Old Laws/New Media
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Topic Owners: Matt Sanchez, Debbie Rosenbaum, Shubham Mukherjee
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This topic concerns the tension that occurs when we attempt to apply old laws to new media and communications technologies (including the Internet). The discussions in this session should provide a useful legal perspective on the societal issues addressed in the sessions regarding music, news, and other communications media.
- You'll want to coordinate with the publication and journalism weeks if possible. JZ 05:16, 16 December 2008 (UTC)
Tentative "questions of the week"
- How has new media affected traditional communications and media industries and challenged traditional law?
- How has traditional law challenged new media?
- For our purposes, questions like these call for a case study to bring it into a week's focus. JZ 05:16, 16 December 2008 (UTC)
- Should new media be treated like one of the traditional media (print, broadcasting, or common carriers), a hybrid, or something entirely new?
- I'd start with a problem for which treating it one way or another represents a solution (and/or an introduction of new problems).
- How have the courts, Congress, and other lawmaking bodies responded to new media technologies?
- What regulatory regime is emerging, if any, to govern new media?
- What is new media?
- How do we deal with the fact that there is little legal infrastructure that takes into account today's new media and technological environments?
- Do we apply old laws to new technologies, or do we create new regulations?
- How can we create sound policy that aligns with both traditional legal and moral aspirations while according with today's technological realities?
Tentative ideas for topics
- Copyright law (e.g., recording industry's litigation campaign against filesharing) (including the specific example of Sony BMG v. Tenenbaum, a federal file-sharing case the three of us are working on with Professor Charles Nesson, co-founder of the Berkman Center)
- Speech-related law (e.g., defamation, anonymous speech rights)
- Privacy laws
Possible guests
- Google Telecom Lawyer Rick Whitt
- Google Antitrust Lawyer Dana Wagner
- Berkman Center's David Ardia, who runs the Citizen Media Law Project
- Cary Sherman of RIAA
- Professor Charles Nesson
- Public Citizen Litigation Group Attorney Paul Alan Levy
- Electronic Frontier Foundation Attorney Fred Von Lohmann
Possible readings
- Various court documents and media coverage from the Sony v. Tenenbaum case
- Materials related to online defamation and anonymity law (AutoAdmit, Roommates.com, etc.)
- Reno v. ACLU, 521 U.S. 844 (1997) (Supreme Court decision striking down parts of Communications Decency Act and also the Court's leading statement on the constitutional status of the Internet)
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. v. Grokster Ltd., 545 U.S. 913 (2005) (Internet services that facilitate file sharing of copyrighted materials can be held liable for infringement)
- Digital Millennium Copyright Act (1998 law that extended U.S. copyright principles to digital materials).
Other considerations
- TBD
- So far some really broad questions -- there are a million directions you could take with this. Tenenbaum might not be a bad case study; I'm sure Nesson would be interested in presenting. JZ 05:16, 16 December 2008 (UTC)