KnowRight 2012 | Knowledge Rights - Legal, Societal and Related Technological Aspects | ISBN 9783854032991

KnowRight 2012

Knowledge Rights - Legal, Societal and Related Technological Aspects

Buchcover KnowRight 2012  | EAN 9783854032991 | ISBN 3-85403-299-4 | ISBN 978-3-85403-299-1

KnowRight 2012

Knowledge Rights - Legal, Societal and Related Technological Aspects

KnowRight conferences have been organized since 1995 with the focus on regulation of the Knowledge Society. The invitation to KnowRight 2012 put this as follows: “Traditionally KnowRight focuses on the interaction between Intellectual Property Rights, Information Rights, ethical issues, civil society and information technology.” This description is a telling example of how observations on the new societal significance of intellectual property rights have prompted a need to discuss the topic more broadly. This is the discussion we continued in the KnowRight 2012 conference. KnowRight 2012 in Helsinki was co-organised by the University of Lapland, Institute of Legal Informatics, the Austrian Computer Society (Oesterreichische Computer Gesellschaft OCG), University of Helsinki, Department of Social Research – Media and Communication Studies, and the Centre for Computers and Law, University of Vienna, jointly with the German Society for Informatics (Gesellschaft für Informatik GI), the Intellectual Property Law Institute of the Jagiellonian University in Krakow, and the German Society for Law and Informatics (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Recht und Informatik DGRI). When the decision was made to hold KnowRight 2012 in Helsinki, we saw a keener focus on the impacts of societal changes on legal regulation. While this was prompted by developments in society, it also had much to do with the Network Society (NETSO) project, hosted by the University of Lapland in Rovaniemi, Finland. The research in the project examined changes in society and the state using approaches and perspectives drawn from multiple disciplines. A major contribution of NETSO consists in the views of Latin America on privacy. In 2013, the OCG intensified its initiatives in the field of data protection and held a symposium on surveillance in October 2013. A summary of presentations and the fruitful discussions is published in this volume. The volume contains new scientific results as well as contributions to practical problems and applications.
Main topics:
IT and Law in General Network Society (Knowledge Society, Information Society) Data Protection Electronic Communications IP Law Digital Rights Surveillance