HYPERTEXT '91 Proceedings of the third annual ACM conference on Hypertext
Computer programs and copyright's fair use doctrine
Communications of the ACM
Copyright's fair use doctrine and digital data
Communications of the ACM
Copyright and Work Made for Hire
IEEE Software
Trademark disputes in cyberspace
netWorker
Developing and distributing hypertext tools: legal inputs and parameter
HYPERTEXT '87 Proceedings of the ACM conference on Hypertext
Is virtual trespass an apt analogy?
Communications of the ACM
The Future of Ideas: The Fate of the Commons in a Connected World
The Future of Ideas: The Fate of the Commons in a Connected World
Ethics and Computing: Living Responsibly in a Computerized World
Ethics and Computing: Living Responsibly in a Computerized World
Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace
Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace
GigaLaw Guide to Internet Law
An ethical evaluation of web site linking
ACM SIGCAS Computers and Society
Live documents with contextual, data-driven information components
Proceedings of the 20th annual international conference on Computer documentation
Micro Law: Glitches in software copyrights
IEEE Micro
Shrink-wrap license restrictions-Preempted?
IEEE Micro
Content providers: "I was framed"
IEEE Micro
Amazon's One-Click Patent Loses Its Teeth
IEEE Micro
Maintaining electronic commerce systems: the legal issues
Journal of Software Maintenance: Research and Practice
Unsolicited communications as trespass?
Communications of the ACM - Service-oriented computing
Towards a documentation maturity model
Proceedings of the 21st annual international conference on Documentation
Liability for defective documentation
Proceedings of the 21st annual international conference on Documentation
Wanted: public policies that foster creation of knowledge
Communications of the ACM - New architectures for financial services
Developing a pyramid structure for managing web-centric documents
Proceedings of the 23rd annual international conference on Design of communication: documenting & designing for pervasive information
Promoting free dialog video corpora: the IFADV corpus example
Multimodal corpora
A Read-Only Distributed Hash Table
Journal of Grid Computing
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This paper addresses how intellectual property affects the Web in general, and content publishing on the Web in particular. Before its commercialization, the Web was perceived as being free and unregulated; this assumption is no longer true. Nowadays, content providers need to know which practices on the Web can result in potential legal problems. The vast majority of Web sites are developed by individual such as technical writers or graphic artists, and small organizations, which receive limited or no legal advice. As a result, these Web sites are developed with little or no regard to the legal constraints of intellectual property law. In order to help this group of people, the paper tries to answer the following question: What are the (typical) legal issues for Web content providers to watch out for? This paper gives an overview of these legal issues for intellectual property (i.e., copyrights, patents, and trademarks) and discusses relevant law cases. As a first step towards a more formal risk assessment of intellectual property issues, we introduce a maturity model that captures a Web site's intellectual property coverage with five different maturity levels.