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| James Kanagy, Director e-Commerce & Business Method Patent, GlaxoSmithKline |
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| Jim Kanagy has practiced intellectual property law for 25 years, mainly as in-house counsel for several pharmaceutical companies. He has a BS in chemistry from Eastern Mennonite University, a MS in organic chemistry from Tufts, and a law degree from Golden Gate University. He is a member of the California and Pennsylvania bars and is a registered US patent agent. He has been advising GSK on legal issues arising from the deployment and use of computer technologies, with a keen interest in understanding electronic technologies and changing legal challenges generated by the opportunities for efficiencies, and abuses, they generate.
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Legal Issues in a Knowledge-sharing Environment
James Kanagy, Director e-Commerce & Business Method Patent, GlaxoSmithKline
In today's world, distributed electronic data systems underpin effective knowledge-sharing and distribution of information. But managing electronic data effectively requires attention to issues of attribution, when it was created or changed, is it secure, and, overtime, can you get the data back, read it and be confident it has not changed. These factors are critical to insuring data is believable and can be relied on by readers, and in official proceedings. This presentation sets out systems' characteristics to take into consideration when designing and building a distributed electronic data management system, and reviews the acceptability of electronic information by courts and governmental bodies in several countries.
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