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Full-Text Articles in Law

Panel Ii: Blockchain Regulation And Criminal Law, 34 Uic J. Marshall J. Priv. & Tech. L. 31 (2019), Justin Steffen, Michele Korver, Elaine Wyder-Harshman, Michael Baumert, Emily Hayes Jan 2019

Panel Ii: Blockchain Regulation And Criminal Law, 34 Uic J. Marshall J. Priv. & Tech. L. 31 (2019), Justin Steffen, Michele Korver, Elaine Wyder-Harshman, Michael Baumert, Emily Hayes

UIC John Marshall Journal of Information Technology & Privacy Law

The most disruptive technology to emerge in the past decade, blockchain technology has had an immediate impact on the legal industry to address the new issues that blockchain, cryptocurrencies, and distributed ledger technologies present. This panel discusses current and potential regulatory issues facing blockchain technology, including ICOs and securities regulation, prevention of blockchain use in criminal activities, the uncertain tax landscape, and the unique challenges of regulating a global borderless technology.


Panel Iii: Practicing Blockchain Law, 34 Uic J. Marshall J. Priv. & Tech. L. 52 (2019), Peter Nadimi, Samuel Korver, Zach Smolinski, Lauren Steinhaeuser, Corey Bieber Jan 2019

Panel Iii: Practicing Blockchain Law, 34 Uic J. Marshall J. Priv. & Tech. L. 52 (2019), Peter Nadimi, Samuel Korver, Zach Smolinski, Lauren Steinhaeuser, Corey Bieber

UIC John Marshall Journal of Information Technology & Privacy Law

The most disruptive technology to emerge in the past decade, blockchain technology has had an immediate impact on the legal industry to address the new issues that blockchain, cryptocurrencies, and distributed ledger technologies present. This panel discusses why it is important for lawyers to take an interest in this area, and more importantly, how lawyers of all experience levels can get involved in the blockchain space. The panel will share diverse experiences and insights from those on the ground who do blockchain legal work.


Panel I: Blockchain And The Law, 34 Uic J. Marshall J. Priv. & Tech. L. 1 (2019), Carla Reyes, Nelson Rosario, Rachel Cannon, Richard Tall Jan 2019

Panel I: Blockchain And The Law, 34 Uic J. Marshall J. Priv. & Tech. L. 1 (2019), Carla Reyes, Nelson Rosario, Rachel Cannon, Richard Tall

UIC John Marshall Journal of Information Technology & Privacy Law

The most disruptive technology to emerge in the past decade, blockchain technology has had an immediate impact on the legal industry to address the new issues that blockchain, cryptocurrencies, and distributed ledger technologies present. This panel provides an overview of blockchain technology, including current and potential applications, and discusses how blockchain intersects with various sectors of the law. The panelists define this new technology, identify potential legal challenges ahead, and explain how new and seasoned attorneys can engage in this emerging area.


Abstraction In Software Patents (And How To Fix It), 18 J. Marshall Rev. Intell. Prop. L. 364 (2019), Athul Acharya Jan 2019

Abstraction In Software Patents (And How To Fix It), 18 J. Marshall Rev. Intell. Prop. L. 364 (2019), Athul Acharya

UIC Review of Intellectual Property Law

Software has long posed a quandary for patent law. As many have observed, software is an abstract technology—but abstract ideas are supposedly ineligible for patenting. This Article explores just what that means, what it doesn’t mean, and what might fix the problem of abstraction in software patents. This Article offers two related ways to understand the abstract nature of software. First, computer science defines itself as a “science of abstraction,” and that self-definition finds real doctrinal purchase. Second, software code is designed to be what the doctrine calls “functional”—to describe abstract results that can be executed on heterogenous hardware without …


Can Accessibility Liberate The "Lost Ark" Of Scholarly Work?: University Library Institutional Repositories Are "Places Of Public Accommodation”, 52 Uic J. Marshall L. Rev. 327 (2019), Raizel Liebler, Gregory Cunningham Jan 2019

Can Accessibility Liberate The "Lost Ark" Of Scholarly Work?: University Library Institutional Repositories Are "Places Of Public Accommodation”, 52 Uic J. Marshall L. Rev. 327 (2019), Raizel Liebler, Gregory Cunningham

UIC Law Review

For any body of knowledge – an ark of power or a corpus of scholarship – to be studied and used by people, it needs to be accessible to those seeking information. Universities, through their libraries, now aim to make more of the scholarship produced available for free to all through institutional repositories. However, the goal of being truly open for an institutional repository is more than the traditional definition of open access. It also means openness in a more general sense. Creating a scholarship-based online space also needs to take into consideration potential barriers for people with disabilities. This …