Chasing Moore's Law: Information Technology Policy in the U.S. - Softcover

 
9781891121333: Chasing Moore's Law: Information Technology Policy in the U.S.

Inhaltsangabe

This book provides an introductory overview to all of the major policy issues in the United States related to information technology. These issues include federal funding of research that helped to create the Internet; telecommunications issues such as regulations about wireless technologies; computer security and homeland defense; governance and use of the Internet such as spam, viruses, electronic voting, taxation of online commerce, and child pornography; privacy; intellectual property issues such as copyright infringement related to peer-to-peer sharing of music and video files, or trademark infringement through the misuse of domain names (cybersquatting); antitrust in the software industry; uneven access to information technology in poor, rural, and minority communities (Digital Divide); and visas for foreign workers. Every chapter identifies the main players, the history of legislation and court cases in this area, and describes recent events. Accessible and interesting to both policy people and technical computing people, as well as to any computer user or IT worker who wanted a general understanding of these issues. The book will help policy people, most of whom are generalists, to understand the basic issues of IT policy. The book will also help IT professionals to understand the process by which their technology is politically controlled.

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Críticas

This book is a landmark. Its ten chapters provide an accessible yet authoritative introduction to the major topics surrounding information technology policy in the United States, - topics such as privacy, Internet governance, workforce, computer security, antitrust, R&D funding, intellectual property, and the digital divide. This book will prove invaluable to all who must chase Moore9s Law: - those who seek to understand and shape the laws and policies that must keep pace with the exponential rate of change in the information technology field."
Edward D. Lazowska, Co-Chair of the President9s Information Technology Advisory Committee

Reseña del editor

This book provides an introductory overview to all of the major policy issues in the United States related to information technology. These issues include federal funding of research that helped to create the Internet; telecommunications issues such as regulations about wireless technologies; computer security and homeland defense; governance and use of the Internet such as spam, viruses, electronic voting, taxation of online commerce, and child pornography; privacy; intellectual property issues such as copyright infringement related to peer-to-peer sharing of music and video files, or trademark infringement through the misuse of domain names (cybersquatting); antitrust in the software industry; uneven access to information technology in poor, rural, and minority communities (Digital Divide); and visas for foreign workers. Every chapter identifies the main players, the history of legislation and court cases in this area, and describes recent events. Accessible and interesting to both policy people and technical computing people, as well as to any computer user or IT worker who wanted a general understanding of these issues. The book will help policy people, most of whom are generalists, to understand the basic issues of IT policy. The book will also help IT professionals to understand the process by which their technology is politically controlled.

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Weitere beliebte Ausgaben desselben Titels

9781891121357: Chasing Moore's Law: Information Technology Policy in the U.S.

Vorgestellte Ausgabe

ISBN 10:  1891121359 ISBN 13:  9781891121357
Verlag: SciTech Publishing Inc, 2004
Hardcover