Washington Journal of Law, Technology & Arts Issues
Volumes 1 - 5 were published under the journal name
"Shidler Journal of Law, Commerce + Technology".
Volume 6
Issue 4
Spring 2011
| Article | Title | Author |
| 259 |
Choose Your Words Wisely: Affirmative Representations as a Limit on § 230 Immunity
abstract
full article
|
Jeffrey R. Doty |
| 273 |
United States v. Berger: The Rejection of Civil Loss Causation Principles in Connection with Criminal Securities Fraud
abstract
full article
|
James A. Jones II |
| 285 |
Gimme a Brekka!: Deciphering “Authorization” Under the CFAA and How Employers Can Protect Their Data
abstract
full article
|
Amber L. Leaders |
| 297 |
A Survey of the DMCA’s Copyright Management Information Protections: The DMCA’s CMI Landscape After All Headline News and McClatchey
abstract
full article
|
Susuk Lim |
| 311 |
Jacobson Revisited: Conditions, Covenants and the Future of Open-Source Software Licenses
abstract
full article
|
Yamini Menon |
Issue 3
Winter 2011
| Article | Title | Author |
| 171 |
The "Three Strikes" Policy in Korean Copyright Act 2009: Safe or Out?
abstract
full article
|
Sun-Young Moon & Daeup Kim |
| 185 |
Standardizing Warhol: Antitrust Liability for Denying the Authenticity of Artwork
abstract
full article
|
Gareth S. Lacy |
| 217 |
“Capital” Punishment: Evaluating an Investor’s Secondary Copyright Infringement Liability after Veoh
abstract
full article
|
James L. Proctor, Jr. |
| 233 |
Exportability’s Effect on Process Patent Enforcement: Why § 271(f) Export Restrictions Do Not Apply to Intangible Process Claims
abstract
full article
|
Homer Yang-hsien Hsu |
| 247 |
How Much is too Much? Copyright Protection of Short Portions of Text in the United States and European Union after Infopaq International A/S v. Danske Dagblades
abstract
full article
|
Connor Moran |
Issue 2
Autumn 2010
| Article | Title | Author |
| 93 |
Neutralizing Actual Controversy: How Patent Holders Can Reduce the Risk of Declaratory Judgment in Patent Disputes
abstract
full article
|
Homer Yang-hsien Hsu |
| 111 |
Outsider Hacking and Insider Trading: The Expansion of Liability Absent a Fiduciary Duty
In January 2008, the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York held that trading put options of a company’s stock based on inside information allegedly obtained by hacking into a computer network did not violate antifraud provisions of federal securities law. The court ruled that the defendant’s alleged “hacking and trading” did not amount to a violation of section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5, promulgated thereunder, because there was no proof the hacker breached a fiduciary duty in obtaining the information. The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit overturned the District Court’s decision, finding that a breach of fiduciary duty was not required for computer hacking to be “deceptive.” This article evaluates the Second Circuit’s decision in S.E.C. v. Dorozhko in light of the assumption that liability under the misappropriation theory requires a breach of fiduciary duty. This article also explores how the Second Circuit’s decision may potentially expand section 10(b) liability to a wider range of parties who take advantage of access to material nonpublic information by trading securities based on that information.
full article
|
James A. Jones II |
| 125 |
Inducement or Solicitation? Competing Interpretations of the “Underlying Illegality” Test in the Wake of Roommates.com
abstract
full article
|
Jeffrey R. Doty |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 155 |
Death of the Spam Wrangler: CAN-SPAM Private Plaintiffs Required to Show Actual Harm
abstract
full article
|
Susuk Lim |
Issue 1
Summer 2010
| Article | Title | Author |
| 1 |
Walking from Cloud to Cloud: The Portability Issue in Cloud Computing
abstract
full article
|
Robert H. Carpenter, Jr. |
| 15 |
Arbitration Nation: Wireless Services Providers and Class Action Waivers
abstract
full article
|
Alexander J. Casey |
| 33 |
Mobile Marketing Derailed: How Curbing Cell-Phone Spam in Satterfield v. Simon & Schuster May Have Banned Text-Message Advertising
abstract
full article
|
Gareth S. Lacy |
| 49 |
Communications Decency Act Provides No Safe Harbor Against Antifraud Liability or Hyperlinks to Third-Party Content Under the Securities and Exchange Act
abstract
full article
|
Sheri Wardwell |
| 67 |
Stevens v. Publicis: The Rise of "No E-Mail Modification" Clauses?
abstract
full article
|
Stephanie Holmes |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |