Tech Perspectives | CyberOne: Law in the Court of Public Opinion: Online Poker @techperspectives | Uploaded July 2015 | Updated October 2024, 11 hours ago.
September 10, 2007 - Professor Charles Nesson introduces and talks about CyberOne: Law in the Court of Public Opinion, a class at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Harvard University. Topics include:
Charles Nesson's experience (4:00)
Richard Stallman and John Perry Barlow (6:46)
Open net and poker (7:16)
Representing online poker (13:42)
Law on the net (15:40)
The program (18:16)
The prosecution of poker (21:41)
Poker and controversies (26:20)
A production company (40:37)
Production power at Harvard (47:00)
NPR interview, browser doesn't play it (48:13)
The program (52:09)
Poker instructional session (54:01)
Asymmetrical litigation, Antigua v U.S. (56:27)
Production viability and skills (1:01:02)
About the message (1:04:29)
Poker chips, constrain on online poker (1:10:25)
Rhetoric, feeling, context, logic (1:13:40)
Expectations, objections (1:20:53)
Copyright 2007
Note: This video may only be used for purposes such as criticism, review, private study, scholarship, or research.
September 10, 2007 - Professor Charles Nesson introduces and talks about CyberOne: Law in the Court of Public Opinion, a class at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Harvard University. Topics include:
Charles Nesson's experience (4:00)
Richard Stallman and John Perry Barlow (6:46)
Open net and poker (7:16)
Representing online poker (13:42)
Law on the net (15:40)
The program (18:16)
The prosecution of poker (21:41)
Poker and controversies (26:20)
A production company (40:37)
Production power at Harvard (47:00)
NPR interview, browser doesn't play it (48:13)
The program (52:09)
Poker instructional session (54:01)
Asymmetrical litigation, Antigua v U.S. (56:27)
Production viability and skills (1:01:02)
About the message (1:04:29)
Poker chips, constrain on online poker (1:10:25)
Rhetoric, feeling, context, logic (1:13:40)
Expectations, objections (1:20:53)
Copyright 2007
Note: This video may only be used for purposes such as criticism, review, private study, scholarship, or research.