Washington Journal of Law, Technology & Arts Issues
Volumes 1 - 5 were published under the journal name
"Shidler Journal of Law, Commerce + Technology".
Volume 2
Issue 4
Spring 2006
| Article | Title | Author |
| 15 |
Easy Come, Easy Go: Copyright Infringement and the DMCA's Notice and Takedown Provision in Light of Rossi v. MPAA
abstract
full article
|
Lawrence F. Rozsnyai |
| 16 |
The Failures and Promises of Canada’s Alternative Compensation System for Private Reproduction of Copyrighted Recordings
abstract
full article
|
Evgenia Fkiaras |
| 17 |
The SPY ACT: Ditching Damages as an Element of Liability for On-Line Conduct Between Private Parties?
abstract
full article
|
Andrew T. Braff |
| 18 |
Applying the Wiretap Act to Online Communications after <em>United States v. Councilman
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belskis |
| 19 |
Compliance with California Privacy Laws: Federal Law Also Provides Guidance to Businesses Nationwide
abstract
full article
|
Anthony D. Milewski Jr. |
Issue 3
Autumn 2005
| Article | Title | Author |
| 10 |
When Small Technology is a Big Deal: Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of RFID
abstract
full article
|
D. Zachary Hostetter |
| 11 |
Wait! Don’t fire that blogger! What Limits Does Labor Law Impose on Employer Regulation of Employee Blogs?
abstract
full article
|
Carson Strege-Flora |
| 12 |
The Fight to Save America’s Inbox: State Legislation and Litigation in the Wake of CAN-SPAM
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 13 |
Electronic Case Filing: Is Failure to Check Email Related to an Electronically Filed Case Malpractice?
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belskis |
| 14 |
American and French Perspectives on Trademark Keying: The Courts Leave Businesses Searching for Answers
abstract
full article
|
Terrance J. Keenan |
Issue 2
Autumn 2005
| Article | Title | Author |
| 5 |
The FACT Act of 2003: Securing Personal Information In an Age of Identity Theft
abstract
full article
|
Terrance J. Keenan |
| 6 |
Liability Under the Americans with Disabilities Act for Private Web Site Operators
abstract
full article
|
Evgenia Fkiaras |
| 7 |
Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement: Is Your Business Ready for Compliance?
abstract
full article
|
Anthony D. Milewski Jr. |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 9 |
"I Didn't Know My Client Wasn't Complying!" The Heightened Obligation Lawyers Have to Ensure Clients Follow Court Orders in Litigation Matters
abstract
full article
|
Mafé Rajul |
Issue 1
Summer 2005
| Article | Title | Author |
| 1 |
Defining Spyware: Necessary or Dangerous
abstract
full article
|
Andrew T. Braff |
| 2 |
TrademarkDilution.com: Nissan Motor Co. v. Nissan Computer Corp., and the Evolving Law of Trademark Dilution on the Internet
abstract
full article
|
Lawrence F. Rozsnyai |
| 3 |
E-Discovery – Can the Producing Party Expect Cost-Shifting?: The New Trend and What Can Be Done to Reduce Production Costs
abstract
full article
|
Mafé Rajul |
| 4 |
Bigger Fish, Deeper Pockets: Business Blogs, Defamation and the Communications Decency Act
Blogging is a form of online communication that encourages instantaneous postings and viewer comments. More and more businesses are creating blogs to talk about and promote their products and services. This article will focus on a business’ potential exposure to defamation liability stemming from content posted on a company-sponsored blog. The history of the Communications Decency Act in the courts indicates that companies will likely be immune from liability for defamation when the suit treats the company blog as the publisher of third party defamatory content. However, businesses that host blogs should be aware that this immunity may not extend to third party content not specifically provided to the blog for publishing, distributing or posting.
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |