NYC LOCAL: Tuesday 11 November 2008 Information Law Institute: Alfred Kahn on Antitrust Law and Network Neutrality - bsd.freebsd.misc
This is a discussion on NYC LOCAL: Tuesday 11 November 2008 Information Law Institute: Alfred Kahn on Antitrust Law and Network Neutrality - bsd.freebsd.misc ; what="official Information Law Institute announcement" note="second event listed further down page" main-issue="the right of free public, business, tribal, and private use of our Net" right-name-of-net-neutrality="common carriage" edits="some odd characters removed"> Subject: Two events from Information Law Institute at NYU Date: ...
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| note="second event listed further down page" main-issue="the right of free public, business, tribal, and private use of our Net" right-name-of-net-neutrality="common carriage" edits="some odd characters removed"> Subject: Two events from Information Law Institute at NYU Date: 12:00 - 2:00 PM Tuesday, November 11, 2008 Speaker: Dr. Alfred Kahn, NERA Economic Consulting Discussants: Professor Nicholas S. Economides, NYU Stern School of Business; Professor C. Scott Hemphill, Columbia Law School; Professor Michael Katz, NYU Stern School of Business Title: Antitrust Law and Network Neutrality Location: Snow Dining Room, 40 Washington Square South Dr. Alfred E. Kahn is the Robert Julius Thorne Professor of Political Economy, Emeritus, at Cornell University and is a Special Consultant to NERA. He has been Chairman of the New York Public Service Commission, Chairman of the Civil Aeronautics Board, Advisor to the President (Carter) on Inflation, and Chairman of the Council on Wage and Price Stability. Dr. Kahn received his bachelor's degree and master's degree from New York University and earned his doctorate in economics from Yale University. Following service in the US Army, he served as Chairman of the Department of Economics at Ripon College in Wisconsin . He later moved to the Department of Economics at Cornell University, where he remained until he took leave to assume the Chairmanship of the New York Public Service Commission. He has also served as a court-appointed expert in State of New York v. Kraft General Foods, Inc., et al., US District Court, SDNY, Advisor to New York Governor Carey on Telecommunications Policy, and as a consultant to the Attorneys General of New York, Pennsylvania, and Illinois, the Ford Foundation, the National Commission on Food Marketing, the US Federal Trade Commission, the Antitrust Division of the US Department of Justice, the US Department of Agriculture, and the City of Denver. For 15 years, he was a regular commentator on PBS's "The Nightly Business Report." Nicholas S. Economides, Professor of Economics, Stern School of Business, NYU. Nicholas Economides is an internationally recognized academic authority on network economics, electronic commerce and public policy. His fields of specialization and research include the economics of networks, especially of telecommunications, computers, and information, the economics of technical compatibility and standardization, industrial organization, the structure and organization of financial markets and payment systems, antitrust, application of public policy to network industries, strategic analysis of markets and law and economics. He holds a PhD and MA in Economics from the University of California at Berkeley, as well as a BSc in Mathematical Economics from the London School of Economics. His papers on Net Neutrality include Net Neutrality on the Internet: A Two-sided Market Analysis, http://www.stern.nyu.edu/networks/Ec...Neutrality.pdf and "Net Neutrality," Non-Discrimination and Digital Distribution of Content through the Internet, http://www.stern.nyu.edu/networks/Ec...Neutrality.pdf. His website on the Economics of Networks, http://www.stern.nyu.edu/networks/site.html, has been ranked as one of the top four economics sites worldwide by The Economist magazine. Professor Economides is Executive Director of the NET Institute, http://www.NETinst.org, a worldwide focal point for research on the economics of network and high technology industries. C. Scott Hemphill, Associate Professor of Law, Columbia Law School. Articles Editor, Stanford Law Review. Law clerk to Judge Richard A. Posner, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, 2002-2003. Law clerk to Justice Antonin Scalia, Supreme Court of the United States, 2003-2004. John M. Olin Fellow, Columbia Law School, 2004-2006. Joined the Columbia faculty in 2006. Current areas of teaching and research interest include antitrust and regulation of industry, intellectual property, the economic structure of legal practice, and statutory interpretation. Michael Katz joined New York University Stern School of Business as a Harvey Golub Professor of Business Leadership and a Professor of Management in July 2007. Professor Katz teaches courses in competitive and corporate strategy. Before joining NYU Stern, Professor Katz held the Sarin Chair in Strategy and Leadership at the University of California, Berkeley Haas School of Business. In addition to his academic service, Professor Katz has twice held positions in government. He served during the second Bush Administration as Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Economic Analysis in the U.S. Department of Justice Antitrust Division from September 2001 through January 2003. He served during the Clinton Administration as Chief Economist of the Federal Communications Commission from January 1994 through January 1996. Professor Katz has published numerous articles on the economics of network industries, intellectual property, telecommunications policy and antitrust enforcement. Professor Katz earned his A.B. from Harvard University and a D.Phil. from Oxford University, both in Economics. Abstract: This group of distinguished scholars will have a moderated discussion, starting from Professor Kahn's discussion of the issue, as set forth in his recent paper, The Threat of Latter Day Progressives to an Authentically Liberal Economic Policy, http://aei-brookings.org/admin/autho...p?fname=3D../= pdffiles/WP08-03_topostv1.pdf. In so doing, they will reference their own prior work (Hemphill's Network Neutrality, Rent Extraction and the False Promise of Zero-Price Regulation, http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.c...t_id=3D1119982, and Katz's The Economics of Product Line Restrictions, With An Applications to the Network Neutrality Debate, http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.c...t_id=3D1003391 as well as other relevant discussions of the issue, see, e.g., Thomas Rosch, Broadband Access Policy: The Role of Antitrust, http://www.ftc.gov/speeches/rosch/08...bandaccess.pdf, and Jonathan Nuechterlein, Antitrust Oversight of an Antitrust Dispute: An Institutional Perspective on the Net Neutrality Debate, http://www.reg-markets.org/publicati...php?pid=3D1257). In so doing, they will evaluate the potential role for antirust law as a check on the behavior of broadband providers, discussing the relevant economic issues, the institutional challenges for antitrust courts vis a vis a specialist regulator, and the potential hurdles posed by the Trinko case. Date: 12:00 - 2:00 PM Tuesday, November 18, 2008 Speaker: Professor Neil W. Netanel, UCLA School of Law Title: Copyright's Paradox - Exploring the Tensions between Copyright Law and Free Speech Location: Room 202, 40 Washington Square South Neil W. Netanel, is a Professor of Law at the University of California at Los Angeles School of Law. He teaches and writes extensively in the areas of copyright, international intellectual property, and media and telecommunications. His recent and forthcoming books include Copyright's Paradox (Oxford University Press, 2008); The Development Agenda: Global Intellectual Property and Developing Countries (Neil Weinstock Netanel ed., Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2008); and From Maimonides to Microsoft; The Jewish Law of Copyright Since the Birth of Print (Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2010) (with David Nimmer). Abstract: Neil Netanel will discuss his new book, Copyright's Paradox, which explores the tensions between copyright law and free speech. The United States Supreme Court famously labeled copyright "the engine of free expression" because it provides a vital economic incentive for much of the literature, commentary, music, art, and film that makes up our public discourse. Netanel argues that copyright can still serve this vital function in the digital age. Yet today's greatly expanded copyright law often does the opposite-it is used to quash news reporting, political commentary, church dissent, historical scholarship, cultural critique, artistic expression, and new media platforms for greater expressive diversity. Netanel provides concrete illustrations of how copyright often prevents speakers from effectively conveying their message, tracing this conflict across both traditional and digital media and considering current controversies such as the YouTube and MySpace copyright infringement cases, Hip-hop music and digital sampling, and the Google Book Search litigation. The author juxtaposes the dramatic expansion of copyright holders' proprietary control against the individual's newly found ability to digitally cut, paste, edit, remix, and distribute sound recordings, movies, TV programs, graphics, and texts the world over. He tests whether, in light of these developments and others, copyright still serves as a vital engine of free expression and he assesses how copyright does--and does not--burden speech. Taking First Amendment values as his lodestar, Netanel argues that copyright should be limited to how it can best promote robust debate and expressive diversity, and he presents a blueprint for how that can be accomplished. Information Law Institute at NYU http://www1.law.nyu.edu/ili/colloquia/index.html Distributed poC TINC: Jay Sulzberger Corresponding Secretary LXNY LXNY is New York's Free Computing Organization. http://www.lxny.org |
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