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Full-Text Articles in Law
Navigating Through The Fog Of Cloud Computing Contracts, T. Noble Foster
Navigating Through The Fog Of Cloud Computing Contracts, T. Noble Foster
T. Noble Foster
This paper explores legal issues associated with cloud computing, provides analysis and commentary on typical clauses found in contracts offered by well-known cloud service providers, and identifies strategies to mitigate the risk of exposure to cloud-based legal claims in the critical areas of data security, privacy, and confidentiality. While current research offers numerous case studies, viewpoints, and technical descriptions of cloud processes, our research provides a close examination of the language used in cloud contract terms. Analysis of these contract terms supports the finding that most standard cloud computing contracts are unevenly balanced in favor of the cloud service provider. …
A Comprehensive Approach To Bridging The Gap Between Cyberbullying Rules And Regulations And The Protections Offered By The First Amendment For Off-Campus Student Speech, Vahagn Amirian
Vahagn Amirian
No abstract provided.
Finding Privacy In A Sea Of Social Media And Other E-Discovery, Allyson Haynes Stuart
Finding Privacy In A Sea Of Social Media And Other E-Discovery, Allyson Haynes Stuart
Allyson Haynes Stuart
This article looks at the case law governing discovery of social media, and finds several problems. First, many courts are improperly requiring a threshold showing that relevant information exists in public portions of the user’s social media account before allowing such discovery. Second, they allow overbroad discovery, often requiring a litigant to turn over its username and password to the other party. At the same time, parties are seeking such information directly from social media sites, attempting an end-run around the relevancy requirement and increasing motion practice. The article argues that, instead, social media discovery should be treated like other …
Incentives Must Change: Addressing The Unpredictability Of Reasonable Royalty Damages, Daniel Mcmanus
Incentives Must Change: Addressing The Unpredictability Of Reasonable Royalty Damages, Daniel Mcmanus
daniel mcmanus
ABSTRACT
INCENTIVES MUST CHANGE: ADDRESSING THE UNPREDICTABILITY OF REASONABLE ROYALTY DAMAGES
Current law encourages patentees and defendants in a patent infringement suit to make the most widely varying arguments for reasonable royalty damages. The parties have so much discretion in presenting calculations for reasonable royalty damages that it is not uncommon for the patentee to request damages 80-100 times greater than the infringer’s proposed damages. Permitting so much discretion makes it highly unlikely that the resulting damages will be reasonable, and thus fails to achieve the goal of determining a reasonable royalty.
The problem is simple. Patents are difficult to …
Online Social Media And The End Of The Employment-At-Will Doctrine, Robert Sprague, Abigail E. Fournier
Online Social Media And The End Of The Employment-At-Will Doctrine, Robert Sprague, Abigail E. Fournier
Robert Sprague
This article addresses the intersection of Section 7 protected concerted activities under the National Labor Relations Act and the common law employment-at-will doctrine. Employers are under pressure to ensure their online social media policies do not unlawfully chill protected Section 7 activities, freeing employees to discuss working conditions with coworkers through online social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. This article argues that once coworkers engage online in work-related conversations, for all practical purposes they cease to be at-will employees. Under the Wright Line standard, if an employee is fired or disciplined shortly after engaging in protected concerted …
Emerging Technologies And Dwindling Speech, Jorge R. Roig
Emerging Technologies And Dwindling Speech, Jorge R. Roig
Jorge R Roig