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Articles 1 - 9 of 9
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Trial And Error: The Supreme Court's Philosophy Of Science, Susan Haack
Trial And Error: The Supreme Court's Philosophy Of Science, Susan Haack
Articles
No abstract provided.
A Dispatch From The Crypto Wars, A. Michael Froomkin
A Dispatch From The Crypto Wars, A. Michael Froomkin
Articles
Matt Curtin's Brute Force is a primarily personal account of one early effort to harness the power of distributed computing. In 1997, Mr. Curtin and other members of the DESCHALL (DES Challenge) project built, distributed, and managed software that united thousands of computers, many of them ordinary personal computers, in the search for a single decryption key among 72 quadrillion possibilities. The DESCHALL project sought to demonstrate that DES, then the U.S. national standard encryption algorithm, was no longer as secure as advertised. While Brute Force also offers some background on encryption regulation, export control policy, and other aspect of …
When "Victory" Masks Retreat: The Lsat, Constitutional Dualism, And The End Of Diversity, D. Marvin Jones
When "Victory" Masks Retreat: The Lsat, Constitutional Dualism, And The End Of Diversity, D. Marvin Jones
Articles
No abstract provided.
Information Society Challenges To Financial Regulation, Caroline Bradley
Information Society Challenges To Financial Regulation, Caroline Bradley
Articles
No abstract provided.
Scientific Secrecy And "Spin": The Sad, Sleazy Saga Of The Trials Of Remune, Susan Haack
Scientific Secrecy And "Spin": The Sad, Sleazy Saga Of The Trials Of Remune, Susan Haack
Articles
No abstract provided.
Supersize Pay, Incentive Compatibility, And The Volatile Shareholder Interest, William Wilson Bratton
Supersize Pay, Incentive Compatibility, And The Volatile Shareholder Interest, William Wilson Bratton
Articles
No abstract provided.
Latcrit X Afterword: Beyond The First Decade: A Forward-Looking History Of Latcrit Theory, Community And Praxis, Berta Hernandez-Truyol, Angela Harris, Francisco Valdes
Latcrit X Afterword: Beyond The First Decade: A Forward-Looking History Of Latcrit Theory, Community And Praxis, Berta Hernandez-Truyol, Angela Harris, Francisco Valdes
Articles
No abstract provided.
Out Of Thin Air: Using First Amendment Public Forum Analysis To Redeem American Broadcasting Regulation, Anthony E. Varona
Out Of Thin Air: Using First Amendment Public Forum Analysis To Redeem American Broadcasting Regulation, Anthony E. Varona
Articles
American television and radio broadcasters are uniquely privileged among Federal Communications Commission (FCC) licensees. Exalted as public trustees by the 1934 Communications Act, broadcasters pay virtually nothing for the use of their channels of public radiofrequency spectrum, unlike many other FCC licensees who have paid billions of dollars for similar digital spectrum. Congress envisioned a social contract of sorts between broadcast licensees and the communities they served. In exchange for their free licenses, broadcast stations were charged with providing a platform for a "free marketplace of ideas" that would cultivate a democratically engaged and enlightened citizenry through the broadcasting of …
Repeat Infringement In The Digital Millennium Copyright Act, A. Michael Froomkin
Repeat Infringement In The Digital Millennium Copyright Act, A. Michael Froomkin
Articles
No abstract provided.