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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Computer Law
Prospects For Legal Analytics: Some Approaches To Extracting More Meaning From Legal Texts, Kevin D. Ashley
Prospects For Legal Analytics: Some Approaches To Extracting More Meaning From Legal Texts, Kevin D. Ashley
University of Cincinnati Law Review
No abstract provided.
Dirty Little Secrets: The Constitutional Feasibility Of Implementing Legislation To Compel Licensing Of Trade Secrets To End The Covid-19 Pandemic, Noah Olson
The University of Cincinnati Intellectual Property and Computer Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Losing Dignity: Eroding Privacy Rights Of Immigrants In Technology-Based Immigration Enforcement, Inma Sumaita
Losing Dignity: Eroding Privacy Rights Of Immigrants In Technology-Based Immigration Enforcement, Inma Sumaita
The University of Cincinnati Intellectual Property and Computer Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Infringement, She Wrote: The Intellectual Property Rights Of Victims In True Crime Craze, Laura Callihan
Infringement, She Wrote: The Intellectual Property Rights Of Victims In True Crime Craze, Laura Callihan
The University of Cincinnati Intellectual Property and Computer Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Patentability Of Inventions With Artificial Intelligence Listed As An Inventor Following Thaler V. Hirshfeld, Kaitlyn Taylor
The Patentability Of Inventions With Artificial Intelligence Listed As An Inventor Following Thaler V. Hirshfeld, Kaitlyn Taylor
The University of Cincinnati Intellectual Property and Computer Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Facebook, Welfare, And Natural Monopoly: A Quantitative Analysis Of Antitrust Remedies, Felix B. Chang, Seth Benzell
Facebook, Welfare, And Natural Monopoly: A Quantitative Analysis Of Antitrust Remedies, Felix B. Chang, Seth Benzell
Faculty Articles and Other Publications
This Article advances a novel theoretical model for assessing policy interventions against Facebook. As prosecutors barrel forward against digital platforms, soon it will fall upon courts and, eventually, regulators to devise remedies. We argue that any sensible solution must include quantification of the welfare effects on the platform’s various constituents. Our model prioritizes the effects upon total societal welfare—or, in economists’ terms, social welfare. Applied to Facebook, the model calculates social welfare as the sum of four components: (i) consumer welfare; (ii) advertising profits; (iii) tax revenues; and (iv) the value of a large user base.
Drawing on surveys of …