Summary
From illegal music downloads to plagiarized school papers, digital piracy is a complicated issue that can affect teens directly. Struggles over intellectual property, piracy, and copyright shape what people can and can't do online everyday, and it's possible for Internet users to wind up on the wrong side of the law without realizing it.
Newly updated and expanded, Digital Piracy, Second Edition provides a guide to this often vague world of copyright, intellectual property, and related legal issues. Looking at real-life examples, coverage includes the landmark $1.9 million judgment in favor of the Recording Industry Association of America over illegally downloaded music. This title also explains why original, user-created videos may be removed from hosting sites, such as YouTube, if they contain copyrighted images or music in the background. In addition, it gives readers the information they need to protect their intellectual property on the Internet.
Chapters and topics include:
- The history of digital piracy and copyright
- Intellectual property in the age of the Internet
- Technologies of digital piracy
- Protecting your work and the work of others online
- File-sharing safety.
About the Author(s)
Nathan W. Fisk is an assistant professor of cybersecurity education in the USF College of Education, and the Community and Outreach Liaison for the Cyber Florida. He is among the inaugural group of five Fulbright Cybersecurity Scholars, having been invited to the London School of Economics in Fall 2016 to perform research on family discourses of youth privacy online. Fisk is additionally a USF faculty affiliate with the department of Women and Gender Studies and a research associate with the Florida Center for Instructional Technology (FCIT).
Marcus K. Rogers, Ph.D., CISSP, CCCI, DFCP, is the executive director for cybersecurity programs in the Purdue Polytechnic Institute at Purdue University, a former police officer, and the editor in chief of the Journal of Digital Forensics Security and Law. He is Professor, Fellow of the Center for Education and Research in Information Assurance and Security (CERIAS), Fellow of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences (AAFS), and past chair of the digital and multimedia science section of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences.