default search action
European Journal of Law and Technology, Volume 7
Volume 7, Number 1, 2016
- Catherine Easton:
Editorial: BILETA 2015 Conference Special Issue.
- Mark Leiser:
AstroTurfing, 'CyberTurfing' and other online persuasion campaigns. - Franziska Boehm, Tim Hey, Robert Ortner:
How to measure IT security awareness of employees: a comparison to e-mail surveillance at the workplace. - Wilson Chow, Michael Ng:
Disintermediator or another intermediary? E-simulation platform for professional legal education at University of Hong Kong. - Daniel Berger, Charles Wild:
Turned on, tuned in, but not dropped out: enhancing the student experience with popular social media platforms.
Volume 7, Number 2, 2016
- Abhilash Nair:
Editorial.
- Milda Macenaite:
Protecting children's privacy online: a critical look to four European self-regulatory initiatives. - Guido Noto La Diega, Ian Walden:
Contracting for the 'Internet of Things': looking into the Nest. - Felipe Romero Moreno, James Griffin:
Criminal copyright proposals: are they appropriate in the information era?
Volume 7, Number 3, 2016
- Paul Maharg, Abhilash Nair:
Editorial - Open legal journals in the space of flows: the future of legal journal publication.
- Elizabeth Anne Kirley:
The robot as cub reporter: law's emerging role in cognitive journalism. - Rosa Maria Ballardini, Juho Lindman, Iñigo Flores Ituarte:
Co-creation, commercialization and intellectual property - challenges with 3D printing. - Krzysztof Garstka:
Looking above and beyond the blunt expectation: specified request as the recommended approach to intermediary liability in cyberspace. - Andrew Mowbray, Philip Chung, Graham Greenleaf:
A free access, automated law citator with international scope: the LawCite project. - Charles Barker, Claire Sparrow:
Technology and presentation skills teaching: activity theory as a tool for the design and evaluation of strategies for the use of video as a learning tool in presentation skills teaching.
- Adekemi Olufunmilola Omotubora:
Comparative perspectives on cybercrime legislation in Nigeria and the UK - a case for revisiting the "hacking" offences under the Nigerian Cybercrime Act 2015.
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.