Exact(18)
As code increasingly penetrates daily life, it becomes de facto law that regulates behaviour, argues Lawrence Lessig, a Stanford law professor, in his book "Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace" (Basic Books, 1999).
One leading light is Lawrence Lessig, whose most influential book, "Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace", argues that computer code is just as important in regulating behaviour as legal code.
His recent book, "Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace" (Basic Books) includes a closely argued brief for protecting the freedoms of "original cyberspace" from the constraints imposed by commerce or copyright.
"It is like a market for forged banknotes...you can't argue for [such a] market simply because it trades," says Rishab Aiyer Ghosh of the University of Maastricht and editor of a recent book, "CODE: Collaboration, Ownership and the Digital Economy".
In his 2006 book "Code: Version 2.0", a legal scholar, Lawrence Lessig noted that online communities were transcending the limits of conventional states and predicted that members of these communities would find it "difficult to stand neutral in this international space".To many, that forecast still smacks of cyber-fantasy.
Professor Weinberg's Harvard dissertation, published in 2003 as the book "Code Green: Money-Driven Hospitals and the Dismantling of Nursing," chronicled the dismantling of primary nursing at Beth Israel after its merger with Deaconess Medical Center in 1999 and Dr. Clifford's departure.
Similar(41)
Mad was a comic book that made fun of comic books, and in 1955 Gaines turned it into a magazine, thereby evading the restrictions of the comic-book code.
TV has finally cracked the comic-book code, or at least jemmied the floodgates open: The Flash joins existing adaptations such as Arrow, Agents of SHIELD, The Walking Dead, Gotham and Constantine.
Meanwhile, dream books — coded guides to symbols and portents in dreams — became enormously popular, keeping alive the idea of dreams as prophecies.
The cover of Geoff Cox's new book, Speaking Code.
When Canadian filmmaker Nicholas de Pencier picked up the 2013 book, Black Code, he was by no means an expert in cyberspace.
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