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- Automobile Accidents Associated With Cell Phone Use: Can Cell Phone Service Providers and Manufacturers Be Held Liable Under a Theory of Negligence (1)
- Bell v. Wolfish (1)
- Coffin v. United States (1)
- Demery v. Arpaio (1)
- Detainees of the Brooklyn House of Detention for Men v. Malcolm (1)
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- Digital Signature Law of the United Nations (1)
- European Union (1)
- Graham v. Connor (1)
- Gucci America Inc. v. Daffy’s Inc (1)
- Jones v. Diamond (1)
- MCC (1)
- Metropolitan Correctional Center (1)
- United Kingdom and United States: Promotion of Growth in E-Commerce With Enhanced Security (1)
- White v. Roper (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Computer Law
Virtually Free From Punishment Until Proven Guilty: The Internet, Web-Cameras And The Compelling Necessity Standard, Michael Clements
Virtually Free From Punishment Until Proven Guilty: The Internet, Web-Cameras And The Compelling Necessity Standard, Michael Clements
Richmond Journal of Law & Technology
Few legal maxims have had greater resonance than the tenet that one is innocent until proven guilty. It is a principle that has been traced back to Roman times, and it entered the American legal lexicon through the United States Supreme Court decision Coffin v. United States. It has even been incorporated in the United Nations’1948 Declaration of Human Rights under article eleven, section one.4
Introduction: Contains Cover, Table Of Contents, Letter From The Editor, And Masthead, Sean Sullivan Kumar
Introduction: Contains Cover, Table Of Contents, Letter From The Editor, And Masthead, Sean Sullivan Kumar
Richmond Journal of Law & Technology
I hope you enjoy the second issue of Volume XI of the Richmond Journal of Law & Technology. The Editorial Board and Staff worked diligently with four outstanding authors to prepare this issue. We are proud to present timely articles by two professors, a practitioner, and the winner of the Journal’s staff casenote competition.