Search for: "Andres Guadamuz" Results 61 - 80 of 108
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9 Apr 2010, 4:42 pm
Application process Please send an abstract not exceeding 500 words to Professor Lilian Edwards (Lilian.Edwards@sheffield.ac.uk) or Mr Andres Guadamuz (a.guadamuz@ed.ac.uk). [read post]
31 Aug 2013, 11:38 am by Andres
Axel Metzger, pp.177-206 | HTML | PDF | Comparative Analysis of copyright assignment and licence formalities for Open Source Contributor Agreements Andres Guadamuz and Andrew Rens, pp.207-230 | HTML | PDF | Reviewed Articles Governance, Social Media and The Cybercitizen – Always in Motion is the FutureAndrew Power, pp.231-245 | HTML | PDF | The European Unified Patent Court: Assessment and Implications of the Federalisation of the Patent System in EuropeDimitris Xenos,… [read post]
6 Mar 2010, 4:32 pm
Application process Please send an abstract not exceeding 500 words to Professor Lilian Edwards (Lilian.Edwards@sheffield.ac.uk) or Mr Andres Guadamuz (a.guadamuz@ed.ac.uk). [read post]
5 Mar 2010, 12:15 pm by Andres
Application process Please send an abstract not exceeding 500 words to Professor Lilian Edwards (Lilian.Edwards@sheffield.ac.uk) or Mr Andres Guadamuz (a.guadamuz@ed.ac.uk). [read post]
1 Mar 2010, 3:01 am by TJ McIntyre
I'm not entirely sure that this result is correct - as Andres Guadamuz notes in a similar context, there are issues of acceptance and consideration in these cases - and it will be interesting to read the full decision to see whether and how these issues are considered.The potential implications of this decision are also important. [read post]
11 Oct 2016, 3:18 am by Andres
Caroline Wilson, Web Observatories and legal and ethical best practice: avoiding Ronald Dahl’s The Magic Finger Wendy Grossman/Jon Crowcroft, Anti-doping Theater Ren Reynolds, The Virtual Policy Network Shane P McNamee, All Your Game Are Belong to Us Alison Harcourt, Memes about Emes: the digital rights movement goes to the W3C Rebecca Giblin, The musical copyright dystopia Andres Guadamuz, There’s a Rattata in my Frittata! [read post]
11 Jul 2012, 2:37 am by Andres
  * Traducido por Andrés Guadamuz y Celia Lerman. [read post]
15 Aug 2010, 1:55 pm by Andres
Neil Stephens, pp.385-392 Reports The Leibniz Center for Law Tom van Engers and Radboud Winkels, pp.393-396 Governance of Stem Cell Science: Multiple Models & Similar Outcomes Geoffrey Lomax, pp.397-399 Book Reviews The Law of Electronic Commerce By Alan Davidson Reviewed by Luca Escoffier, pp.400-402 Law and Society Approaches to Cyberspace By Paul Schiff Berman Reviewed by Andres Guadamuz, pp.403-404 Speaking For the Dead: The Human… [read post]
18 Jul 2016, 4:24 am
 [If you have managed to forget, you can find IPKat coverage here and here, and an interesting perspective from Technollama's Andrés Guadamuz here]People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA)'s involvement in the legal dispute over the striking monkey selfies stimulated a broader and bafflingly vague campaign for animal copyrights by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and image distributing site Latinstock.While we… [read post]
27 Dec 2006, 10:20 pm
These 27 "global" (well, maybe "global" to you if you're an American) blogs have real substance and promise, and that they expand and add to the Conversation about law and business: Going Global, Craig Maginnes China Law Blog, Dan Harris and Steve Dickinson, Harris and Moure, pllc Binary Law, Nick Holmes (England) Geeklawyer (England) Human Law, Justin Patten (England) Corporate Blawg UK (UK) TechnoLlama, Andrés Guadamuz (Scotland) … [read post]
9 Sep 2015, 1:03 am by Andres
Why humans should concerns AIs future — from perspective of patent law Andres Guadamuz. [read post]
24 Sep 2013, 11:12 am by Michael Froomkin
Founded, as Richard Fisher writes in New Scientist, by Lilian Edwards and Andres Guadamuz, gikii is a safe space for speculation that, as Edwards put it earlier this week, would get you giggled at elsewhere. [read post]
31 Aug 2009, 2:52 am
Legal Issues Associated with Twitter and other Micro-Blogging Sites" 10:30-11:00 Coffee Break 11:00-12:30 Second Morning session (4): Making and Sharing Maarten Brinkerink, Inge van Beekum, Incentives and Constraints for Dutch Public Broadcasters to Adopt Creative Commons Licensing Melanie Dulong de Rosnay, Creative Commons licenses incompatibilities  : when sharing needs to be rationalized Steven Hetcher, Location, Location Still Matters: Pop… [read post]
26 Sep 2007, 1:50 am
All of the presentations were interesting, and here are some personal highlights: Andres Guadamuz (Technollama) on economies in virtual worlds, and how the adding of an economy to the City of Heroes has contributed to the development of that world. [read post]
24 Jun 2010, 3:43 am
Augmented and clouded platforms Andres Guadamuz, "We Can Tag It for You Wholesale: Augmented Reality and the User-Generated World". [read post]
9 Jul 2010, 11:32 am by Daithí
 And the footnote to this point discussed the NPG/Wikipedia issue with links from Technollama (Andres Guadamuz) and Francis Davey! [read post]
30 Mar 2009, 4:10 am
Relying on typical networks (including scale-free networks; a topic that has been exercising the mind of fellow attendee and blogger Andres Guadamuz of late), Geist notes that the contemporary web (and thus web searching) is recognised as scale-free. [read post]
27 Mar 2008, 10:31 am
Speaker Andres Guadamuz (Edinburgh), co-director of SCRIPT, previewed the session on his blog, here and session chair Shawn Harmon, after introducing the panel, discussed SCRIPT-ed and their approach to peer review and rapid turnarounds (always welcome). [read post]
6 Feb 2009, 12:38 am
" Graeme Laurie, "Biobanks in the UK and UK Biobank Governance" Shang-Yung Yen, "Biobanking in UK and Taiwan: Controversies and Governance" 11:30 Coffee Break 11:45 Parallel-9: "IP-4 - ICTs & IP" (Playfair Library) (Chair: Andres Guadamuz, SCRIPT)Stefan Larsson & Mans Svensson, "Law in Books, Norms in Action: Governing IPRs in a File Sharing Society"Simon… [read post]
20 Mar 2024, 8:24 pm by Chuck Cosson
  Professor Andre Guadamuz of the University of Sussex, quoted in The Economist in support of the “fair use” arguments, nonetheless also believes ultimately a licensing regime will arise, and that AI developers will have to pay creators in return for the use of their work in AI model development.[12] Professor Guadamuz elaborates on the reasons for this in a recent paper,[13] which emphasizes the fact-specific nature of both the data collection, the… [read post]