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Silicon FlatironsA Center for Law, Technology, and Entrepreneurship at the University of Colorado |
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Open Source, Open Standards, and the Future of the InternetMarch 3, 2005The Internet's evolution from an academic curiosity to a transformative force of economic and social change continues to baffle observers and challenge policymakers. In the early 1990s, the government made its initial steps to embrace private enterprise in the Internet world and to encourage the development of proprietary technologies, allowing, for example, software patents and encouraging international compliance with stronger intellectual property rights. At the same time, leading standard setting bodies, such as the World Wide Web Consortium, have championed the role of open standards and open source technologies to preserve the Internet's traditional commitment to openness and the end-to-end principle that facilitates innovation and entry at the edges of the network. As the Internet evolves, and new proprietary applications continue to take hold, companies, lawyers, and policymakers must make sense of a complex set of developments. In this conference, we will discuss the sustainability and legal status of open source licensing as a regime for facilitating the Internet's commitment to openness while inviting commercial development. Similarly, we will explore whether and how open standards can thrive in an environment where firms are often relying on intellectual property protection and business strategies that encourage proprietary development. To put these questions in perspective, we will hear from Michael Gallagher, the President's top information policy advisor, as well as an array of business, legal, and policy professionals.
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Conference VideosDownload videos of select prior conferences here. Videos of select prior Silicon Flatirons conferences can also be ordered on DVD, VHS, or CD by contacting videos@silicon-flatirons.org Conference Papers and Speech TextsSelect papers from our conferences are published in the Journal on Telecommunications and High Technology Law. To subscribe, contact the journal at jthtl@colorado.edu. |
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