Recent Articles
The 'License as Tax' Fallacy
Article, Spring 2022
Unreasonable: A Strict Liability Solution to the FTC's Data Security Problem
Article, Spring 2022
The Ping-Pong Olympics of Antisuit Injunction in FRAND Litigation
Article, Spring 2022
Content Moderation Remedies
Article, Fall 2021
An Empirical Study: Willful Infringement & Enhanced Damages in Patent Law After Halo
Article, Fall 2021
Recent Notes
The Best Data Plan Is to Have a Game Plan: Obstacles and Solutions to Reaching International Data Privacy Agreements
Note, Spring 2022
Mental Health Mobile Apps and the Need to Update Federal Regulations to Protect Users
Note, Spring 2022
Blog Posts
Twitter’s New Country-Specific Censorship Policy: An Attack on Free Speech or a Legally Necessary Move?
The social media website Twitter announced in a recent blog post entitled “The Tweets Must Still Flow” its plan to enact a new censorship initiative. “Starting today,” Twitter announced, “we give ourselves the ability to reactively withhold content from users in a...
US v. Jones: Fourth Down, One Yard to Go . . . and the Court Decides to Punt
The latest installment of the US v. Jones saga has just arrived. In a decision released earlier today, the Supreme Court held that government installation and monitoring of a GPS device on a suspect’s vehicle constitutes a “search” under the Fourth Amendment. (For a...
The Battle Between Facebook and Timelines
Back in September last year, Facebook was sued by Timelines.com for allegedly infringing the latter’s trademark right over the word “Timeline” in introducing the Facebook Timeline feature. Timelines.com is a website that allows users to record and share events,...
Supreme Court Decides Golan v. Holder
A law providing that millions of works created by foreign authors that had been in the public domain qualify for U.S. copyright protection was upheld on Saturday, January 18, 2012, when the Supreme Court decided Golan v. Holder (No.10-545). The case involved the...
New Hampshire 4 Paul Had a Bunch of Hits, Chinese Feud Makes Paul Sick
The campaign for Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul has sued the anonymous creators of a controversial video that was attributed to the campaign, claiming false designation of origin, false advertising, and defamation. The video, which has tallied over 300,000...
Beijing Requires Real Name Registration for Micro-blog Users
SINA WEIBO is the most widely used micro-blog in China, which has more than 300 million users by the end of 2011. WEIBO is like the Chinese version of Twitter. On December 16th, 2011, “Beijing Micro-blog Development Management Rules” were released by Beijing...


