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This single book has all you've
been looking for, doesn't it ?



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by Christopher Heath, Anselm Kamperman Sanders




Living in UK? Get It Here!
Living in Deutschland? Get It Here!
Living in France? Get It Here!
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Reviews Book Description What exactly do policymakers and journalists mean when they refer to the `information age'? What bearing do the `problems' they describe and the `solutions' they offer have on current global realities? Specifically, what does the Euro-American concept of intellectual property mean in a global context? Why is the idea of electronic commerce so difficult to `export'? These questions which clearly identify issues of crucial importance for the coming decades of human history are given full weight, stripped of ideology, in this provocative book, based on the papers presented at a seminar sponsored by the Macau Institute of European Studies (IEEM) in June 2000. Although there are no clear answers, the accounts and analyses presented here provide a wealth of detail that comes as close as we can expect at this date to the facts of the case. The focus is on East Asia, Greater China in particular, an area which (most social theorists will agree) offers the most revealing social context for the examination of emerging global trends in this field. Among the vital issues covered are the following: + the collision of indigenous knowledge with the Euro-American patent concept; + the idea of `digital commons'; + software piracy and trade `blacklists'; + the quality of information on offer, or (as the philosopher Baudrillard puts it) `more and more information, less and less meaning'; + the hidden value judgments of information technologies; + the postponement of more fundamental reforms caused by the belief in the possibilities of the `new age'; + the loss of values associated with traditional categories of information; + the commodification of information; and commercialization of the Internet as protection against its use by pornographers and racists. By examining the status of information technologies in East Asia, and the pressure to grant a level of legal protection to intellectual property owners that is hardly compatible with the present level of economic development in these countries, Intellectual Property in the Digital Age: Challenges for Asia offers invaluable insights into how the Internet and other digital technologies can be fairly and meaningfully regulated worldwide. Above all, these essays prove that we must appreciate how our understandings in this area are socially constructed, and we must look to the future with a broader cultural perspective if the global `information society' is really to materialize.
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Copyright (c) by Eugene Kisly and Victor Kisly, 1999-2000
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