tailieunhanh - Legal issues relating to the archiving of Internet resources in the UK, EU, USA and Australia
Since its origins as a researcher’s tool at CERN in the early 1990s, the World Wide Web has developed into an immense international complex of hyperlinked information. Some of the information available on the WWW simply mirrors that found in existing print publications. Much, however, is to be found nowhere else but (often temporarily) on the WWW. Some of that information, such as the webpages produced during and after the September 11 terrorist attacks, is of significant historical importance; other information, such as that found on medical websites, may be of long-term scientific value. The uniqueness of the information to be found on the medium, combined with. | Legal issues relating to the archiving of Internet resources in the UK EU USA and Australia A study undertaken for the JISC and Wellcome Trust Andrew Charlesworth University of Bristol Centre for IT and Law Version February 2003 The Wellcome Trust Legal issues related to the archiving ofInternet resources Page ii Author Details Andrew Charlesworth Centre for IT and Law Department of Law University of Bristol Wills Memorial Building Queens Road Bristol BS8 1RJ Telephone 0117 954 5355 Fax 0117 925 1870 E-mail Page iii Legal issues related to the archiving ofInternet resources Contents Management summary and Audience and Legal Report 1. . Preserving the . History in the . Law and the Web 2. The United . Legal . . . Content . Data . Existing Archives and . Future 3. The European . Legal . Existing Archives and . Denmark - and the Royal . Sweden - Kulturarw3. 30 . The Nordic Web Archive NWA .32 . France - Bibliothèque de . Future 4. The United . Legal . . . Data . Illegal Content .39 . Existing Archives and . Library of Congress - . The Internet . Future 5. . Legal . . . Data .
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