The Political Economy of Collaborative Production
in the Digital Information Age by Mark
Cooper, 5 Journal of Telecommunications & High Technology Law 125 (2006)
(published by University of Colorado School of Law)
The
Columbia Journal of Law & the Arts has published Volume 29, Number 4
as a symposium entitled How the Show Goes On: Law and Theater in the
Twenty-First Century with the following articles:
Sweet
Charity: Not-for-Profit Theater
moderated by Carolyn Casselman, 29 The
Money
Makes the World Go-Round: The Economics of Commercial Theater,
moderated by Jason Cooper, 29 The
What
Permission? A Practitioner’s Guide to Copyright Licensing in Theater
moderated by Freddie Gershon, 29 The
From
Screen to Stage (and Back Again):
Criminal
Enforcement of Intellectual Property Laws in the Twenty-First Century
by Michael M. DuBose, 29 The
Relief
from Online Used Book Sales During New Book Launches
by Sharon Billington, 29 The