Author Archive for marcelo.thompson
Network Singularity: Legal Pluralism Under Siege
0 Comments Published by marcelo.thompson October 2nd, 2009 in *OIINEWSLaw Tech Talk | Law and Technology Centre Mr. Marcelo Thompson, Faculty of Law, The University of Hong Kong Abstract: When the United States Federal Communications Commission released its Memorandum Opinion and Order on the Comcast case last year, more than the future of the Internet was at stake. What was at stake was the very [...]
Technological Singularity and Technological Neutrality
0 Comments Published by marcelo.thompson February 22nd, 2009 in *OIINEWSSo, here goes a Sci-Fi thought (or perhaps not quite). If singularity theories turn out to be right, what to make of a principle of technological neutrality (in law and politics)? Even if we assume the internal coherence of such a principle. Even if we assume that there is a sound legal theoretical way of [...]
Chasing the Flame in a Networked World: Notes on Fernando Henrique Cardoso’s 2008 Oxford Lecture
0 Comments Published by marcelo.thompson February 19th, 2009 in *OIINEWSDownload in PDF Below you will find some notes I wrote last month upon request of the British Council, on the occasion of the Sergio Vieira de Mello Annual Lecure, given by Professor Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Former President of Brazil. A webcast of the event can be found here. The views conveyed in these notes express [...]
Brazilian Government Formalizes its Intention to Adopt ODF
1 Comment Published by marcelo.thompson August 28th, 2008 in *OIINEWSSome very significant bodies of the Brazilian Government and government-owned corporations have just signed an agreement to adopt Open Document Format as their standard format for the exchange of electronic documents. While the agreement merely conveys their intention of adopting ODF, it also firms up their commitment to “plan, organize, and enable such policy in the federal government”, one official said. The announcement [...]
So Secure Hyderabad: the Demise of a Rights-Based Discourse in the IGF?
0 Comments Published by marcelo.thompson August 22nd, 2008 in *OIINEWSMany think of the Internet Governance Forum as being nothing but a multi-stakeholders monumental talk shop. Even if so, that would not be so hopeless for an area in which customs play a decisive role; an area to whose build-up the showcase of state practices and formalization of diferent levels of opinio juris very widely contribute: the area of international human rights law. Though derided as a talk [...]
Charlatans, FLOSS, and the Brazilian Supreme Court
0 Comments Published by marcelo.thompson August 21st, 2008 in *OIINEWSBrazilian Sunday TV news program “Fantástico” showed in its last edition that a gang of supposed fraudsters would be offering their services to Brazilian politicians. The services in question would involve the manipulation of electronic voting systems to elect illegitimate candidates in the upcoming municipal suffrage.
Identidade, Capacidade e Totalidade: Repensando as Fronteiras da Personalidade no Brasil
0 Comments Published by marcelo.thompson July 14th, 2008 in UncategorizedO Documento Nacional de Identidade Eletrônico Na terça-feira passada o Presidente da República em exercício anunciou a adoção de um novo documento nacional de identidade para os cidadãos brasileiros. O documento será armazenado em um cartão inteligente, que provavelmente conterá um certificado digital emitido no âmbito da Infra-estrutura de Chaves Públicas Brasileira — a ICP-Brasil, [...]
My last post discussed the vagueness-precision dichotomy in light of Canadian copyright reform. Ironically, the matter resurfaces today, now in the UK. IPKat brings news on the Higgs case, in which Neil Higgs, also known as “MrModchips“, escaped conviction arguably because of the complexities of English copyright law.
The Place of Neutrality in the Canadian Copyright Maze
3 Comments Published by marcelo.thompson June 22nd, 2008 in *OIINEWSOsgoode Hall Prof Pina D’Agostino has published a sensible column on Bill C-61 in the Toronto Star. Much unlike Bill C-61, her message was clear — we need to police our tone to offer a sober academic perspective on Canadian copyright reform — as she advocated legal intervention to balance the interests of users, owners, [...]
Fairness in the IETF, an on the Internet?
0 Comments Published by marcelo.thompson June 19th, 2008 in *OIINEWSRevisiting Kathy Bowrey’s insightful Law & Internet Cultures I noticed that she opens the book with an intriguing remark about IETF RFCs. She notes that RFC 2026 prompts IETF technical standards to be “designed to help facilitate best practice in terms of [inter alia] fairness”. This is a powerful assertion. But is it right?
Search
About
Marcelo Thompson is a Research / Assistant Professor and Deputy Director of the Master of Laws in IT & IP Law at The University of Hong Kong, Faculty of Law. He is currently wrapping up his Doctorate of Philosophy at the OII.
Longer entries are truncated. Click the headline of an entry to read it in its entirety.Archives
- April 2012
- March 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- May 2010
- January 2010
- October 2009
- February 2009
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- July 2007
- March 2007
- January 2007
- December 2006
- November 2006
- October 2006
Categories
- *OIINEWS (41)
- Uncategorized (6)
