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Articles 31 - 60 of 174
Full-Text Articles in Science and Technology Law
Who's Virus Is It Anyway? How The World Health Organization Can Protect Against Claims Of "Viral Sovereignty", Jason Carter
Who's Virus Is It Anyway? How The World Health Organization Can Protect Against Claims Of "Viral Sovereignty", Jason Carter
Georgia Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
"Honey I Blew Up The World!"? One Small Step Towards Filling The Regulatory "Black Hole" At The Intersection Of High-Energy Particle Colliders And International Law, Samuel J. Adams
Georgia Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
Regulating Weaponized Nanotechnology: How The International Criminal Court Offers A Way Forward, Lucas D. Bradley
Regulating Weaponized Nanotechnology: How The International Criminal Court Offers A Way Forward, Lucas D. Bradley
Georgia Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
Social Media Policy Confusion: The Nlrb's Dated Embrace Of Concerted Activity Misconstrues The Realities Of Twenty-First Century Collective Action, Geordan G. Logan
Social Media Policy Confusion: The Nlrb's Dated Embrace Of Concerted Activity Misconstrues The Realities Of Twenty-First Century Collective Action, Geordan G. Logan
Nevada Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Zero And The Rise Of Technological Lawmaking, Max Stul Oppenheimer
Zero And The Rise Of Technological Lawmaking, Max Stul Oppenheimer
Pace Law Review
This Article begins by identifying and drawing the outline of this previously unrecognized source of law: technology-made law. It then focuses on one paradigmatic case: changes in the meaning of “zero” and the closely related concept of a mathematical limit (for example a speed limit). It defines “zero” and demonstrates its explicit and implicit uses in law. It then posits that there are two ways to interpret a law involving a technological limit: a technology-static approach, in which comparisons are made using the technology available at the time the law was enacted, and a technology-dynamic approach, in which comparisons are …
Cultural Cognition Of Patents, Lisa Larrimore Ouellette
Cultural Cognition Of Patents, Lisa Larrimore Ouellette
IP Theory
Simply making empirical progress is not always enough to influence policy, as demonstrated by the polarized public discourse over issues ranging from climate change to gun control. The current discourse over patents appears to have a similar pathology, in which cultural values — such as respect for strong property rights or concern about limiting access to knowledge — shape priors and affect the weight given to new information, such that advocates and policymakers on both sides of the patent wars often fail to acknowledge the ambiguity of existing evidence. This Essay suggests that the “cultural cognition” framework might help scholars …
Generic Entry Jujitsu: Innovation And Quality In Drug Manufacturing, W. Nicholson Price Ii
Generic Entry Jujitsu: Innovation And Quality In Drug Manufacturing, W. Nicholson Price Ii
IP Theory
The manufacturing side of the pharmaceutical industry has been neglected in innovation theory and policy, with the unfortunate result of stagnant manufacturing techniques driving major problems for the healthcare system. This innovation failure has roots in ineffective intellectual property incentives and high regulatory hurdles to innovative change. Changes in pure regulation or intellectual property incentives have significant potential to help the innovation deficit, but are not the only possibility for change. A relatively minor regulatory change could harness the powerful dynamics of pioneer/generic competition surrounding generic drug market entry. If pioneer firms were permitted to make label claims committing to …
Duty And Control In Intermediary Copyright Liability: An Australian Perspective, Kylie Pappalardo
Duty And Control In Intermediary Copyright Liability: An Australian Perspective, Kylie Pappalardo
IP Theory
In the internet age, copyright owners are increasingly looking to online intermediaries to take steps to prevent copyright infringement. Sometimes these intermediaries are closely tied to the acts of infringement; sometimes – as in the case of ISPs – they are not. In 2012, the Australian High Court decided the Roadshow Films v iiNet case, in which it held that an Australian ISP was not liable under copyright’s authorization doctrine, which asks whether the intermediary has sanctioned, approved or countenanced the infringement. The Australian Copyright Act 1968 directs a court to consider, in these situations, whether the intermediary had the …
The Conflict Between The Fda’S Pre-Launch Activities Importation Request Program And The Hatch-Waxman Act, Alex Cheng, Matthew Avery
The Conflict Between The Fda’S Pre-Launch Activities Importation Request Program And The Hatch-Waxman Act, Alex Cheng, Matthew Avery
UC Law Science and Technology Journal
In 2008, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) implemented the Pre- Launch Activities Importation Request (PLAIR) program. The FDA exercises its enforcement discretion under the guise of the PLAIR program to permit drug manufacturers to import unapproved drugs into the United States so the manufacturers can expedite their commercial launches when they finally receive official FDA approval. But the ability to import unapproved finished drug products into the United States ahead of anticipated FDA approval conflicts with certain provisions of the Hatch-Waxman Act that permit brand-name companies to use permanent injunctions to prevent the importation of generic equivalents of their …
An Insight Into The Apparel Industry’S Patent Troll Problem, Ashli Weiss
An Insight Into The Apparel Industry’S Patent Troll Problem, Ashli Weiss
UC Law Science and Technology Journal
Patent trolls have increasingly targeted the end users of patent-encumbered technology rather than suing the companies that created the allegedly infringing products themselves. Apparel companies provide a useful example of the predicament faced by a variety of similarly situated, nontechnology-oriented companies targeted by troll litigation. As high-profile end users of a variety of commercial technologies, apparel companies have proven to be popular targets for troll litigation. This article examines the apparel industry’s patent troll problem through the lens of historical context, in order to describe how nontechnology companies expose themselves to liability by becoming dependent on third-party technology. It then …
Mental Health Parity: The Patient Protection And Affordable Care Act And The Parity Definition Implications, Suann Kessler
Mental Health Parity: The Patient Protection And Affordable Care Act And The Parity Definition Implications, Suann Kessler
UC Law Science and Technology Journal
At least twenty-eight percent of American adults suffer from a mental or addictive disorder. However, even today, health insurance coverage for mental health services differs drastically from that of other medical services. Nonetheless, although it has yet to achieve parity with other medical services, health insurance coverage for mental health services has improved over time. Because the recent enactment of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (“PPACA”) appears to have filled the parity gaps left by the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008, many claim that mental health parity has finally been achieved. While the PPACA …
Stop Monkeying Around With Human Health: Moving Human Drug Development Into The 21st Century By Abandoning Animal Models, Validating Emerging Test Methods, Updating Fda Regulations, And Issuing Fda Guidance, Elizabeth Baker
North Carolina Central University Science & Intellectual Property Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Expanding Use Of Genetic And Psychological Evidence: Finding Coherence In The Criminal Law? , Michael Vitiello
The Expanding Use Of Genetic And Psychological Evidence: Finding Coherence In The Criminal Law? , Michael Vitiello
Nevada Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Transparency Trumps Technology: Reconciling Open Meeting Laws With Modern Technology, Cassandra B. Roeder
Transparency Trumps Technology: Reconciling Open Meeting Laws With Modern Technology, Cassandra B. Roeder
William & Mary Law Review
No abstract provided.
With Great Power Comes Little Responsibility: The Role Of Online Payment Service Providers With Regards To Websites Selling Counterfeit Goods, J. Bruce Richardson
With Great Power Comes Little Responsibility: The Role Of Online Payment Service Providers With Regards To Websites Selling Counterfeit Goods, J. Bruce Richardson
Canadian Journal of Law and Technology
This article will explain the current avenues for intellectual property rights holders to make use of existing anti-counterfeiting policies made available by financial companies dealing in electronic payments, and argue that current policies, while helpful, are not sufficient. The article will conclude by demonstrating that policy makers have options to intervene and regulate the use of online payment services, either directly through legislation or indirectly through facilitating “best practices.”
Rethinking Online Privacy In Canada: Commentary On Voltage Pictures V. John And Jane Doe, Ngozi Okidegbe
Rethinking Online Privacy In Canada: Commentary On Voltage Pictures V. John And Jane Doe, Ngozi Okidegbe
Canadian Journal of Law and Technology
This article examines the Voltage decision, with the view that the bona fide standard safeguards intellectual property rights at the cost of online privacy rights and will proceed in three parts. Part I provides a brief contextualization of the issues. Part II is an analysis of the Voltage decision. Part III examines how the bona fide standard is a relatively low threshold. This article concludes by considering the possibility of shifting to a higher standard for disclosure, as well as a possible solution for the effect that a higher standard could have on copyright owners.
Access Of Evil? Legislating Online Youth Privacy In The Information Age, Agathon Fric
Access Of Evil? Legislating Online Youth Privacy In The Information Age, Agathon Fric
Canadian Journal of Law and Technology
This article seeks to address what constitutes youth online privacy, how youth conceive of their privacy, whether their privacy needs protecting, and, if so, how youth privacy should be regulated online. First, the article begins by rooting the issue of online youth privacy in the current social, technological, economic, political, and legal context, drawing on social science research to demonstrate both the threats and opportunities created by technology for youth privacy.
Second, the analysis focuses on the relative strengths and weaknesses of current federal legislation as the primary law governing the collection, use, and disclosure of youth’s personal information through …
The Song Remains The Same: Preserving The First Sale Doctrine For A Secondary Market Of Digital Music, Marco Figliomeni
The Song Remains The Same: Preserving The First Sale Doctrine For A Secondary Market Of Digital Music, Marco Figliomeni
Canadian Journal of Law and Technology
This article will explore the origins and rationale for the first sale doctrine. A review of the most recent American case law shows the court rejecting the doctrine’s applicability in a digital sphere. I suggest that in spite of the court’s rigid interpretation of the U.S. Copyright Act, formulating a digital first sale doctrine is a matter better left to lawmakers. A flourishing digital secondary market can promote competition and innovation while making content more accessible to the public, but its endorsement requires an appreciation of its adverse effect on the primary market for copyright owners. The article fast-forwards to …
Regulating Three-Dimensional Printing: The Converging Worlds Of Bits And Atoms, Lucas S. Osborn
Regulating Three-Dimensional Printing: The Converging Worlds Of Bits And Atoms, Lucas S. Osborn
San Diego Law Review
Three-dimensional printing (3D printing) is invading society, bringing with it the ability to “print” objects (atoms) from computer files (bits). Posting a computer-assisted design (CAD) file of an object—an illegal gun or an infringing shoe—to the Internet essentially makes the physical object available to the world. The technology portends dramatic shifts in manufacturing, trade, medicine, and more and will require a legal regime that integrates the legal concepts governing the digital and physical worlds. This Article represents the first broad descriptive and normative study of this technology and its multivalent effects on law. The Article separates truly novel legal issues …
Combining Familial Searching And Abandoned Dna: Potential Privacy Outcomes And The Future Of Canada's National Dna Data Bank, Amy Conroy
Canadian Journal of Law and Technology
This article aims to respond to the government’s request by explaining the nature of that relationship and by arguing that the combined use of familial searching and analysis of abandoned DNA would present a serious risk for genetic privacy. The risk is particularly acute given that it would effectively circumvent the existing justification for the NDDB, leading to inclusion of individuals whose DNA profiles have not been uploaded directly onto the data bank. To substantiate this main argument, this article proceeds in three parts. The first describes the current Canadian law on familial searching and the ongoing interest in amending …
Software Patentability After Prometheus, Joseph Holland King
Software Patentability After Prometheus, Joseph Holland King
Georgia State University Law Review
This Note examines the history of patentability of abstract ideas and the tests that courts have used to make the determination of whether an invention incorporating an abstract idea is patentable. Part I provides a history of the four seminal cases related to patentable subject matter, as well as some more recent on point decisions. Part II changes focus to the various tests and factors that have been used by the courts, exploring the history of each, discussing the treatment by the Supreme Court, and determining the strengths and weaknesses of each. Based on the discussion in Part II, Part …
Complex Litigation In The New Era Of The Ijury, Andrew J. Wilhelm
Complex Litigation In The New Era Of The Ijury, Andrew J. Wilhelm
Pepperdine Law Review
This Comment argues for a comprehensive approach to legitimizing the lay jury—an approach involving education, attorney adaptation, courtroom renovations, and judicial knowledge—and a better understanding of how legal professionals can fairly and most effectively transmit knowledge to the average American. The lay jury can remain a vital, unique part of the American judicial system if the bench and bar take seriously their responsibilities and adapt to today’s new reality. Part II examines the background of three basic components of a successful contemporary trial: technology, litigation, and the jury. Part III explores how these three components have evolved in the modern …
Back To Blood: The Sociopolitics And Law Of Compulsory Dna Testing Of Refugees, Edward S. Dove
Back To Blood: The Sociopolitics And Law Of Compulsory Dna Testing Of Refugees, Edward S. Dove
University of Massachusetts Law Review
Since October 2012, certain family members of refugees seeking reunification through the United States Refugee Admissions Priority Three program must undergo DNA testing to prove they are genetically related. The putative purposes of the policy include fraud prevention, enhanced national security, and greater efficiency in refugee claims processing. Upon close inspection, however, the new policy generates significant sociopolitical and legal concerns. The notion of what constitutes a family is significantly narrowed. Required DNA testing may violate domestic laws and international human rights instruments regarding voluntary informed consent, privacy, and anti-discrimination. Traditional legal solutions insufficiently remedy these concerns and cannot prevent …
Anaerobic Digestion As A Renewable Energy Source And Waste Management Technology: What Must Be Done For This Technology To Realize Success In The United States?, Blake Anthony Klinkner
Anaerobic Digestion As A Renewable Energy Source And Waste Management Technology: What Must Be Done For This Technology To Realize Success In The United States?, Blake Anthony Klinkner
University of Massachusetts Law Review
Anaerobic digestion technology uses microorganisms to consume waste and produce methane gas, which serves as a source of clean renewable energy. Although anaerobic digestion is widely used for both purposes throughout the rest of the world, it is rarely applied in the United States. This Article explains the scientific processes of anaerobic digestion. It then discusses how anaerobic digestion has been used throughout history and among societies as a waste management technology and source of renewable energy. The Article continues by addressing the legal aspects of anaerobic digestion, examining the reasons why it is not widely used in the United …
The Appeal Of Technology, Nancy Bellhouse May
The Appeal Of Technology, Nancy Bellhouse May
The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process
No abstract provided.
Preface: A Computational Scientist's Perspective On Appellate Technology, Olaf O. Storaasli
Preface: A Computational Scientist's Perspective On Appellate Technology, Olaf O. Storaasli
The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process
No abstract provided.
Introduction: Achieving Better Court Management Through Better Data, Roger A. Hanson, Brian J. Ostrom
Introduction: Achieving Better Court Management Through Better Data, Roger A. Hanson, Brian J. Ostrom
The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process
No abstract provided.
The Paperless Court Of Appeals Comes Of Age, Philip G. Espinosa
The Paperless Court Of Appeals Comes Of Age, Philip G. Espinosa
The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process
No abstract provided.
Enhancing Efficiencies In The Appellate Process Through Technology, Joseph Delehanty, Yvan Llanes, Robert Rath, Danielle Sheff
Enhancing Efficiencies In The Appellate Process Through Technology, Joseph Delehanty, Yvan Llanes, Robert Rath, Danielle Sheff
The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process
No abstract provided.
Prospects And Problems Associated With Technological Change In Appellate Courts: Envisioning The Appeal Of The Future, Eric J. Magnuson, Samuel A. Thumma
Prospects And Problems Associated With Technological Change In Appellate Courts: Envisioning The Appeal Of The Future, Eric J. Magnuson, Samuel A. Thumma
The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process
No abstract provided.