1st Edition

Law, Technology and Cognition The Human Element in Online Copyright Infringement

By Hayleigh Bosher Copyright 2020
    204 Pages
    by Routledge

    204 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book considers a new approach to online copyright infringement. Rather than looking at the subject within a purely technological context, it provides legal analysis from a human perspective. This book highlights that there are three key instances in which the capacity of a human mind intersects with the development of copyright regulation: (1) the development of copyright statutory law; (2) the interpretation of the copyright statutory law the judiciary; and (3) human interaction with new technology.

    Using a novel framework for constructing digital perspectives, the author, Dr Hayleigh Bosher, analyses the laws relating to online copyright infringement. She provides insights into why the law appears as it does, shedding light on the circumstances of how it came to pass and demonstrates a clear malfunction in the interpretation and application of copyright law to online activities that derives from the disconnect between the technological and the human perspectives. The book proposes putting the human element back into copyright analysis to enable the return of reason where it has been lost, and provide a clearer, more consistent and fair legal regulation of online copyright infringement.

    Law, Technology and Cognition: The Human Element in Online Copyright Infringement will be of interest to students, academics, researchers, as well as practitioners.

    0. Introduction  1. The Human Element in the Story of Online Copyright Infringement  2. The Internal and External Perspectives of the Internet  3. The Human Element in Reproduction  4. Online Copyright Infringement by Storage and Transient Copying  5. The Human Element in Communication to the Public  6. Communication to the Public  7. Concluding the Story

    Biography

    Dr Hayleigh Bosher is a Lecturer in Intellectual Property Law at Brunel University London, as well as Visiting Research Fellow at the Centre for Intellectual Property, Policy and Management. She is also Book Review Editor for the specialist IP blog IPKat, Director of the Intellectual Property Awareness Network (IPAN), Deputy Editor of the European Trade Mark Reports, founder of the World IP Women (WIPW) network and an Intellectual Property & Entertainment Law consultant.