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On Infringements: When Computer Add Ons and Peripherals Should
(And Should Not) Be Considered Infringing Derivative Works Under
Lewis Galoob Toys, Inc. v. Nintendo of America, Inc., and Other
Recent Decisions, 15:615
Against Software
Patents: The League for Programming Freedom, 14:297
California v. FCC:
A Victory for the States, 13:233
Can a Computer be
an Author? Copyright Aspects of Artificial Intelligence, 4:707
Carrying Copyright
Too Far: The Inadequacy of the Current System of Protection for
Computer Programs, 12:81
The Case for
Software Patent Protection, 14:315
Control of, and
Access to, On Line Computer Data Bases: Some First Amendment
Issues in Videotex and Teletext, 5:1
Copyright
Protection of Object Code Computer Programs: Can Courts Determine
Copying?, 9:255
Copyright
Protection for Video Games, Computer Programs and Other Cybernetic
Works, 5:477
Copyright
Registration for Computer Programs and Screen Displays, 15:671
The
Copyrightability of Computer Program Screen Displays, 10:859
Cyberspace, the
Free Market and the Free Marketplace of Ideas: Recognizing Legal
Differences in Computer Bulletin Board Functions, 16:87
Disclosure of
Computer Re enactments During Pretrial Discovery, 16:691
The Future of
Software Copyright Protection: Arbitration v. Litigation, 12:1
The Games People
Play: Sega v. Accolade and the Right to Reverse Engineer Software,
15:557
The High Cost of
Convenience: Antitrust Law Violations in the Computerized
Ticketing Services Industry, 16:349
As Interactive
Cable Enters, Does Privacy Go Out the Window?, 4:781
Introduction to
Computer Law, 14:215
Introduction to the
Software Patent Debate, 14:295
It is Time to Put
"Look and Feel" Out to Pasture, 15:605
Juvenile Computer
Crime - Hacking: Criminal and Civil Liability, 7:335
Legal Protection
for Computer Programs, 1980 1992: A Bibliography of Law
Related Materials, 15:211
Let Technology
Counteract Technology: Protecting the Medical Record in the
Computer Age, 15:455
Libel Law in the
Twenty First Century: Defamation and the Electronic Newspaper, 3:379
Lotus Development
v. Paperback Software: The Overextension of Copyright Protection
to Functional Aspects of Computer Software, 14:271
The Nature of
Copyright Analysis for Computer Programs: Copyright Law
Professors' Brief
Amicus Curiae in Lotus v. Borland, 16:657
Proposed Prior Art
Legislation for Computer Program Patent Applications: Creating a
Potential for Coexisting Patents, 13:57
PTO Perspective on
Recent Developments in Patent Protection for Computer Hardware and
Software, 16:627
Real Life Trial
Issues in Software Copyright Infringement Cases or How Those
"Look and Feel" Lawyers are Proving "Look and
Feel": Reviewing Demonstrative Techniques, 16:559
Software "Look
and Feel" Protection in the 1990s, 15:571
VADs, VARs, and
Authorized Dealers - Do the Franchise Laws Apply to the Computer
Industry?, 12:33
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