Communication Law,Technological Change,and the New Normal |
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Authors: | Enrique Armijo |
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Abstract: | Our current debates concerning communication law and policy would have been unrecognizable to us twenty years ago. Few predicted in 1993, when the World Wide Web was just five years old, that in two decades, the functions of a word processor, camcorder, telephone, camera and pager could all fit within a single, palm-sized device — let alone that the same device could be connected to hundreds of millions of like devices and distribute text, photographs and video in milliseconds. Today's prognostications are often tomorrow's follies. But as the articles in this issue show, communication scholars continue the task of fitting current law into the changed communication spaces created by the digital revolution. After surveying these changes, this article argues that over the next two decades, communications-related technological change will be felt in two areas that have long been the province of state tort law: reputation and privacy. |
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