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Some legal implications of web linking

The explosive expansion of the Internet during the recent years has provoked many lawsuits that left lawyers struggling with the application of traditional, "analogue" law to the new, digital technology. Yet, another pattern of disputes emerges that involves unauthorised Web linking in various forms...

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Main Author: Roudi, Anuschka
Other Authors: Hofman, Julien
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Centre for Law and Society 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Roudi, Anuschka
author2 Hofman, Julien
author_browse Hofman, Julien
Roudi, Anuschka
author_facet Hofman, Julien
Roudi, Anuschka
author_sort Roudi, Anuschka
collection Thesis
description The explosive expansion of the Internet during the recent years has provoked many lawsuits that left lawyers struggling with the application of traditional, "analogue" law to the new, digital technology. Yet, another pattern of disputes emerges that involves unauthorised Web linking in various forms. Technology meanwhile provides for the possibility to either incorporate images originating from another source on the Web into the own Web site or to frame content from other providers into the own material published on the Web simply by using hypertext links. These activities, along with more traditional kinds of links, have lead to disputes between content providers on the Internet about linking in general and specific kinds of links in particular. Four celebrated linking disputes, one in the Great Britain and three in the United States, gained interest in the cyber world because of their potential impact on the main feature of the Web, the possibility of linking documents. Thus far, only one court decision was issued in the Scotland, the other lawsuits were either settled or they are still pending. Notwithstanding. this uncertainty in law, similar situations have evolved and the demand for a solution is growing. Commentators around the world have tried to deal with the issue and it appears that in many jurisdictions traditional intellectual property law is difficult to apply to the new technology.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
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last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:06.010Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42931 Some legal implications of web linking Roudi, Anuschka Hofman, Julien Legal Web linking The explosive expansion of the Internet during the recent years has provoked many lawsuits that left lawyers struggling with the application of traditional, "analogue" law to the new, digital technology. Yet, another pattern of disputes emerges that involves unauthorised Web linking in various forms. Technology meanwhile provides for the possibility to either incorporate images originating from another source on the Web into the own Web site or to frame content from other providers into the own material published on the Web simply by using hypertext links. These activities, along with more traditional kinds of links, have lead to disputes between content providers on the Internet about linking in general and specific kinds of links in particular. Four celebrated linking disputes, one in the Great Britain and three in the United States, gained interest in the cyber world because of their potential impact on the main feature of the Web, the possibility of linking documents. Thus far, only one court decision was issued in the Scotland, the other lawsuits were either settled or they are still pending. Notwithstanding. this uncertainty in law, similar situations have evolved and the demand for a solution is growing. Commentators around the world have tried to deal with the issue and it appears that in many jurisdictions traditional intellectual property law is difficult to apply to the new technology. 2026-03-03T13:56:35Z 2026-03-03T13:56:35Z 1999 2026-03-03T12:54:04Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42931 en eng application/pdf Centre for Law and Society Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Legal
Web linking
Roudi, Anuschka
Some legal implications of web linking
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Some legal implications of web linking
title_full Some legal implications of web linking
title_fullStr Some legal implications of web linking
title_full_unstemmed Some legal implications of web linking
title_short Some legal implications of web linking
title_sort some legal implications of web linking
topic Legal
Web linking
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42931
work_keys_str_mv AT roudianuschka somelegalimplicationsofweblinking