Tulane Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property, Volume 16, Fall 2013 Buy on Amazon

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Tulane Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property, Volume 16, Fall 2013

Book Details

ISBN / ASINB00HNCYW4S
ISBN-13978B00HNCYW40
Sales Rank2,093,550
MarketplaceUnited States  🇺🇸

Description

The Tulane Journal of Technology & Intellectual Property (JTIP) is a student-edited, subscription-based, scholarly publication of Tulane University Law School. JTIP examines legal issues relating to technology, including topics such as patents, copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets, antitrust, information privacy, computer law, constitutional law, contracts, torts, and all other policy implications of law and technology in our society. JTIP's editorial members are second- and third-year law students who work under the guidance of faculty advisors. JTIP is conveniently available in print and on Westlaw, LexisNexis, and Hein Online, and we are currently working on making JTIP available through other online resources. The journal publishes annually in the fall.

Volume Fifteen includes:

ARTICLES
• “Economic Espionage and Theft of Trade Secrets: The Case for a Federal Cause of Action,” Kelley Clements Keller & Brian M.Z. Reece
• “The Income of the Twenty-First Century: Online Advertising as a Case Study for the Implications of Technology for Source-Based Taxation,” Assaf Y. Prussak
• “Contesting Monsanto’s Patents on Life: Transnational Juridical Dialogue and the Influence of the European Court of Justice on Soybean- Exporting Countries,” Marcelo Dias Varella & Maria Edelvacy Pinto Marinho
• “New Law on Reverse Payment Settlements— The Agenda for Courts and the Legislature After the Supreme Court’s Actavis Ruling,” Peter Picht
• “Will the JOBS Act Jump-Start the Video Game Industry? Crowdfunding Start-Up Capital,” Van S. Wiltz

COMMENTS
• “Endermen, Creepers, and Copyright: The Bogeymen of User-Generated Content in Minecraft,” Melinda J. Schlinsog
• “Exhibit Facebook: The Discoverability and Admissibility of Social Media Evidence,” Emma W. Sholl
• “The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act: A Prosecutor’s Dream and a Hacker’s Worst Nightmare—The Case Against Aaron Swartz and the Need To Reform the CFAA,” Sarah A. Constant
• “Fractured: How a Circuit Split in Natural Gas Intellectual Property Law Puts the Environment at Risk,” Elliot Singer
• “The View from the Crossroads: The European Union’s New Data Rules and the Future of U.S. Privacy Law,” Alessandra Suuberg

NOTES
• “‘A Million Little Antennas:’ The Second Circuit’s Decision in WNET, Thirteen v. Aereo, Inc., and the Next Great United States Supreme Court Copyright Battle,” Sebastian Wyatt Novak
• “It’s De Minimis, but Wait! It’s Also Fair Use: Faulkner v. Sony Pictures and Why Courts Should Focus on Developing the De Minimis Doctrine To Streamline Copyright Infringement Analysis,” Caroline Hewitt Fischer
• “How the Fair Use Doctrine Is an Integral Part of the Copyright Act: The Ninth Circuit’s Examination of the Factors for Meritorious Fair Use in SOFA Entertainment, Inc. v. Dodger Productions, Inc.,” Shane Exon
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