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Full-Text Articles in Law
Jury 2.0, Caren Morrison
Jury 2.0, Caren Morrison
Caren Myers Morrison
When the Framers drafted the Sixth Amendment and provided that the accused in a criminal case would have the right to a speedy and public trial by an “impartial jury,” it is unlikely that they imagined the members of that impartial jury becoming Facebook friends during deliberations, or Googling the defendant’s name during trial. But in the past few years, such cases have increasingly been making headlines. The impact of the Internet on the functioning of the jury has generated a lot of press, but has not yet attracted scholarly attention. This article seeks to focus legal discourse on this …
Toward A Textualist Paradigm For Interpreting Emoticons, John Ehrett
Toward A Textualist Paradigm For Interpreting Emoticons, John Ehrett
John Ehrett
I evaluate the dimensions of courts’ current interpretive dilemma, and subsequently sketch a possible framework for extending traditional statutory interpretation principles into this new domain: throughout the following analysis, I describe the process of attaching cognizable linguistic referents to emoticons and emojis throughout as symbolical reification, and propose a normative way forward for those tasked with deriving meaning from emoji-laden communications.
Does Australia Really Need Mandatory Data Breach Notification Laws - And If So, What Kind?, Sara Smyth
Does Australia Really Need Mandatory Data Breach Notification Laws - And If So, What Kind?, Sara Smyth
Sara Smyth
Extract
Mandatory data breach notification laws brought much-needed attention to areas of concern that were previously unknown, particularly organisational inadequacies regarding the security of personal information, and led to innovative organisational practices and regulatory initiatives. This is important given that there is little or no incentive for private and public organisations to report data breach information on their own, particularly given the fear of reputational sanctions.137 Yet, data breach notification laws can also bring publicity to breaches that are relatively minor, and not likely to have a significant impact given the low risk of identity theft, which can unnecessarily lead …
The Answer To Trial Publicity Is A Better Question, Kevin F. Qualls
The Answer To Trial Publicity Is A Better Question, Kevin F. Qualls
Kevin F Qualls
Free-Press/Fair-Trial contests now happen in a new media age. Judicial remedies such as change-of-venue, sequestration, jury admonitions, and gag orders were fashioned in an era that included broadcast radio and television, an emerging cable television industry, and the traditional print media of newspapers and magazines. That content was, to some degree, geographically bound and temporary. Now those judicial remedies are applied in a new media age that extends the reach of traditional media in time and space while offering interactive capability. The efficacy of these remedies is in question. This paper provides an historical overview of how judicial remedies for …
Big Data, Cyber Security, And Exchange Of Information Challenges, William Byrnes
Big Data, Cyber Security, And Exchange Of Information Challenges, William Byrnes
William H. Byrnes
No abstract provided.
Cases For Lecture 3; Trademarks, Macerata 17 March 2015, Ulf Maunsbach
Cases For Lecture 3; Trademarks, Macerata 17 March 2015, Ulf Maunsbach
Ulf Maunsbach
No abstract provided.
Cases For Lecture 4 - Copyright In Cyberspace, Macerata, 8 April 2015, Ulf Maunsbach
Cases For Lecture 4 - Copyright In Cyberspace, Macerata, 8 April 2015, Ulf Maunsbach
Ulf Maunsbach
No abstract provided.
Cases For Lecture 5; Private International Law And The Internet, Macerata 15 April 2015, Ulf Maunsbach
Cases For Lecture 5; Private International Law And The Internet, Macerata 15 April 2015, Ulf Maunsbach
Ulf Maunsbach
No abstract provided.