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Controlling access to content : regulating conditional access in digital broadcasting / natali helberger.
2005
P 23 HEL.C
Available at WIPO Library
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Items
Полное описание
Название
Controlling access to content : regulating conditional access in digital broadcasting / natali helberger.
Описание
xvi, 308 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
ISBN
9041123458 hardback
9789041123459 hardback
9789041123459 hardback
Альтернативный идентификационный номер
P 23 HEL.C
Резюме
"Control of access to content has become a vital aspect of many business models for modern broadcasting and online services. Using the example of digital broadcasting, the author reveals the resulting challenges for competition and public information policy and how they are addressed in European law governing competition, broadcasting, and telecommunications. Controlling Access to Content explores the relationship between electronic access control, freedom of expression and functioning competition. It scrutinizes the interplay between law and technique, and the ways in which broadcasting, telecommunications, and general competition law are inevitably interconnected."--Jacket.
Библиографическая и др. запись
Includes bibliographical references (pages 287-304) and index.
Запись форматированного содержания
1. Controlling access to content; 2. Access-controlled broadcasting and the free flow of information; 3. Conditional access and general competition law; 4. Conditional access and telecommunications law; 5. Sumary and conclusion.
Серии
Information Law Series.
Опубликовано
The Hague : Kluwer Law International, cop. 2005.
Язык(и)
eng
Запись имеется в
Review
"Control of access to content has become a vital aspect of many business models for modern broadcasting and online services. Using the example of digital broadcasting, the author reveals the resulting challenges for competition and public information policy and how they are addressed in European law governing competition, broadcasting, and telecommunications. Controlling Access to Content explores the relationship between electronic access control, freedom of expression and functioning competition. It scrutinizes the interplay between law and technique, and the ways in which broadcasting, telecommunications, and general competition law are inevitably interconnected."--Jacket.