Search for: "Tim Wu" Results 181 - 200 of 569
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27 Oct 2010, 8:46 am by Adam Thierer
This is the third installment in a series of essays about Tim Wu’s new book, The Master Switch: The Rise and Fall of Information Empires. [read post]
27 Mar 2011, 6:33 pm by Marvin Ammori
Last week, Tim Wu blogged about recent First Amendment scholarship that address issues beyond classical censorship, and he included a shout out to my recent draft article. [read post]
15 Sep 2014, 5:07 pm by sgottlieb
We have all been hearing about the primary races for Governor and Lieutenant Governor, although polls tell us that lots of people haven’t heard of Zephyr Teachout and Tim Wu, or if they’ve heard the names don’t know why. [read post]
10 Sep 2014, 6:04 am by Staci Zaretsky
News] * Law professors Zephyr Teachout (Fordham) and Tim Wu (Columbia) were defeated in the Democratic primary election for New York governor and lieutenant governor, but they lost well. [read post]
22 Oct 2020, 10:42 am
"From "With the Google Lawsuit, the Long Antitrust Winter Is Over/The Justice Department is demanding that the company prove its greatness by competing in the market, not by buying its way out of it" by Columbia lawprof Tim Wu (NYT). [read post]
16 Apr 2024, 9:30 pm by ernst
  The Forum at Columbia University, Room 315 (Third Floor), 601 West 125th Street, New York, NY 10027At this roundtable hosted by the Columbia Center for Political Economy and The Tobin Project, Bill Novak (University of Michigan Law School), an editor and contributor to the book, will join fellow contributors Richard John (Columbia Journalism School), Kate Andrias (Columbia Law School), and Tim Wu (Columbia Law School), to discuss how antimonopoly has figured importantly in… [read post]
22 Nov 2010, 11:04 pm by Joshua Wright
What Tim Wu is really doing is propagating the simplistic old saw that “Big Is Bad. [read post]
17 May 2011, 8:12 pm by Adam Thierer
I also appreciated Kaiser’s thought’s on Tim Wu’s “Separations Principle,” which would rigidly segregate all information services into three buckets–content, conduit, and devices–and keep them there. [read post]
5 Oct 2007, 4:37 am
Unlocking Apple’s iPhone is legal, ethical, and just plain fun Even with good instructions, activating and unlocking your iPhone isn’t very easy. [read post]
25 Oct 2007, 12:58 pm
Michael Madison, citing the recent NYTimes story about some libraries choosing the Open Content Alliance over Google, the WSJ story about Microsoft and Hollywood coming to terms on copyright "precrimes," and Tim Wu's Slate piece cited below, has some harsh words for those of us trying to make arguments in public about matters of public access and public goods: ... [read post]
4 Feb 2011, 1:22 pm by Rebecca Tushnet
A good survey of a certain segment of thinking about the internet, with some big names represented (Yochai Benkler, Jonathan Zittrain, Tim Wu) condensing and de-footnoting things they’ve said elsewhere. [read post]
2 Nov 2010, 7:44 am by Adam Thierer
Regardless, what does Tim Wu want done about the problems he has (mis-)diagnosed? [read post]
24 Mar 2023, 8:56 am
[The former White House adviser on technology and competition, Tim] Wu told me that it isn’t easy for the U.S. government to move beyond the vague message of trust us, TikTok is bad. [read post]
24 Jun 2013, 6:00 am by Cyrus Farivar
Aurich Lawson / Jonathan Naumann / Joi Ito / Stanford CIS Fifteen years ago, I was living outside Geneva, Switzerland, spending my lunch hours screwing around on the nascent Web a few dozen kilometers from where it was created. [read post]
5 Jan 2007, 8:56 am
A look at how we got here and why we should be vigilant: Ma Bell is back. [read post]
10 May 2010, 1:22 pm by legalinformatics
Filed under: Applications, Technology developments, Technology tools Tagged: AltLaw, Free access to law, Paul Ohm, Program on Law and Technology at Columbia Law School, Public access to legal information, Stuart Sierra, Tim Wu [read post]
27 Feb 2011, 9:29 am by Adam Thierer
The technology law triad of Harvard’s Lawrence Lessig and Jonathan Zittrain and Columbia’s Tim Wu had a vision. [read post]