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
New Legislation to Regulate Automated Political Calls
You may think of robocalls as those annoying automated calls about warrantees that the FCC is cracking down on. But if you have a land line and regularly vote in elections, you probably receive political robocalls as well. These robocalls are subject to fewer...
Impact of Student-Written Work
MTTLR, like many journals, publishes content written by both students and scholars. Though articles written by scholars (professors, practitioners, judges, etc.) are generally considered more significant, student-written content has had a noticeable impact and has...
MTTLR Volume 15, Issue 1 Is Now Available
MTTLR is pleased to announce the availability of its new issue, Volume 15, Issue 1. Here are the highlights: J. Jonas Anderson writes on the temporary presence exception and patent infringement avoidance [PDF]. Leah Chan Grinvald writes on Chinese Trademark Law [PDF]....
New Zealand rethinks “3 strikes” copyright law
New Zealand's government announced this week that their proposed "three strikes"/"graduated response" copyright law would not go into effect, and would be rewritten from the ground up.The law, which would have required ISPs to cut off internet access to users who had...
Are Subpoena Standards Substantive, Procedural, or Constitutional Law?
As courts [PDF] have established standards for subpoenas to ISPs in online defamation lawsuits, they have raised new questions. Professor Wasserman has raised the question whether these standards are a part of state substantive defamation law that federal courts would...
Cook County Sheriff Files Suit Against craigslist for Facilitation of Prostitution
On March 5th, Cook County sheriff Tom Dart sued craiglist, Inc. in U.S. District Court for “knowingly promoting and facilitating prostitution” through its “Exotic Services” section. Dart does not seem fixated on the crime of prostitution per se, but that “missing...


