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Full-Text Articles in Law

Reforming Surveillance Law: The Swiss Model, Susan Freiwald, Sylvain Metille Aug 2012

Reforming Surveillance Law: The Swiss Model, Susan Freiwald, Sylvain Metille

Susan Freiwald

Reforming Surveillance Law: The Swiss Model

Susan Freiwald & Sylvain Métille

As implemented over the past twenty-six years, the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA), which regulates electronic surveillance by law enforcement agents, has become incomplete, confusing, and ineffective. In contrast, a new Swiss law (CrimPC) regulates law enforcement surveillance in a more comprehensive, uniform, and effective manner. This article compares the two approaches and argues that recent proposals to reform EPCA in a piecemeal fashion will not suffice. Instead, the Swiss CrimPC law presents a model for more fundamental reform of U.S. law.

This article is the first to analyze …


The Law Of The Zebra, Andrea Matwyshyn Feb 2012

The Law Of The Zebra, Andrea Matwyshyn

Andrea Matwyshyn

At the dawn of internet law, scholars and judged debated whether a “law of the horse” – a set of specific laws addressing technology problems – was ever needed. Time has demonstrated that, in some cases, the answer is yes. However, today courts are inherently confused regarding the trajectory for contract law in technology contexts: a technology-centric analysis is threatening to subvert traditional contract law and the future of entrepreneurship: circuit splits have emerged in what might be called an undesirable “law of the zebra.” Do contracts that involve technology indeed require exceptional contract rules? In particular, does the use …


Best Practices For Drafting University Technology Assignment Agreements After Filmtec, Stanford V. Roche, And Patent Reform, Parker Miles Tresemer Jan 2012

Best Practices For Drafting University Technology Assignment Agreements After Filmtec, Stanford V. Roche, And Patent Reform, Parker Miles Tresemer

Parker Tresemer

Since the end of World War II, federally funded universities and private companies have been an integral part of continued American innovation and technological production. However, like most rational economic actors, universities and private companies are only willing to invest in federally funded technologies if they are guaranteed some sort of exclusive return on their investment. By granting federal contractors exclusive patent rights to their employee’s federally funded inventions, the Bayh-Dole Act provided the necessary incentives for private sector investment in federally funded technologies. However, case law subsequent to Bayh-Dole’s enactment has significantly undermined the system of incentives Congress intended …


Reforming The Universal Service Fund For The Digital Age, Daniel Lyons Dec 2011

Reforming The Universal Service Fund For The Digital Age, Daniel Lyons

Daniel Lyons

The marketplace and technological changes that have occurred since the last major revision of the Communications Act in 1996 have rendered existing law and policy woefully outdated, if not obsolete. In the past fifteen years there has been a switch from analog to digital services, from narrowband to broadband networks, and, most importantly, from a mostly monopolistic to a generally competitive environment. In Communications Law and Policy in the Digital Age: The Next Five Years, some of the nation's most eminent scholars explain why communications law and policy should be changed in response to these profound marketplace transitions. And, as …