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Softwars: The Legal Battles for Control of the Global Software Industry

Autor Anthony L. Clapes
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 25 ian 1993 – vârsta până la 17 ani
Softwars: The Legal Battles for Control of the Global Software Industry explains why the future of the computer industry depends on the nature and extent of intellectual property protection for the software that controls computer hardware. The softwars it discusses are the confrontations taking place in the courtroom, in the legislative chambers and in professional symposia around the world in which the scope of intellectual property protection for computer software is being debated and, in some cases, determined. In a highly readable and entertaining series of essays, the author explains the influences of clones, hackers, vendors of proprietary systems, vendors of open systems, software patents, copyrights and trade secrets on the evolution of the industry. No other book to date has provided either as lucid a description of the major litigation involving software protection or as cogent an analysis of the economic and strategic consequences of that litigation.Softwars is divided into five parts, each consisting of two or more essays. In Part I, the author discusses the nature of computer programs and the history of intellectual property protection for computer programs. Part II deals with the look and feel issue; it explains what constitutes infringement of rights in screen displays and other aspects of user interfaces, and the importance of the issue. Part III concerns the practice known as reverse engineering of software; who does it, why, and what the legal and economic consequences are. In Part IV, the reader is led to the boundaries of the legal debate, where the limits of the law are being tested. Part V is the author's conclusion and prognostications for the future of the computer industry and the law. Anyone interested in the intersection of law and technology, and particularly those involved in the computer industry, will find Softwars valuable and compelling reading.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780899305974
ISBN-10: 0899305970
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Notă biografică

ANTHONY L. CLAPES is Assistant General Counsel at IBM, responsible for managing litigation matters, including intellectual property ligitation. Mr. Clapes is a frequent lecturer at seminars on intellectual property protection for software. In 1991, he was named one of the leading high-tech intellectual property lawyers in the United States by the National Law Journal. He is the author of a seminal book on copyright law and computer programs, Software, Copyright and Competition: The Look and Feel of the Law (Quorum, 1989).

Cuprins

PrefaceAt the War CollegeA Brief Discourse on the Spoils of War: The Nature of That Which Is Being ContestedAerial Reconnaisance: The First Two Decades of the SoftwarsFear and Loathing, Look and FeelGaining Enlightenment from the Lotus SutraAfter the Fall: The Weak Protectionists Regroup"You Could Look It Up": Why Copyright Law Protects the Yellow Pages But Not the White PagesNever-Ending Stories: Ashton Tate v. Fox, Apple v. Microsoft and the Future of User InterfacesHeavy Artillery: The Patent Laws as Armaments in the SoftwarsEngineers of MonotonyBeyond Arbitration: Fujitsu and IBM Take Their Show on the RoadAt Sea Over Reverse Engineering: The Bonito Boats CaseAntipodean Logic: Autodesk v. Martin Dyason"Been Down so Long it Looks Like Up to Me": IBM v. AMIThe Lady Vanishes: An Academic Ventures into the Real World and Retreats in DismayThinking about the UnthinkableCircuit Theory: Nonliteral Copying by Any Other NameThe Outer Limits: Laseroomb v. ReynoldsRevenge of the Nerds: Guerillas, Terrorists, Peaceniks and the Legion of Doom"All that Glitters": Nintendo v. Atari, the Nightmare ScenarioSome Animals Are More Equal than Others: "Open Systems", Truce or Consequences?Conclusion for Now"The One Who Controls the Software. . . . ": A Meditation on the Future of the Softwars