Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Artificial Intelligence; Intellectual Property; Patent Law; Copyright Law; DABUS; Stephen Thaler; Innovation; Generative AI; Federal Circuit; United States Patent and Trademark Office; United States Copyright Office; Congress; Digiwork; Patent; Copyright; IP; Authorship (1)
- Asylum; Immigration; Immigration & Nationality Act; INA; Membership; Particular Social Group; Domestic Violence; Victims; Gangs; Canadian Asylum Law; Canada; Board Of Immigration Appeals; BIA; Matter Of W-G-R-; Matter Of M-E-V-; Three-Element Test (1)
- BRI (1)
- Belt and Road Initiative (1)
- Contracts; Government Contracts; Government Procurement; ASEAN; Asia; Southeast Asia; Winstar; Sovereign Immunity; Remedies; Restitution (1)
-
- Injunction; Canada; interlocutory mandatory injunctions; interlocutory prohibitive injunctions; Supreme Court of Canada; R v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp.; strong prima facie case; litigation; trial; American Cyanamid v. Ethicon Ltd.; practical consequences (1)
- Search Engine; Right To Be Forgotten; Right To Deindex; Right Of Publicity; Right Of Privacy; Google Spain; Privacy; Google; Google Spain V. AEPD; Private Information; First Amendment; Free Speech; Court Of Justice Of The European Union; CJEU; Publicity; Search Results; European Union; Haelan Laboratories (1)
- White-collar crime; Compelled testimony; Cross-border; International white-collar investigation; Financial corporations; International; Multijurisdictional; United States v. Allen; Kastigar hearing; DOJ; Department of Justice; MLAT; Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty; Taint; Taint Teams; Parallel Investigations; Future Foreign Corrupt Practices Act; Fifth Amendment; Derivative Use Immunity; Financial Conduct Authority; FCA (1)
Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Law
Unintended Consequences: The New Test For Interlocutory Mandatory Injunctions, Jeff Berryman
Unintended Consequences: The New Test For Interlocutory Mandatory Injunctions, Jeff Berryman
Brooklyn Law Review
Interlocutory mandatory injunctions can be an important remedy during the pendency of a trial. With its decision in R. v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp, the Supreme Court of Canada revised its test for an interlocutory mandatory injunction, holding that it should require a higher threshold and be therefore harder to obtain than an interlocutory prohibitive injunction. This higher threshold requires that the applicant demonstrate a strong prima facie case that it will succeed at trial based on law and evidence. This change adds uncertainty to the process, ultimately complicating and adding costs to litigation.
Rise Of The Machines: The Future Of Intellectual Property Rights In The Age Of Artificial Intelligence, Sofia Vescovo
Rise Of The Machines: The Future Of Intellectual Property Rights In The Age Of Artificial Intelligence, Sofia Vescovo
Brooklyn Law Review
Artificial intelligence (AI) is not new to generating outputs considered suitable for intellectual property (IP) protection. However, recent technological advancements have made it possible for AI to transform from a mere tool used to assist in developing IP to the mind behind novel artistic works and inventions. One particular AI, DABUS, has done just so. Yet, while technology has advanced, IP law has not. This note sets out to provide a solution to the legal concerns raised by AI in IP law, specifically in the context of AI authorship and inventorship. The DABUS test case offers a model framework for …
Remedies For Government Breach: Lessons From The United States And A Zone Of Appealable Remedies For Southeast Asia, Benjamin D. Black
Remedies For Government Breach: Lessons From The United States And A Zone Of Appealable Remedies For Southeast Asia, Benjamin D. Black
Brooklyn Law Review
Though international investment treaties may supplant domestic contract law in cross-border government contracts, their limited use in Southeast Asia informs the continued importance of clear remedies for a government breach of contract under domestic law. As investment from China’s Belt and Road Initiative continues to flow into the region, private parties require clear rules and remedies when a government breaches a contract. This note argues that the lack of clear and codified public contract law in Southeast Asia presents a substantial risk to private contractors and that the extreme variance in public contract law is detrimental to both parties involved. …
The (Not-So) “Brave New World Of International Criminal Enforcement”: The Intricacies Of Multi-Jurisdictional White-Collar Investigations, Emily T. Carlson
The (Not-So) “Brave New World Of International Criminal Enforcement”: The Intricacies Of Multi-Jurisdictional White-Collar Investigations, Emily T. Carlson
Brooklyn Law Review
We have entered a new age of international white-collar crime and are seeing the growing interdependency of the Department of Justice (DOJ) and parallel foreign agencies to conduct investigations and subsequent prosecutorial proceedings. This coordination to combat these crimes, however, has revealed a troubling question—how can enforcement agencies work effectively together if they have fundamental differences in the legal authority governing testimony-gathering and what evidence is allowed before a grand jury? The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in United States v. Allen, confronted this issue directly as it overturned two indictments arising out of suspected manipulation of a …
Particular Social Groups: Vague Definitions And An Indeterminate Future For Asylum Seekers, Christopher C. Malwitz
Particular Social Groups: Vague Definitions And An Indeterminate Future For Asylum Seekers, Christopher C. Malwitz
Brooklyn Law Review
Victims fleeing their native countries to escape violence, discrimination, or persecution are provided a limited number of mechanisms under current immigration law to gain refuge in the United States. Under the controlling law, aliens entering the United States are eligible for asylum if they qualify under one of five protected grounds, including race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion. But the complete lack of statutory guidance surrounding what constitutes a “particular social group” is incredibly controversial and confusing. The immigration statutes provide no language defining this protected ground. Thus, the guiding framework and eligibility criteria …
Search Query: Can America Accept A Right To Be Forgotten As A Publicity Right?, James J. Lavelle
Search Query: Can America Accept A Right To Be Forgotten As A Publicity Right?, James J. Lavelle
Brooklyn Law Review
Search engines have profoundly changed the relationship between privacy and free speech by making personal information widely and cheaply available to a global audience. This has raised many concerns both over how online companies handle the information they collect and how regular citizens use online services to invade other people’s privacy. One way Europe has addressed this change is by providing European Union citizens with a right to petition search engines to deindex links from search results—a so-called “right to be forgotten.” If the information contained in a search result is “inadequate, irrelevant or no longer relevant,” the search engine …