When a Good Interpretation is the Wrong One (CFAA Edition)
In this post, I want to revisit the CFAA and the Nosal case. I wrote about this case back in… Read More »When a Good Interpretation is the Wrong One (CFAA Edition)
In this post, I want to revisit the CFAA and the Nosal case. I wrote about this case back in… Read More »When a Good Interpretation is the Wrong One (CFAA Edition)
News here. The bloggers claim that they should have been paid for their posts, and the court basically said, “If… Read More »Bloggers lose case against Huffington Post…
Most law professors hold citation by the Supreme Court as a lofty goal. The best result would be adoption of… Read More »Patentable Subject Matter, The Supreme Court, and Me
A few weeks ago, I posted here that if you attach a picture from movie posters on your product as… Read More »Really, Louis Vuitton? Really?
This Denver Post news story nicely illustrates a maxim in law practice – don’t ask a question at trial when… Read More »On Not Asking Questions When You Don’t Know the Answers…