| 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 |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 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. |
| 13 |
Digitized Book Search Engines and Copyright Concerns
abstract
full article
|
Ari Okano |
| 16 |
Electronic Health Records: Interoperability Challenges Patients' Right to Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 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 |
| 457 |
What Your Tweet Doesn’t Say: Twitter, Non-Content Data, and the Stored Communications Act
abstract
full article
|
Daniel Shickich |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 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. |
| 13 |
Digitized Book Search Engines and Copyright Concerns
abstract
full article
|
Ari Okano |
| 16 |
Electronic Health Records: Interoperability Challenges Patients' Right to Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 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 |
| 457 |
What Your Tweet Doesn’t Say: Twitter, Non-Content Data, and the Stored Communications Act
abstract
full article
|
Daniel Shickich |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 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. |
| 13 |
Digitized Book Search Engines and Copyright Concerns
abstract
full article
|
Ari Okano |
| 16 |
Electronic Health Records: Interoperability Challenges Patients' Right to Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 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 |
| 457 |
What Your Tweet Doesn’t Say: Twitter, Non-Content Data, and the Stored Communications Act
abstract
full article
|
Daniel Shickich |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 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. |
| 13 |
Digitized Book Search Engines and Copyright Concerns
abstract
full article
|
Ari Okano |
| 16 |
Electronic Health Records: Interoperability Challenges Patients' Right to Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 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 |
| 457 |
What Your Tweet Doesn’t Say: Twitter, Non-Content Data, and the Stored Communications Act
abstract
full article
|
Daniel Shickich |
| 573 |
What Is the Media in the Age of the Internet? Defamation Law and the Blogosphere
abstract
full article
|
Lauren Guicheteau |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 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. |
| 13 |
Digitized Book Search Engines and Copyright Concerns
abstract
full article
|
Ari Okano |
| 16 |
Electronic Health Records: Interoperability Challenges Patients' Right to Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 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 |
| 457 |
What Your Tweet Doesn’t Say: Twitter, Non-Content Data, and the Stored Communications Act
abstract
full article
|
Daniel Shickich |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 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. |
| 13 |
Digitized Book Search Engines and Copyright Concerns
abstract
full article
|
Ari Okano |
| 16 |
Electronic Health Records: Interoperability Challenges Patients' Right to Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 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 |
| 457 |
What Your Tweet Doesn’t Say: Twitter, Non-Content Data, and the Stored Communications Act
abstract
full article
|
Daniel Shickich |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 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. |
| 13 |
Digitized Book Search Engines and Copyright Concerns
abstract
full article
|
Ari Okano |
| 16 |
Electronic Health Records: Interoperability Challenges Patients' Right to Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 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 |
| 457 |
What Your Tweet Doesn’t Say: Twitter, Non-Content Data, and the Stored Communications Act
abstract
full article
|
Daniel Shickich |
| 573 |
What Is the Media in the Age of the Internet? Defamation Law and the Blogosphere
abstract
full article
|
Lauren Guicheteau |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 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. |
| 13 |
Digitized Book Search Engines and Copyright Concerns
abstract
full article
|
Ari Okano |
| 16 |
Electronic Health Records: Interoperability Challenges Patients' Right to Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 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 |
| 457 |
What Your Tweet Doesn’t Say: Twitter, Non-Content Data, and the Stored Communications Act
abstract
full article
|
Daniel Shickich |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 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. |
| 13 |
Digitized Book Search Engines and Copyright Concerns
abstract
full article
|
Ari Okano |
| 16 |
Electronic Health Records: Interoperability Challenges Patients' Right to Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 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 |
| 457 |
What Your Tweet Doesn’t Say: Twitter, Non-Content Data, and the Stored Communications Act
abstract
full article
|
Daniel Shickich |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 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. |
| 13 |
Digitized Book Search Engines and Copyright Concerns
abstract
full article
|
Ari Okano |
| 16 |
Electronic Health Records: Interoperability Challenges Patients' Right to Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 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 |
| 457 |
What Your Tweet Doesn’t Say: Twitter, Non-Content Data, and the Stored Communications Act
abstract
full article
|
Daniel Shickich |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |
| 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
The fight to curb the ever-increasing amount of unsolicited commercial email or “spam” showing up in the inboxes of American businesses has generated both state and federal legislation. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was enacted to create a bright-line between spam and legal commercial email. The Act preempted many state spam laws but also left significant enforcement abilities to the individual states. States that elect to create large civil damages for spam without criminalizing the transmission of unsolicited commercial email run the risk of winning cases where the damage awards are largely unenforceable and not effective deterrents to big-time spammers.
The pursuit of civil damages in spam litigation, nonetheless, plays an important role in the overall fight against the flood of unsolicited commercial email. The effect of the use of criminal penalties in combination with large damage awards was illustrated in recent cases in Virginia and Florida. Virginia’s spam law, which makes certain types of spamming a felony, is a model for the over 20 states currently considering enacting new spam legislation. Legislative approaches which provide civil liability and criminal penalties for spamming may prove most effective in the fight against spam.
abstract
full article
|
Emma Scanlan |
| 9 |
Data Privacy and Breach Reporting: Compliance with Varying State Laws
abstract
full article
|
G. Martin Bingisser |
| 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 |
| 295 |
Internet as a Human Right: A Practical Legal Framework to Address the Unique Nature of the Medium and to Promote Development
abstract
full article
|
Young Joon Lim and Sarah E. Sexton |
| 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. |
| 13 |
Digitized Book Search Engines and Copyright Concerns
abstract
full article
|
Ari Okano |
| 16 |
Electronic Health Records: Interoperability Challenges Patients' Right to Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 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 |
| 457 |
What Your Tweet Doesn’t Say: Twitter, Non-Content Data, and the Stored Communications Act
abstract
full article
|
Daniel Shickich |
| 1 |
When is a Phone Call Not a Phone Call? Legal Issues Arising From Business Use of VoIP
abstract
full article
|
Paula K. Royalty |
| 3 |
CAN Law Firms SPAM?
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Michael |
| 4 |
Don't Send that E-Mail to a Minor!: Compliance with State Child Protection Registry Statutes
abstract
full article
|
Laura Dunlop |
| 2 |
Don't Bet on it: How Complying with Federal Internet Gambling Law is not Enough
abstract
full article
|
Jennifer W. Chiang |
| 3 |
De-Identified Data and Third Party Data Mining: The Risk of Re-Identification of Personal Information
abstract
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 |
| 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 |
| 83 |
Trusting the Machines: New York State Bar Ethics Opinion Allows Attorneys to Use Gmail
abstract
full article
|
Kevin Raudebaugh |
| 1 |
Broadcasting Expectations: An Unprotected Wireless Network Takes on Constitutional Dimensions
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 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 |
| 8 |
Proposed Federal Definition of "Internet Job Applicant" Suggests Need for Revised Human Resource Policies
abstract
full article
|
Strege-Flora |
| 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 |
| 10 |
MySpace or Yours? The Impact of the MySpace-Attorneys General Agreement on Online Businesses
abstract
full article
|
Chelsea Peters |
| 143 |
Location Surveillance by GPS: Balancing an Employer’s Business Interest with Employee Privacy
abstract
full article
|
Kendra Rosenberg |
| 75 |
Ninth Circuit Unmasks Anonymous Internet Users and Lowers the Bar for Disclosure of Online Speakers
abstract
full article
|
Mallory Allen |
| 93 |
Juror Investigation: Is In-Courtroom Internet Research Going Too Far?
abstract
full article
|
Duncan Stark |
| 107 |
Social Media Policies for Character and Fitness Evaluations
abstract
full article
|
Jessica Belle |