Washington Journal of Law, Technology & Arts Issues
Volumes 1 - 5 were published under the journal name
"Shidler Journal of Law, Commerce + Technology".
Volume 5
Issue 5
Spring 2009 Supplemental
| Article | Title | Author |
| 20 |
Willful Infringement After Seagate: How the Willfulness Standard Has Changed and What Attorneys Should Know About It
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 21 |
Safe Haven No More: How Online Affiliate Marketing Programs Can Minimize New State Sales Tax Liability
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer Heidt White |
| 22 |
Invalidity of Covenants not to Compete in California Affects Employers Nationwide
abstract
full article
|
Sheri Wardwell |
| 23 |
Evaluating Columbia Pictures Industries v. Bunnell and the Role of RAM Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure on E-discovery
abstract
full article
|
Loren M. Hall |
| 24 |
Intellectual Property Protection for Fashion Design: An Overview of Existing Law and A Look Toward Proposed Legislative Changes
abstract
full article
|
Elizabeth Mills |
Issue 4
Spring 2009
| Article | Title | Author |
| 15 |
You Can Send This But Not That: Creating and Enforcing Employer Email Policies Under Sections 7 and 8 of the National Labor Relations Act After Register Guard
abstract
full article
|
By Nicole Lindquist |
| 16 |
Internet User Anonymity, First Amendment Protections and Mobilisa: Changing the Cahill Test
abstract
full article
|
Kristina Ringland |
| 17 |
Where Vernor v. Autodesk Fits Into First Sale Decisions
abstract
full article
|
Thomas A. Hackett |
| 18 |
User Privacy and Information Disclosure: The Need for Clarity in "Opt-In" Questions for Consent to Share Personal Information
abstract
full article
|
Suzanna Shaub |
| 19 |
Text Message Monitoring After Quon v. Arch Wireless: What Private Employers Need to Know About the Stored Communications Act and an Employee's Right to Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer Heidt White |
Issue 3
Winter 2009
| Article | Title | Author |
| 11 |
Standardization in the European Information and Technology Sector: Official Procedures on the Verge of Being Overhauled
abstract
full article
|
Patrick Van Eecke & Maarten Truyens |
| 12 |
Electronic Pitfalls: The Online Modification of Ongoing Consumer Service Agreements
abstract
full article
|
Ben Casady |
| 13 |
The European Union's Data Retention Directive and the United States's Data Preservation Laws: Finding the Better Model
abstract
full article
|
Kristina Ringland |
| 14 |
The Limits of Expanding Patent Claim Scope to Provoke an Interference with a Competitor
abstract
full article
|
Christopher L. Kuyper |
Issue 2
Autumn 2008
| Article | Title | Author |
| 6 |
Age Verification as a Shield for Minors on the Internet: A Quixotic Search?
abstract
full article
|
Francoise Gilbert |
| 7 |
Federal Tax Consequences of Virtual World Transactions
abstract
full article
|
Martin Bingisser |
| 8 |
Ethical Duties to Prospective Clients Who Send Unsolicited Emails
abstract
full article
|
Nicole Lindquist |
| 9 |
Border Searches of Laptop Computers after United States v. Arnold: Implications for Traveling Professionals
abstract
full article
|
Cooper Offenbecher |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
Issue 1
Summer 2008
| Article | Title | Author |
| 1 |
Ethical Considerations for Blog-Related Discovery
abstract
full article
|
Jason Boulette and Tanya DeMent |
| 2 |
Liability for Search Engine Triggering of Trademarked Keywords after Rescuecom
abstract
full article
|
Riana Pfefferkorn |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
Recent computer science research demonstrates that anonymized data can sometimes be easily re-identified with particular individuals, despite companies’ attempts to isolate personal information. Netflix and AOL are two examples of companies that released personal data intended to be anonymous but which was re-identified with individual users with the use of very small amounts of auxiliary data. Re-identification of anonymized data may expose companies to increased liability, as the information may no longer be treated as anonymous. In addition, companies may violate their own privacy policies by releasing anonymous information to third parties that can be easily re-identified with individual users. The potential for third parties to re-identify anonymous information with its individual source indicates the need for both increased privacy protection of anonymized information and increased security for databases containing anonymized information.
full article
|
C. Christine Porter |
| 4 |
Whole Foods, Unwholesome Practices: Will Sock Puppeteers be Held Accountable for Pseudonymous Web Postings?
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 5 |
Does the U.S. SAFE WEB Act Strike the Proper Balance Between Law Enforcement Interests and Privacy Interests?
abstract
full article
|
Shaobin Zhu |