Search for: "Jonathan Zittrain" Results 281 - 300 of 507
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21 Aug 2010, 1:49 am
Nimmer, John Frow, Jonathan Zittrain, Lawrence Liang and Shamnad Basheer. [read post]
18 Aug 2010, 11:29 am by editor
Harvard Internet Law Professor Jonathan Zittrain’s take on the Google – Verizon Net Neutrality Proposals is here. [read post]
11 Aug 2010, 7:56 am by Andrew McDiarmid
For further analysis on this issue, please read the blogs of CDT Fellows Susan Crawford and Jonathan Zittrain. [read post]
10 Aug 2010, 10:41 am by William McGeveran
As Jonathan Zittrain sums up: Google might well be able to pay — and then leave poorer content providers behind. [read post]
10 Aug 2010, 8:21 am by Frank Pasquale
As Jonathan Zittrain noted in the NYT yesterday, the details of “‘peer arrangements in which I.S.P.s agreed to carry each other’s traffic . . . are typically trade secrets. [read post]
10 Aug 2010, 8:11 am by Frank Pasquale
As Jonathan Zittrain noted in the NYT yesterday, the details of "'peer arrangements in which I.S.P.s agreed to carry each other’s traffic . . . are typically trade secrets. [read post]
9 Aug 2010, 6:51 pm by cap95
Debates around network neutrality tend to revolve around a desire, on the one hand, to retain the innovative openness of the Internet to the development of new and unintended applications (Jonathan Zittrain calls this "generativity"). [read post]
9 Aug 2010, 5:42 pm by Jim Harper
Read the comments of Tim Wu, Lawrence Lessig, David Gelernter, Ed Felten, Jonathan Zittrain, and myself. [read post]
3 Aug 2010, 6:49 am by Glenn Cohen
A recent faculty workshop by my witty and brilliant colleague Jonathan Zittrain on “ubiquitous human computing,” (this youtube video captures in a different form what he was talking about ), prompted me to thinking about some ways in which platforms like Amazon’s Mechanical Turk, interface with university research and research ethics in interesting ways. [read post]
27 Jul 2010, 5:31 am by Danielle Citron
” Rosen’s piece offers insights and potential solutions from Concurring Opinions favorites — our very own Dan Solove, guest blogger Paul Ohm, star author Jonathan Zittrain whose book The Future of the Internet (And How to Stop It) will be the focus on an online symposium in early September, and Bright Ideas scholar M. [read post]
22 Jun 2010, 7:37 pm by Frank Pasquale
" Privacy advocates will need to find equally pithy and dramatic encapsulations of their values if the research imperative is not to run roughshod over extant privacy rights.Related "war rhetoric" was thoughtfully debated at an Intelligence Squared debate on cyberwar that included Jonathan Zittrain and Bruce Schneier. [read post]
22 Jun 2010, 6:54 pm by Frank Pasquale
Related “war rhetoric” was thoughtfully debated at an Intelligence Squared debate on cyberwar that included Jonathan Zittrain and Bruce Schneier. [read post]
8 Jun 2010, 6:02 pm by Adam Thierer
Palfrey, Rafal Rohozinski, and Jonathan Zittrain, Access Controlled is essential reading for anyone studying the methods governments are using globally to stifle online expression and dissent. [read post]
8 Jun 2010, 11:36 am by Marina Petrova
" (Jonathan Zittrain, The Future of the Internet 107 (2008)). [read post]
8 Jun 2010, 11:36 am by Marina Petrova
(Jonathan Zittrain, The Future of the Internet 107 (2008)). [read post]
4 Jun 2010, 6:25 pm by Rebecca Tushnet
Ann Bartow, Portrait of the Internet as a Young Man, reviewing Jonathan Zittrain, The Future of the Internet and How to Stop It: Okay, let me admit my seething jealousy for the perfection of Bartow’s title, which manages to be both funny and incisive, encapsulating a key element of the review. [read post]
1 Jun 2010, 8:16 pm by Adam Thierer
Last Friday afternoon, as I was leaving my house to en route to the airport with the family for a short vacation, Nicholas Carr’s latest book, The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains, arrived in my mailbox. [read post]
23 May 2010, 1:58 pm by Berin Szoka
Since Jonathan Zittrain’s ideas about the “generativity” have permeated the intellectual climate of technology policy almost as thoroughly as those of Larry Lessig, scarcely a month passes without a new Chicken Little shouting about how the digital sky is falling in a major publication. [read post]