Technical communication, copyright, and the shrinking public domain

Laura J. Gurak University of Minnesota System
Journal
Computers and Composition
Published
1997-01-01
DOI
10.1016/s8755-4615(97)90004-9
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Citation Context

Cited by in this index (5)

  1. Computers and Composition
  2. Computers and Composition
  3. Computers and Composition
  4. Journal of Business and Technical Communication
  5. Technical Communication Quarterly

References (19)

  1. Basic Books, Inc. V. Kinko's Graphics Corporation, 89-2807 (S.D. N.Y. 1991).
  2. Cyberspace and the law: Your rights and duties in the on-line world
  3. The multifaceted and novel nature of using cyber-texts as research data
    Computer networking and scholarly communication in the twenty-first-century university
  4. Walking the labyrinth of multimedia law
    Technical Communication
  5. Law in a digital world
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  1. Copyright: Alive and well in the digital age
    Web Techniques
  2. The tell-tale ‘heart’: Determining ‘fair’ use of unpublished texts
    Law and Contemporary Problems  
  3. The public domain
    Emory Law Journal
  4. Introductory remarks
    Conference on College Composition and Communication
  5. Copyright bill pending in Congress threatens free exchange on internet
    Columbus Dispatch
  6. Forces of production: A social history of industrial automation
  7. Who owns digital works?
    Scientific American  
  8. The fair use privilege in copyright law
  9. The nature of copyright: A law of users' rights
  10. Team selected to develop digital object identifier system for publishing industry [press …
    Red Rock Eater online news service
  11. Princeton University Press v. Michigan Document Services, 94-1778, (U.S. 6th Cir. 1996).
  12. Authors and owners: The invention of copyright
  13. The copyright grab
    HotWired
  14. The law of texts: Copyright in the academy
    College English