2 resultados para Bang-bang Pll
em Digital Peer Publishing
Resumo:
Since the UsedSoft ruling of the CJEU in 2012, there has been the distinct feeling that – like the big bang - UsedSoft signals the start of a new beginning. As we enter this brave new world, the Copyright Directive will be read anew: misalignments in the treatment of physical and digital content will be resolved; accessibility and affordability for consumers will be heightened; and lock-in will be reduced as e-exhaustion takes hold. With UsedSoft as a precedent, the Court can do nothing but keep expanding its own ruling. For big bang theorists, it is only a matter of time until the digital first sale meteor strikes non-software downloads also. This paper looks at whether the UsedSoft ruling could indeed be the beginning of a wider doctrine of e-exhaustion, or if it is simply a one-shot comet restrained by provisions of the Computer Program Directive on which it was based. Fighting the latter corner, we have the strict word of the law; in the UsedSoft ruling, the Court appears to willingly bypass the international legal framework of the WCT. As far as expansion goes, the Copyright Directive was conceived specifically to implement the WCT, thus the legislative intent is clear. The Court would not, surely, invoke its modicum of creativity there also... With perhaps undue haste in a digital market of many unknowns, it seems this might well be the case. Provoking the big bang theory of e-exhaustion, the UsedSoft ruling can be read as distinctly purposive, but rather than having copyright norms in mind, the standard for the Court is the same free movement rules that underpin the exhaustion doctrine in the physical world. With an endowed sense of principled equivalence, the Court clearly wishes the tangible and intangible rules to be aligned. Against the backdrop of the European internal market, perhaps few legislative instruments would staunchly stand in its way. With firm objectives in mind, the UsedSoft ruling could be a rather disruptive meteor indeed.
Resumo:
Diskutiert werden die Möglichkeiten architektonischen Einfügens anhand der Position, die der französische Architekt Jean Nouvel in Theorie wie Praxis einnimmt. Im Rückblick auf sein Werk zeigt sich dabei, dass er sich von Anbeginn mit der Reflexion über die Möglichkeiten und die Grenzen architektonischen Einfügens in bereits bestehende bauliche Ensembles auseinandergesetzt und eine Reihe von Konzepten entwickelt hat, deren Begrifflichkeit sich an Philosophen wie Félix Guattari, Gilles Deleuze und Michel Foucault orientiert. Die konkrete Anwendung dieser Begriffe wird anhand von zwei Projekten erörtert, die einmal die Einfügung eines kompletten Gebäudeinnern in bereits bestehende Außenwände eines historischen Baus (Oper Lyon), ein anderes Mal die Einfügung eines Neubaus in ein prägnantes, städtebauliches Ensemble (Hotel "Sofitel Vienna Stephansdom“) betreffen.