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Full-Text Articles in Law

Application Of The Ada To Websites: Congress Should Rely On The Standards Created By The World Wide Consortium, Mara'd A. Smith Dec 2012

Application Of The Ada To Websites: Congress Should Rely On The Standards Created By The World Wide Consortium, Mara'd A. Smith

Mara'D Smith

Congress created the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) in 1990 to assure equality of opportunity and independent living to those with physical or mental abilities. Although the roots of the Internet were growing rapidly when Congress passed the ADA, the World Wide Web did not become popular until the mid 1990s. Congress has not yet updated the ADA to clearly cover websites, and the current regulations that ensure access for disabled persons to physical locations do not clearly apply to websites. This paper argues that Congress should rely on the World Wide Web Consortium standards when revising the ADA to …


Prison Visitation Policies: A Fifty State Survey, Chesa Boudin Dec 2012

Prison Visitation Policies: A Fifty State Survey, Chesa Boudin

Chesa Boudin

This paper presents a summary of the findings from the first fifty-state survey of prison visitation policies. Our research explores the contours of how prison administrators exercise their discretion to prescribe when and how prisoners may have contact with friends and family. Visitation policies impact recidivism, inmates’ and their families’ quality of life, public safety, and prison security, transparency and accountability. Yet many policies are inaccessible to visitors and researchers. Given the wide-ranging effects of visitation, it is important to understand the landscape of visitation policies and then, where possible, identify best practices and uncover policies that may be counterproductive …


Investigating Impacts Of Legal Practice Management System On The Employee Productivity Of The Small Thai Law Firm, Onanong Pilun-Owad Nov 2012

Investigating Impacts Of Legal Practice Management System On The Employee Productivity Of The Small Thai Law Firm, Onanong Pilun-Owad

Onanong Pilun-owad

This paper focuses on the study and investigation of the impacts in the implementation of a software package to support the operation and management of legal practice, which is referred to as the Legal Practice Management System (LPMS), on employee productivity. This implementation is considered the Information Technology-enabled business process and organization change of a small law firm in Thailand. The focal organization is a law firm in Thailand employing thirty-two people, which has been facing various business challenges from both internal and external factors; for example, increasing clients’ expectations, local and foreign competitors, poor financial performance, slow responses to …


Contracting In The Modern World, Enrico Baffi Nov 2012

Contracting In The Modern World, Enrico Baffi

enrico baffi

In this paper we try explore some of the basic features of mass contracting. In our opinion, there are basically four characteristics of mass contracting: the reduced negotiations, the dissemination of standard form contracts, the presence of abusive clauses, and the recapitulation of the contract and its execution in a single act of stipulation. a) The reduction in negotiations is the result first of all of the costs that this activity requires and of the costs required to manage personalised contracts; secondly, this reduction is the consequence of the greater advantage of mass-produced goods compared to personalised goods; ) The …


The Problem Of Internalization Of Social Costs And The Ideas Of Ronal Coase, Enrico Baffi Nov 2012

The Problem Of Internalization Of Social Costs And The Ideas Of Ronal Coase, Enrico Baffi

enrico baffi

This work examines the influence of Coasian thought on the analysis of externalities as used by economists and legal economists. Ronald Coase, a Chicago scholar, advanced a series of criticisms of the Pigovian tax system; the theorem that bears his name is merely the best known. In his 1960 work, he sought to demonstrate that the internationalization of social costs was not always socially useful andd sometimes impossible. In addition, he identified other institutional solutions to which systems can - and often do - resort. One of these solutions is to simply authorize the harmful activity without introducing mechanisms to …


Keeping Secrets: An Alternative To The Economic Penalty Enhancement Act, Brittani N. Baldwin Oct 2012

Keeping Secrets: An Alternative To The Economic Penalty Enhancement Act, Brittani N. Baldwin

Brittani N. Baldwin

No abstract provided.


Law Practice Technology: A Law School Course?, Charles H. Oates Oct 2012

Law Practice Technology: A Law School Course?, Charles H. Oates

Charles H Oates

Technology is transforming the practice of law, but law schools are being left behind. Until relatively recently and only to a very limited extent, law school curricula have not reflected the revolutionary changes in the ways that technology is altering the practice of law. Today’s law students, unlike their predecessors, are comfortable with technology, but anxious about entering a severely competitive profession. For most lawyers, economic survival will depend upon their ability to utilize technology to maximize efficiencies and comply with court-mandated applications of technology. With the pervasiveness of technology in all areas of law practice today, a course in …


Managing Content In Virtual Environments: From Music To Machinima, Tamiko R. Franklin Sep 2012

Managing Content In Virtual Environments: From Music To Machinima, Tamiko R. Franklin

Tamiko R Franklin

Developing an effective rights management strategy in virtual environments requires a close review of current case law especially with respect to ongoing clarifications of mentioned statutory provisions under copyright laws. It is also helpful to be aware of the peculiarities that involve copyright protected content created for use in virtual spaces such as issues involving publication and making available across multiple jurisdictions. There are differences in international systems of protection that affect the intellectual property rights in content; particularly so if the content in question is a work of visual art like a photograph or digital representation of a painting, …


Direct And Enhanced Disclosure Of Researcher Financial Conflicts, Roy G. Spece Jr. Sep 2012

Direct And Enhanced Disclosure Of Researcher Financial Conflicts, Roy G. Spece Jr.

Roy G Spece Jr.

Abstract of DIRECT AND ENHANCED DISCLOSURE OF RESEARCHER FINANCIAL CONFLICTS OF INTEREST: THE ROLE OF TRUST In earlier writing I recommended direct disclosure of a major researcher financial conflict of interest, per capita funding—i.e., providing a fixed sum per subject recruited and enrolled in a study. This article adds a recommendation for enhanced direct disclosure. The enhancement in the disclosure is a summary of why per capita and excess payments are being discussed. The reason they are being discussed is because of their risk of introducing bias into researchers’ decisions regarding study design, implementation, and interpretation as well as concerning …


Beyond Einstein And Edison: Claiming Space For Non-Faculty Inventors In Technology Transfer, Jennifer Carter-Johnson Sep 2012

Beyond Einstein And Edison: Claiming Space For Non-Faculty Inventors In Technology Transfer, Jennifer Carter-Johnson

Jennifer Carter-Johnson

The Bayh-Dole Act, often credited with the explosion of university technology transfer, requires universities to incentivize invention disclosure by sharing the royalties generated by licensing. Many scholars have debated the effectiveness of university implementation of this requirement, and indeed, the low rate of disclosure of inventions by academic researchers to the university is often a bottleneck in technology transfer process. Unfortunately, most discussions focusing on inventor compliance with Bayh-Dole requirements have explored faculty-inventor motivations. Similarly, many university intellectual property (IP) policies are drafted specifically toward incentivizing faculty-inventors to comply with invention disclosure requirements. However, in most cases, university inventions are …


Patenting Isolated Human Enhancer Elements And The Utility Requirement Problem, William B. Mcconnell Sep 2012

Patenting Isolated Human Enhancer Elements And The Utility Requirement Problem, William B. Mcconnell

William B. McConnell

No abstract provided.


Toward Cyber Peace: Managing Cyber Attacks Through Polycentric Governance, Scott Shackelford Aug 2012

Toward Cyber Peace: Managing Cyber Attacks Through Polycentric Governance, Scott Shackelford

Scott Shackelford

Views range widely about the seriousness of cyber attacks and the likelihood of cyber war. But even framing cyber attacks within the context of a loaded category like war can be an oversimplification that shifts focus away from enhancing cybersecurity against the full range of threats now facing companies, countries, and the international community. Current methods are proving ineffective at managing cyber attacks, and as cybersecurity legislation is being debated in the U.S. Congress and around the world the time is ripe for a fresh look at this critical topic. This Article searches for alternative avenues to foster cyber peace …


Mistake-Proofing Medicine: Legal Considerations And Healthcare Quality Implications, Arlen W. Langvardt Aug 2012

Mistake-Proofing Medicine: Legal Considerations And Healthcare Quality Implications, Arlen W. Langvardt

Arlen W Langvardt

MISTAKE-PROOFING MEDICINE: LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS

AND HEALTHCARE QUALITY IMPLICATIONS

Authors: John R. Grout, John W. Hill, Arlen W. Langvardt (corresponding author).

Abstract

In 1999, the Institute of Medicine estimated that approximately 98,000 deaths resulted annually from medical errors. This shocking number does not appear to have lessened during the intervening years. Although mistake-proofing techniques similar to those that have proven useful in the product liability context hold great promise for reducing the number of medical errors, the adoption of such techniques in healthcare settings has not occurred to the extent it should have.

This article examines potentially useful mistake-proofing techniques, explores …


It's About Time: Privacy, Information Life Cycles, And The Right To Be Forgotten, Meg Leta Ambrose Aug 2012

It's About Time: Privacy, Information Life Cycles, And The Right To Be Forgotten, Meg Leta Ambrose

Meg Leta Ambrose

The current consensus is that information, once online, is there forever. Content permanence has led many European countries, the European Union, and even the United States to establish a right to be forgotten to protect citizens from the shackles of the past presented by the Internet. But, the Internet has not defeated time, and information, like everything, gets old, decays, and dies, even online. Quite the opposite of permanent, the Web cannot be self-preserving. One study from the field of content persistence, a body of research that has been almost wholly overlooked by legal scholars, found that 85% of content …


Search, Essential Facilities, And The Antitrust Duty To Deal, Marina Lao Aug 2012

Search, Essential Facilities, And The Antitrust Duty To Deal, Marina Lao

Marina Lao

The core of the gathering antitrust case against Google seems to be that it favors its own or its affiliates’ content over that of its competitors in ancillary markets in the unpaid search results. Seeking the competitive advantages inherent in integration, which is what preferential treatment of one’s own property is about, is usually not unlawful. This paper examines whether “essential facilities” and the duty-to-deal nonetheless provide a basis for prohibiting this practice, as some have suggested, and concludes that they do not.

On the threshold monopoly power issue, most assume, based on Google’s high percentage of general search queries, …


Employee And Inventor Witnesses In Patent Trials: The Blurry Line Between Expert And Lay Testimony, Alex Reese Aug 2012

Employee And Inventor Witnesses In Patent Trials: The Blurry Line Between Expert And Lay Testimony, Alex Reese

Alex Reese

Parties in patent lawsuits that are going to trial face a crucial choice: who is the best witness to explain the often complex or scientific technology behind an invention or an accused product? Often, the parties will select an employee witness such as an engineer, scientist, or a named inventor of the patent-in-suit to offer this key testimony rather than a hired expert. Many litigants have found that there are benefits to choosing an employee witness who can testify based on first-hand experience with the technology in question rather than a hired expert, who must prepare an expert report and …


Patent Infringement In The Context Of Follow-On Biologics, Janet Freilich Aug 2012

Patent Infringement In The Context Of Follow-On Biologics, Janet Freilich

Janet Freilich

This article fills a gap in the literature by conducting a comprehensive analysis of patent infringement in the context of follow-on biologics. Patent infringement is an important topic because, like small molecule generic drugs, follow-on biologics are likely to begin their life facing infringement suits. Because it is tremendously expensive to develop a follow-on biologic, it is vital that there be consistency in how they are treated in the courts once the inevitable patent infringement suits arrive. If follow-on biologics companies cannot predict how their product will be received in court, they may decide it is not worth the risk …


Contextual Expectations Of Privacy, Andrew Selbst Aug 2012

Contextual Expectations Of Privacy, Andrew Selbst

Andrew Selbst

Fourth Amendment search jurisprudence is nominally based on a “reasonable expectation of privacy,” but actual doctrine is detached from society’s conception of privacy. Courts rely on various binary distinctions: Is a piece of information secret or not? Was the observed conduct inside or outside? While often convenient, none of these binary distinctions can adequately capture the complicated range of ideas encompassed by “privacy.” Over the last decade, privacy theorists have begun to understand that a consideration of context is essential to a full understanding of privacy. Helen Nissenbaum’s theory of contextual integrity, which characterizes a right to privacy as the …


Does The Communications Act Of 1934 Contain A Hidden Internet Kill Switch?, David W. Opderbeck Aug 2012

Does The Communications Act Of 1934 Contain A Hidden Internet Kill Switch?, David W. Opderbeck

David W. Opderbeck

A key area of debate over cybersecurity policy concerns whether the President should have authority to shut down all or part of the Internet in the event of a cyber-emergency or cyber-war. The proposed Cybersecurity Act of 2009, for example, contained what critics derided as an Internet “kill switch.” The current iteration of a comprehensive cybersecurity reform bill, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012, opts for a soft public-private contingency plan model instead of a kill switch. But the kill switch may yet live. Sponsors of the present legislation have argued that Section 606 of the Communications Act of 1934 already …


The Paradox Of Legal Equivalents And Scientific Equivalence: Reconciling Patent Law’S Doctrine Of Equivalents With The Fda’S Bioequivalence Requirement, Janet Freilich Aug 2012

The Paradox Of Legal Equivalents And Scientific Equivalence: Reconciling Patent Law’S Doctrine Of Equivalents With The Fda’S Bioequivalence Requirement, Janet Freilich

Janet Freilich

Contrary to popular perception, generic drugs often enter the market before the patents covering their brand-name counterparts have expired by making slight changes the drug to avoid the brand-name patent. These generics face a paradox: the FDA requires that the generic “not show a significant difference” from the reference product while patent law requires that the generic have “substantial differences” as compared to the reference product. The generic must be bioequivalent but not legally equivalent to the brand-name drug. This paradox occurs frequently in the courts but has never been discussed in the literature. This article analyzes every case involving …


Forging Towards Coexistence, Laurie J. Beyranevand Aug 2012

Forging Towards Coexistence, Laurie J. Beyranevand

Laurie J Beyranevand

Abstract: For better or worse, the United States has demonstrated a long history of support for agricultural biotechnology. Justified as necessary to meet the growing demands of our nation’s food demand, federal policies addressing genetic engineering have attempted to balance of set of competing interests to ensure health and safety while also encouraging further innovation and development of technology. The unfortunate effects of these policies are suffered disproportionately by organic and non-GE farmers, as there has been little consideration of how the products of genetic engineering impact this sector. In the midst of regulating biotechnology, the federal government has lost …


Rationalizing Risks To Cultural Loss In Resource Development, Sari M. Graben Aug 2012

Rationalizing Risks To Cultural Loss In Resource Development, Sari M. Graben

Sari M Graben

Abstract In this article, I consider the implications of culture for valuation of cultural loss in cost benefit analysis. I argue that rational choice models have a difficult time quantifying cultural values because they have yet to grapple with the way experts tasked with cost benefit analysis translate knowledge about cultural worldviews for the purposes of comparison. This translation can alter the valuation of the risk so as to undermine the representation of a loss, rather than identify it. However, instead of rejecting the consideration of cultural loss in cost-benefit analysis outright, I build on dialogical approaches to governance that …


Search, Essential Facilities, And The Antitrust Duty To Deal, Marina Lao Aug 2012

Search, Essential Facilities, And The Antitrust Duty To Deal, Marina Lao

Marina Lao

The core of the gathering antitrust case against Google seems to be that it favors its own or its affiliates’ content over that of its competitors in ancillary markets in the unpaid search results. Seeking the competitive advantages inherent in integration, which is what preferential treatment of one’s own property is about, is usually not unlawful. This paper examines whether “essential facilities” and the duty-to-deal nonetheless provide a basis for prohibiting this practice, as some have suggested, and concludes that they do not.

On the threshold monopoly power issue, most assume, based on Google’s high percentage of general search queries, …


Search, Essential Facilities, And The Antitrust Duty To Deal, Marina Lao Aug 2012

Search, Essential Facilities, And The Antitrust Duty To Deal, Marina Lao

Marina Lao

The core of the gathering antitrust case against Google seems to be that it favors its own or its affiliates’ content over that of its competitors in ancillary markets in the unpaid search results. Seeking the competitive advantages inherent in integration, which is what preferential treatment of one’s own property is about, is usually not unlawful. This paper examines whether “essential facilities” and the duty-to-deal nonetheless provide a basis for prohibiting this practice, as some have suggested, and concludes that they do not.

On the threshold monopoly power issue, most assume, based on Google’s high percentage of general search queries, …


Will Fda Data Exclusivity Make Biologic Patents Passé?, Vincent J. Roth Esq Aug 2012

Will Fda Data Exclusivity Make Biologic Patents Passé?, Vincent J. Roth Esq

Vincent J Roth Esq

Much controversy has ensued over the current 12 year data exclusivity period afforded biosimilars pursuant to the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act of 2009 (the “BPCI”) that was recently enacted in March 2010, as part of President Obama’s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (the “PPACA”), to create a biosimilar market in the US. In fact, the BPCI, itself, has been controversial and just barely survived judicial scrutiny when the US Supreme Court upheld the PPACA on June 28, 2012 in a 5-4 vote. Many commentators speculate whether data exclusivity will overtake patents as the preferred method of intellectual …


The Curious Case Of Convenience Casinos: How Internet Sweepstakes Cafes Survive In A Gray Area Between Unlawful Gambling And Legitimate Business Promotions, Steven J. Silver Aug 2012

The Curious Case Of Convenience Casinos: How Internet Sweepstakes Cafes Survive In A Gray Area Between Unlawful Gambling And Legitimate Business Promotions, Steven J. Silver

Steven Silver

Once relegated to the Nevada desert and New Jersey shore, gambling is now everywhere in the United States. State governments strapped for cash and desperate for increased tax revenues are welcoming gambling with open arms as forty-three states sponsor lotteries and twenty-three states house casinos. Despite this gaming boom, the ease of access to casinos has not deterred entrepreneurs from successfully creating an offshoot industry of “convenience casinos.” Convenience casinos are simply Internet cafes that sell Internet time cards attached with instant-win sweepstakes entries, much like the code underneath a Coke bottle or a McDonald’s Monopoly game piece. Although seemingly …


Will Fda Data Exclusivity Make Biologic Patents Passé?, Vincent J. Roth Esq Aug 2012

Will Fda Data Exclusivity Make Biologic Patents Passé?, Vincent J. Roth Esq

Vincent J Roth Esq

Much controversy has ensued over the current 12 year data exclusivity period afforded biosimilars pursuant to the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act of 2009 (the “BPCI”) that was recently enacted in March 2010, as part of President Obama’s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (the “PPACA”), to create a biosimilar market in the US. In fact, the BPCI, itself, has been controversial and just barely survived judicial scrutiny when the US Supreme Court upheld the PPACA on June 28, 2012 in a 5-4 vote. Many commentators speculate whether data exclusivity will overtake patents as the preferred method of intellectual …


Beyond Patents: The Supreme Court’S Evolving Relationship With The Federal Circuit, Daniel Kazhdan Aug 2012

Beyond Patents: The Supreme Court’S Evolving Relationship With The Federal Circuit, Daniel Kazhdan

Daniel Kazhdan

Federal Circuit scholars have begun to notice a shift in the way the Supreme Court interacts with the Federal Circuit when it comes to patent questions. Scholars point to the fact that in recent years the Supreme Court reviews the Federal Circuit more frequently and more harshly. The Court also criticizes the Federal Circuit for being too formalistic and too eager to expand its jurisdiction. What scholars have failed to note is that these trends are occurring across the entirety of the Federal Circuit’s decisions, and not just with regards to patent questions. This suggests that there is something about …


Beyond Patents: The Supreme Court’S Relationship With The Federal Circuit, Daniel Kazhdan Aug 2012

Beyond Patents: The Supreme Court’S Relationship With The Federal Circuit, Daniel Kazhdan

Daniel Kazhdan

Federal Circuit scholars have begun to notice a shift in the way the Supreme Court interacts with the Federal Circuit when it comes to patent questions. Scholars point to the fact that in recent years the Supreme Court reviews the Federal Circuit more frequently and more harshly. The Court also criticizes the Federal Circuit for being too formalistic and too eager to expand its jurisdiction. What scholars have failed to note is that these trends are occurring across the entirety of the Federal Circuit’s decisions, and not just with regards to patent questions. This suggests that there is something about …


Uncertainty As Enforcement Mechanism: The New Expansion Of Secondary Copyright Liability To Internet Platforms, John Blevins Aug 2012

Uncertainty As Enforcement Mechanism: The New Expansion Of Secondary Copyright Liability To Internet Platforms, John Blevins

John F. Blevins

This article examines the role that legal uncertainty plays as a copyright enforcement mechanism against Internet platforms. In recent years, Internet platforms have faced a new wave of copyright enforcement actions arising from their users’ activity. These actions include both civil secondary liability claims and public enforcement actions such as domain name seizures and criminal prosecution. Critically, copyright owners and the government do not necessarily need to prevail in these actions. Instead, the proceedings can be effective so long as they impose sufficient costs upon Internet platforms. In this respect, prevailing is less important than obtaining statutory and doctrinal constructions …