
| 作者介绍:Mark F. Grady Mark F. Grady is Professor of Law and Director of the Center for Law and Economics at the UCLA School of Law. He specializes in law and economics, torts, antitrust, and intellectual property. He received his A.B. degree summa cum laude in Economics and his J.D. from UCLA. Before beginning his academic career, Grady worked for the Federal Trade Commission, the US Senate Judiciary Committee, and American Management Systems. |
| Acknowledgments page Contributors The Law and Economics of Cybersecurity: An Introduction Mark Grady and Francesco Parisi PART ONE: PROBLEMS Cybersecurity and Its Problems 1 Private versus Social Incentives in Cybersecurity: Law and Economics 2 A Model for When Disclosure Helps Security: What Is Different about Computer and Network Security? Intervention Strategies: Redundancy, Diversity and Autarchy 3 Peer Production of Survivable Critical Infrastructures 4 Cybersecurity: Of Heterogeneity and Autarchy PART TWO: SOLUTIONS Private Ordering Solutions 5 Network Responses to Network Threats: The Evolution into Private Cybersecurity Associations 6 The Dark Side of Private Ordering: The Network /Community Harm of Crime Regulation and Jurisdiction for Global Cybersecurity 7 Holding Internet Service Providers Accountable 8 Global Cyberterrorism, Jurisdiction, and International Organization Index |
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