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35 Int'l Rev. L. Computers & Tech. 1 (2021)

handle is hein.journals/irlct35 and id is 1 raw text is: INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF LAW, COMPUTERS & TECHNOLOGY                outledge
2021, VOL. 35, NO. 1, 1
https://doi.org/10.1080/13600869.2020.1784566                     Taylor & Francis Group
EDITORIAL                                                                 pd
The future of legal regulation: the intersection of creativity,
technology and biology
November 2019 was the month and year in which the film Blade Runner was set. Anyone fam-
iliar with that film will understand the challenges that it presented to us as part of its depiction
of the future of the human race. A dystopia was presented challenging our conceptions of artifi-
cial intelligence, of what it means to be human, and our relationships with the machinic and
biologic. This special issue brings together articles considering this relationship between the
human, the machinic, and the biologic.
We begin with an article by Edison Bicuardo, Phoebe Li and Alex Faulkner. They are asses-
sing the relationship between patents and the experimental space. They are focusing on the
social, legal, and the geographical dimensions of 3D bioprinting. They consider the entangle-
ments between social creativity, legal instruments and global policies. They are looking at the
use of bioprinting as a technique for the use of robotic computer-controlled devices, in which
bioactive structures are manufactured. They argue that experimentation, and its ever-changing
dynamics, is critical to the development of the global and local dynamics of bioprinting.
Lauren Elrick considers the ecosystem concept, suggesting a holistic approach towards
privacy protection. She looks at the challenge of privacy in an era when digital technology
can be highly intrusive, such invasion being adjudged essential for a State to be able to
fight terrorism. This conflict poses a challenge to the notions of proportionality. The article
suggests that there should be a use of the biological concepts of ecosystem to provide gui-
dance. It argues that an ecological concept does offer a manner through which an assessment
of privacy could be conducted. The importance of such an approach within a biologic and infor-
matic future should be self-evident to the reader.
Nicholas Gervassis discusses the concept of information biopolitics. The article begins with a
consideration of how our machinic and biologic futures are presented in film. It examines the
nature of societies relationship with the medium of the Internet, underlining the conceptual-
isation of information as a form of communication. Gervassis points to the different levels at
which copyright law is utilised as a disruptive force and as a tool for power. He examines
the issue of commodification within this informatic biologic context. This is a paper that will
challenge your preconceptions.
The final article is one written by the editor of this special issue. The article has been fully
peer reviewed and edited by the journal editor in chief, Dr Subhajit Basu. The article draws par-
allels between the Chinese system of Internet State censorship, and the existing systems of
copyright enforcement in the UK. The reader might correctly think that this is a loaded com-
parison. However, as the article discusses, there is a clear link between the technologies
used for the purposes of censorship, and subsequent use of those technologies for the pur-
poses of copyright enforcement. They are, essentially, the same technologies, but applied in
different contexts. This article therefore assesses how the use of China's censorship technol-
ogies will feed into digital copyright enforcement.
James Griffin
University of Exeter
j.g.h.g riffin@exeter.ac.uk
© 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group

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