14. Models of Regulation

A. Identifying the Speaker

  1. Myerson, Authors, Editors, and Uncommon Carriers: Identifying the "Speaker" Within the New Media, Supp., pp. 344-367

B. Using "Traditional" First Amendment Law to deal with Converging Technologies

  1. Krattenmaker and Powe, Converging First Amendment Principles for Converging Communications Media, Supp., pp. 368-379

  2. Negroponte, Bit by Bit, PC's are Becoming TV's. Or Is It the Other Way Around?, Supp., pp. 380

C. Analogies to Broadcasting and Cable

  1. Sunstein, The First Amendment in Cyberspace, Supp., pp. 381-405

D. Libertarian Responses

  1. Volokh, Cheap Speech and What It Will Do., Supp., pp. 406-429

E. "Techno-law"-- Technological Norms and Social Norms

  1. Johnson and Post, Law and Borders-- The Rise of Law in Cyberspace, Supp., pp. 430-447

  2. Lessig, The Zones of Cyberspace, Supp., pp. 448-452
  3. Lessig, The Path of Cyberlaw, Supp., pp. 453-459
  4. Reidenberg, Governing Networks and Rule-Making in Cyberspace, Supp., pp. 460-471
  5. Post, Anarchy, State and the Internet, Supp., pp. 472-489
  6. Kline and Burstein, Is Government Obsolete?, Supp., pp. 490-501

F. Optional Links

  1. Schlachter, Cyberspace, the Free Market and the Free Marketplace of Ideas: Recognizing Legal Differences in Computer Bulletin Board Functions

  2. Johnson and Post, And How Shall the Net Be Governed?: A Meditation on the Relative Virtues of Decentralized, Emergent Law