Commodifying the information age: Intellectual property rights, the state and the Internet

This article examines the role of the state and the rule of law in relation to the problem of intellectual property on the Internet. It concludes that the claim that states are no longer effective actors (and hence subjecting to them to political pressure is a waste of time) has conveniently omitted...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Christopher May
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2004-09-01
Series:SCRIPTed: A Journal of Law, Technology & Society
Online Access:http://www.law.ed.ac.uk/ahrb/script-ed/issue3/may.asp
id doaj-f7a1449eb02947b382b56f2ed90ced9c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f7a1449eb02947b382b56f2ed90ced9c2020-11-25T00:54:22ZengUniversity of EdinburghSCRIPTed: A Journal of Law, Technology & Society1744-25672004-09-0113408419Commodifying the information age: Intellectual property rights, the state and the InternetChristopher MayThis article examines the role of the state and the rule of law in relation to the problem of intellectual property on the Internet. It concludes that the claim that states are no longer effective actors (and hence subjecting to them to political pressure is a waste of time) has conveniently omitted the states role as guarantor of the legislative infrastructure that underlies market activity. The state is critically required to legally support the markets of the new economy, and while its means of market intervention may have changed, this is not the same as withdrawal. The history of intellectual property has been a political battle to balance the rights of owners with the very important social benefits that flow from social availability of information and knowledge. Thus, states remain a key site for political mobilisation as regards the central legal structures of the (so-called) information society.http://www.law.ed.ac.uk/ahrb/script-ed/issue3/may.asp
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christopher May
spellingShingle Christopher May
Commodifying the information age: Intellectual property rights, the state and the Internet
SCRIPTed: A Journal of Law, Technology & Society
author_facet Christopher May
author_sort Christopher May
title Commodifying the information age: Intellectual property rights, the state and the Internet
title_short Commodifying the information age: Intellectual property rights, the state and the Internet
title_full Commodifying the information age: Intellectual property rights, the state and the Internet
title_fullStr Commodifying the information age: Intellectual property rights, the state and the Internet
title_full_unstemmed Commodifying the information age: Intellectual property rights, the state and the Internet
title_sort commodifying the information age: intellectual property rights, the state and the internet
publisher University of Edinburgh
series SCRIPTed: A Journal of Law, Technology & Society
issn 1744-2567
publishDate 2004-09-01
description This article examines the role of the state and the rule of law in relation to the problem of intellectual property on the Internet. It concludes that the claim that states are no longer effective actors (and hence subjecting to them to political pressure is a waste of time) has conveniently omitted the states role as guarantor of the legislative infrastructure that underlies market activity. The state is critically required to legally support the markets of the new economy, and while its means of market intervention may have changed, this is not the same as withdrawal. The history of intellectual property has been a political battle to balance the rights of owners with the very important social benefits that flow from social availability of information and knowledge. Thus, states remain a key site for political mobilisation as regards the central legal structures of the (so-called) information society.
url http://www.law.ed.ac.uk/ahrb/script-ed/issue3/may.asp
work_keys_str_mv AT christophermay commodifyingtheinformationageintellectualpropertyrightsthestateandtheinternet
_version_ 1725234498474344448