QUOTE(Apathetic @ Mon 5th October 2009, 4:30pm)
QUOTE(LaraLove @ Mon 5th October 2009, 4:11pm)
QUOTE(A Horse With No Name @ Mon 5th October 2009, 3:35pm)
Haha, you got a shout out.
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=...oldid=318106334editing on behalf of a banned user lawl
It appears that elementary English is not pre-requisite for Arbcom membership. (IMG:
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I actually wrote up an article for One on "Law of the Horse" (which he half-jokingly requested) but he never put online. If anyone wants to post it, be my guest -- it is all formatted and ready to run:
'''Law of the Horse''' is a term that was used in the mid-1990s to define the state of [[cyberlaw]] during the nascent years of the Internet’s development as a socio-economic force of information.
The term first gained prominence in a 1996 cyberlaw conference presentation by Judge [[Frank H. Easterbrook]] of the [[United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit]]. Easterbrook, who was also a professor at the [[University of Chicago]], later published his presentation in the University of Chicago Law Review as ''Cyberspace and the Law of the Horse,'' in which he argued against the notion of defining cyberlaw as a unique section of legal studies and litigation.<ref>{{cite news | author =Amy Harmon | title =The Law Where There Is No Land; A Legal System Built on Precedents Has Few of Them in the Digital World | publisher =The New York Times | date =March 16, 1998 | url =http://www.nytimes.com/1998/03/16/business/law-where-there-no-land-legal-system-built-precedents-has-few-them-digital-world.html?pagewanted=2 | accessdate=2009-09-25}}</ref> Easterbrook cited [[Gerhard Casper]] as coining the expression “law of the horse,†and stated that Casper’s arguments against specialized or niche legal studies applied to cyberlaw:
<blockquote>
“...the best way to learn the law applicable to specialized endeavors is to study general rules. Lots of cases deal with sales of horses; others deal with people kicked by horses; still more deal with the licensing and racing of horses, or with the care veterinarians give to horses, or with prizes at horse shows. Any effort to collect these strands into a course on 'The Law of the Horse' is doomed to be shallow and to miss unifying principles.â€<ref>{{cite news | author =Frank H. Easterbrook | title =Cyberspace and the Law of the House | publisher =University of Chicago Law Review | date =1996 | url =http://www.law.upenn.edu/fac/pwagner/law619/f2001/week15/easterbrook.pdf | accessdate=2009-09-25}}</ref></blockquote>
Easterbrook’s theory was challenged by [[Lawrence Lessig]], a professor at [[Stanford Law School]], in an April 1997 article ''The Law of the Horse: What Cyberlaw Might Teach.'' Lessig’s article, which was first presented at the [[Boston University]] Law School Faculty Workshop, argued that legal perceptions and rules would need to evolve as the cyberspace environment developed and expanded.<ref>{{cite news | author =Wired News Staff | title =Newly Appointed 'Special Master' To Probe MS Issues | publisher =Wired Magazine | date =December 11, 1997 | url =http://www.wired.com/techbiz/media/news/1997/12/9118 | accessdate=2009-09-25}}</ref>
<ref>{{cite news | author =Bret A. Fausett | title =Hooray RIAA | publisher =Dr. Dobb’s Journal | date =February 12, 2003 | url =http://www.ddj.com/architect/184411637 | accessdate=2009-09-25}}</ref>
==References==
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Computer law]]
[[Category:Cyberspace]]
(Mod note) Removed code that broke the thread. -DerktarSorry about that, Derktar. (IMG:
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This post has been edited by A Horse With No Name: