Washington Journal of Law, Technology & Arts Issues
Volumes 1 - 5 were published under the journal name
"Shidler Journal of Law, Commerce + Technology".
Volume 1
Issue 3
Summer 2005
| Article | Title | Author |
| 9 |
Will Wi-Fi Make Your Private Network Public? Wardriving, Criminal and Civil Liability, and the Security Risks of Wireless Networks
abstract
full article
|
Anita Ramasastry, Jane K. Winn and Peter Winn |
| 10 |
Safe Harbor Agreement - Boon or Bane?
abstract
full article
|
Sylvia Mercado Kierkegaard |
| 11 |
A Few Degrees off the Mark: Miniature Missteps that Can Render the Safe Harbors of the DMCA Inaccessible
abstract
full article
|
Nicole J. Nyman |
| 12 |
Pop Goes The Trademark? Competitive Advertising on the Internet
abstract
full article
|
Kendall Bodden |
Issue 2
Winter 2005
| Article | Title | Author |
| 5 |
Tax Implications of Using Out-of-State Computer Servers
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 6 |
Tangible Cash for an Intangible Loss? Insurance Coverage for Damage or Loss of Third-Party Data
abstract
full article
|
Kendall Bodden |
| 7 |
Risky Business: What Must Employers Do to Shield Against Liability for Employee Wrongdoings in the Internet Age?
abstract
full article
|
Nicole J. Nyman |
| 8 |
When Invisible Electronic Ink Leaves Red Faces: Tactical, Legal and Ethical Consequences of the Failure to Remove Metadata
abstract
full article
|
Jembaa Cole |
Issue 1
Spring 2004
| Article | Title | Author |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 2 |
Oops! The Legal Consequences Of and Solutions To Online Pricing Errors
abstract
full article
|
Benjamin Groebner |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 presents a compliance problem for law firms that issue periodic newsletters to clients or prospective clients. While the Act does not expressly include such newsletters, nor define commercial advertisement in a manner that suggests newsletters will be included, the advisory opinions from state ethics boards suggest that newsletters are advertisements. Arguments can be made that newsletters to current clients are not advertisements. However, given the low cost of compliance with the Act, firms should treat these newsletters as commercial advertisements and adhere to the provisions of the Act.
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Not Child's Play: Compliance with the Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule
abstract
full article
|
Kristin Bryant |