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Full-Text Articles in Law
Concurrent Damages, Bert I. Huang
Concurrent Damages, Bert I. Huang
Faculty Scholarship
Imagine that a hacker is working for a university official secretly spying on faculty members – say, to find out who has been leaking information to the press about internal disciplinary matters. The injuries to a given victim of the hacking might follow a classic learning curve: The first few intrusions into her e-mail account reveal a storehouse of personal secrets, but further break-ins yield less and less new information. One might say there is diminishing marginal harm.
There is no such leveling off, however, in the compensation that would be awarded to that victim. The electronic privacy law …
Unplanned Coauthorship, Shyamkrishna Balganesh
Unplanned Coauthorship, Shyamkrishna Balganesh
Faculty Scholarship
Unplanned coauthorship refers to the process by which contributors to a creative work are treated by copyright law as coauthors of the work based entirely on their observable behavior during its creation. The process entails a court imputing the status of coauthors to the parties ex post, usually during a claim for copyright infringement. For years now, courts and scholars have struggled to identify a coherent rationale for unplanned coauthorship and situate it within copyright’s set of goals and objectives. This Article offers a novel framework for understanding the rules of unplanned coauthorship using insights from theories of shared intentionality. …