 | Lawrence Lessig - Social Science - 2004 - 368 pages
Lawrence Lessig, “the most important thinker on intellectual property in the Internet era” (The New Yorker), masterfully argues that never before in human history has the power ... | |
 | Lawrence Lessig - Law - 2008 - 352 pages
The reigning authority on intellectual property in the Internet age, Lawrence Lessig spotlights the newest and possibly the most harmful culture war?a war waged against those ... | |
 | Lawrence Lessig - Computers - 2006 - 410 pages
Discusses cyberspace as a social community that is separate but built upon the Internet. | |
 | Anne Lamott - Medical - 1980 - 290 pages
A sensitive and reflective twenty-four-year-old woman chronicles her family's confrontation with illness when it is discovered that her father suffers from an inoperable brain ... | |
 | Lawrence Lessig - Law - 1999 - 297 pages
The man that the "Washington Post" called "one of the most brilliant legal minds of his generation" examines the common belief that cyberspace cannot be regulated--that it is ... | |
 | David Bollier - Business & Economics - 2002 - 260 pages
This text exposes the audacious attempts of companies to appropriate medical breakthroughs, public airwaves, outer space, state research, and even the DNA of plants and animals ... | |
 | Lawrence Lessig - Political Science - 2011 - 400 pages
In an era when special interests funnel huge amounts of money into our government-driven by shifts in campaign-finance rules and brought to new levels by the Supreme Court in ... | |
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