Word: copyright
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...really intense processes that have to be perfect," says Lonergan. Just as fine have been the cultural calibrations of the project. In working with the artists, Perkins and Croft have had to traverse the country by plane, 4WD and e-mail, signing off on designs while negotiating sensitive copyright issues with Paris; in one case, an artist's contract couldn't be signed until the floodwaters had receded from her remote community. "It's not only a cross-nation collaboration," says Perkins. "It's inter-cultural as well, and then also between the strands of architecture, curatorship and the arts...
...half years, I’ve imposed myself on your editorial page with oft-inane, always obscure commentary about the ways technology has transformed and will transform our lives. I’ve spoken about privacy, about copyright, about free discourse and the democratic process, and about how to procrastinate during reading period…and it all ends here...
...Copyright holders are afraid of computers becoming copy machines, phone companies are concerned that Google is using their lines for its own profits, and even the government has worried that encryption technology might someday endanger its ability to enforce the law. In each case a suggestion has been made that, through rules or fines, makes invention expensive, creating long term costs that are impossible to foresee but potentially disastrous...
...open up eateries in the United States. Pasteur is the name of a well-known avenue in Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City. The Pho Pasteur, for example, in Carrolton, Texas has no connection to Le’s chain. Although Pho Pasteur is not a copyright protected name, Le has copyrighted his own name, Le’s, because he feels a personal connection to the restaurants he created under the previous title. “I made it become successful in this city. The name became famous because I did it. I built...
...than failure to deliver, but you can bet it’s very rare,” Todd Gitlin, a professor of journalism and sociology at Columbia University, wrote in an e-mail yesterday. According to legal experts, it is possible to plagiarize a work without infringing on its copyright. “If I use a sentence from another work and pass it off as my own without citing it or quoting it, that might not be copyright infringement, because I wouldn’t necessarily need permission to use it,” Lawrence Lessig, a prominent intellectual...