Property:Has description of data

From Copyright EVIDENCE

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"The consultation on the role of online platforms gathered evidence and views on the regulatory environment for platforms, liability of intermediaries, data and cloud, and the collaborative economy. It was open from 24 September 2015 - 6 January 2016 in 23 languages. The consultation received 1034 replies: 1005 through EU-Survey; 29 by email."  +
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* The author examines both quantitative and qualitative research models used in this study to examine global IP protection, addresses some limitations of the empirical study and advocates historical approaches to the cultural problem in IP protection. *In Hofestede’s work, the number of respondents across countries had a great degree of variance. For example, the number of respondents was fewer than 200 in 15 countries, whereas only 6 countries had respondents numbering 1,000. Hofstede based his study on the factor analyses of an existing database of IBM employee attitude survey questionnaires which were related to personal work goals. * The GLOBE survey was conducted with 951 organizations in three industries: food processing, financial services, and telecommunications services. In addition, the development and analysis of the GLOBE questionnaire was theory-driven, based on the existing literature and on statistical pretests.   +
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* The behaviour of 4552 Internet users aged 12+ in the UK has been analyzed; the respondents were surveyed during the period of March to May 2015 and asked about their behaviour during “the past three months”. * The research universe for this study was all aged 12+ in the UK. Although some elements of the survey cover those without internet access, so as to provide a nationally representative frame, the core focus of the study (and thus the majority of questions) was the UK online population aged 12+. * A mixed online and face-to-face methodology was employed for this project, following the guidelines established in response to the illegal le-sharing pilot study19 in 2010. The original design recommended by Kantar Media was subsequently approved via peer review, albeit with several amendments.   +
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1039 survey questionnaires issued to serious, professional artists (not including those working in film, interior design or architecture). Artists identified using membership lists of Arts organisations and screened to ensure they are currently working in their principle artistic occupation, crosschecked with the Australian Bureau of Statistics Census of Population and Household data.  +
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14 qualitative interviews with tattooers throughout the United States.  +
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1405 firms that answered questions about their undertaken and planned investments in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. The information collected mostly between 1989–1994. Firms from the oil, gas, and coal sector were excluded from the sample.  +
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15 participants were recruited from Tumblr and LiveJournal, who were thereafter interviewed to determine the social norms or unwritten rules of their respective online community. Data were then qualitatively coded and organised thematically.  +
174 students and adults surveyed.  +
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199 written surveys: 95 common users, 62 professional users, and 42 firm users.  +
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2 separate surveys, 4 months apart, to the same 127 students doing a Bachelor of Business in a Canadian University. The response rate was slightly over 77% with 98 returned questionnaires.  +
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2,755 musicians and songwriters responded to a Web-based survey. The total sample includes 2,793 musicians, songwriters and music publishers, however, the data included in the report is based exclusively on questions that were asked of musicians and songwriters (n=2,755)  +
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20 interviews of workers in the British independent television production sector(ITPS).  +
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200 high school students (97 male, 103 female) in New York completed voluntary, anonymous written surveys on attitudes towards piracy, deviant peer groups, computer experience, and self-control, using numerical scales. Participants included 18 freshmen, 76 sophomores, 58 juniors, and 48 seniors.Respondents self-identified as 143 White, 39 Asian American, two African American, four Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander,and 14 other.  +
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2012 call for comment, to which 58 stakeholder parties responded, and 2013 roundtable, led by the Honorable Jerrold Nadler, U.S. House of Representatives, with four panels of 9 to 12 stakeholder representatives each.  +
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206 university students voluntarily and anonymously responded through a self-administered survey, indicating agreement with statements through a numerical scale. More than 50% were female. 44.8% of the sample had used illegal downloading - of the downloaders, 86.8% were between the ages of 18 and 25, and 70.3% had low incomes.  +
215 copies of the same questionnaire were distributed among undergraduate students at a large university. Questionnaires were excluded as usable data if they featured more than 15% missed items. This left a total of 206 usable questionnaires.  +
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217 completed written surveys from Midwestern university students. Questions included surveyed about whether they have used DMS, the speed of their internet connections, the number of hours they go online, whether they play online games regularly (at least once a week), the number of hours they listen to music, whether they burn their downloaded music to CD, the storage size of their MP3 player, and whether they use instant messaging (IM) on a regular basis.  +
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219 questionnaires were filled in by respondents  +
24 experiments featuring 279 individual subjects  +
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2454, of all types of writers invited to take part. This data was refers to financial year 2014/2015. 56% of respondents were mend and 44% women. 17% are 44 or under, 54% were 45-64, and 29% were over 65. Among the respondents of the survey there were two groups. Professional authors who dedicate a majority of their time to writing and “all Writers” who are a wide range of writers where time spent is not taken into account, includes part and full time authors. The 2007 ALCS data, from “What are Words Worth” used was from the 2004/2005 financial year. Research carried out and published in 2000 by the Society of Authors is also used.  +