Author: Peter Huber
Edition:
Binding: Hardcover
ISBN: 0195116143
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Features:
Edition:
Binding: Hardcover
ISBN: 0195116143
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Features:
Law and Disorder in Cyberspace: Abolish the FCC and Let Common Law Rule the Telecosm
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Additional Publishing Information Full subtitle: Abolish the FCC and Let Common Law Rule the Telecosm. By Peter Huber. From the First Printing by Oxford University Press in 1997.This measures about 9-1/2" x 6-3/8" and has 265 pages, ending with an Index. Condition Enlarge the photo above. Lighter storage on the dust jacket in very good condition. The boards are like new and the pages are in very good, near new condition.No names or other markings noted.From clean, smoke-free home. Combined Post. Download Law and Disorder in Cyberspace computer ebooks
. Congress created the Federal Radio Commission in 1927, what we now call cyberspace was just "ether." Broadcasting had only begun to carry tinny human voices and music across the fields and prairies, while Sunday afternoon phone calls to Aunt Mabel snaked through wires below, courtesy of an army of operators who switched each circuit by hand. It didn't take long, though, for the wires and airwaves to fill up with untrammeled chatter, so much so that by 1934 after complaints by the Navy that ship to shore communications had become hopelessly chaotic, and under the unproved but widely held belief that the broadcast spectrum was a finite natural resource all federal authority over electronic communications was forged into a new, powerful
Law and Disorder in Cyberspace: Abolish the FCC and Let Common Law Rule the Telecosm
Categories: Antitrust law->United States, Telecommunication->Law and legislation->United States. Contributors: Peter Huber - Author. Format: Hardcover
Oxford University Press USA 1997. Hardcover. New/New. Brand new gift quality hardcover in jacket. Please email for photos.
by Peter Huber - Oxford University Press (1997) - Hardback - ISBN 0195116143 9780195116144
Law and Disorder in Cyberspace Free
It didn't take long, though, for the wires and airwaves to fill up with untrammeled chatter, so much so that by 1934 after complaints by the Navy that ship to shore communications had become hopelessly chaotic, and under the unproved but widely held belief that the broadcast spectrum was a finite natural resource all federal authority over electronic communications was forged into a new, powerful