'This book is useful for researchers, practitioners, post-graduate students, lawyers, judges, policy makers, and most importantly to all those who are involved in communication standardization activities in any capacity.' Mubashir Husain Rehmani, IEEE Communications Magazine
Introduction Jorge L. Contreras; Part I. Standardization and the State: 1. International trade law and technical standardization Panagiotis Delimatsis; 2. Government use of standards in the US and abroad Emily S. Bremer; Part II. Standardization, Health, Safety and Liability: 3. Technical standards in health and safety regulation: risk regimes, the new administrative law, and food safety governance Timothy D. Lytton; 4. Tort liability for standards development in the United States and European Union Paul Verbruggen; Part III. Copyright and Standards: 5. Questioning copyright in standards Pamela Samuelson and Kathryn Hashimoto; 6. Integrating technical standards into federal regulations: incorporation by reference Daniel J. Sheffner; 7. Public law, European constitutionalism and copyright in standards Björn Lundqvist; 8. Termination of copyright transfers and technical standards Jorge L. Contreras and Andrew T. Hernacki; Part IV. Standards and Software: 9. Open standards Jay P. Kesan; 10. Standardization, open source and innovation: sketching the effect of IPR policies Martin Husovec; 11. OSS and SDO: symbiotic functions in the innovation equation David J. Kappos; Part V. Trademarks, Certification and Standards: 12. Trademarks, certification marks and technical standards Jorge L. Contreras; 13. The unregulated certification mark(et) Jeanne C. Fromer; 14. The certification paradox Jonathan M. Barnett.