TY - BOOK ID - 64866041 TI - Regulatory Model for Digital Rights Management : Analysis of U.S., Europe and China PY - 2020 SN - 9811519951 9811519943 PB - Singapore : Springer Singapore : Imprint: Springer, DB - UniCat KW - Digital rights management. KW - DRM (Digital rights management) KW - Management, Digital rights KW - Rights management, Digital KW - Copyright and electronic data processing KW - Private international law. KW - Conflict of laws. KW - Mass media. KW - Law. KW - Culture. KW - Technology. KW - Private International Law, International & Foreign Law, Comparative Law . KW - IT Law, Media Law, Intellectual Property. KW - Sociology of Culture. KW - Culture and Technology. KW - Applied science KW - Arts, Useful KW - Science, Applied KW - Useful arts KW - Science KW - Industrial arts KW - Material culture KW - Cultural sociology KW - Culture KW - Sociology of culture KW - Civilization KW - Popular culture KW - Acts, Legislative KW - Enactments, Legislative KW - Laws (Statutes) KW - Legislative acts KW - Legislative enactments KW - Jurisprudence KW - Legislation KW - Mass communication KW - Media, Mass KW - Media, The KW - Communication KW - Choice of law KW - Conflict of laws KW - Intermunicipal law KW - International law, Private KW - International private law KW - Private international law KW - Law KW - Legal polycentricity KW - Social aspects KW - Civil law UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:64866041 AB - This book highlights the shortcomings of the present Digital Rights Management (DRM) regulations in China. Using literature reviews and comparative analysis from theoretical and empirical perspectives, it appraises different DRM restriction regulations and practices as well as current advice on balance of interests to analyze the dilemma faced by the DRM system. This research intends to help China establish a comprehensive DRM regulatory model through comparative theoretical and empirical critiques of systems in America and Europe. A newly designed DRM regulatory model should be suitable for specific Chinese features, and should consist of government regulated, self-regulated, and even unregulated sections. The new regulation model might be an addition to existing legal structures, while self-regulations/social enforcement also would be as important as legislation based on case studies. ER -