-
The UNLV Boyd School of Law is presenting an international symposium addressing best practices for the regulation of Internet gaming. The symposium fe...
-
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., May 18 /U.S. Newswire/ -- The Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School will host ILAW, a three- day program that will explore the changing legal systems governing the Internet and the implications for international business, entertainment, journalism, and government.
Taught by some of the world's foremost experts on Internet law -- Lawrence Lessig, Charles Nesson, William F. Fisher III, Yochai Benkler, Jonathan Zittrain, John Palfrey, and Beth Noveck -- ILAW's program focuses on controversial issues currently affecting business and public policy today, including:
-
By Ed Stannard Register Metro Editor estannard@nhregister.com
HARTFORD -- A bill to strengthen the state law against bullying in school, including bullying over the Internet, passed the General Assembly's Education Committee Wednesday.
-
Until now, blind law school applicants haven't been able to utilize the Internet to access the website law schools use to receive applications.
However, the National Federation of announced this week that they have settled a lawsuit with the Law School Admission Council to make LSAC's website accessible to blind applicants.
-
The Wikileaks example The Swiss-based Julius Baer Bank and Trust filed a lawsuit against Wikileaks and its domain name registrar, Dynadot LLC, on Feb. 6, for publishing documents that it alleges were stolen by a former employee and "reveal secret Julius Baer trust structures used for asset hiding, money laundering and tax evasion." Stanford Law School professor Roland Vogl, an expert on Internet law, said that aside from questions of the court even having subject matter jurisdiction over the foreign entities involved, the case boiled down to the trouble that judges face when trying to use legal tools such as a temporary injunction against Web sites.
-
STANFORD, Calif. -- Stanford Law School today announced that Google Inc. has pledged to contribute $2M to help fund the Center for Internet and Societ...
-
WEST COVINA - Three of the supposed police officers depicted in a viral Internet video were West Covina public safety employees, while the other two work for school law enforcement agencies, West Covina city officials said Friday.
The short film, which depicts police harassing a motorist at gunpoint for kicks, was intended to be a spoof.
-
STANFORD, Calif. -- The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has announced the names of panelists scheduled to testify at a public hearing hosted b...
-
EUREKA - A Eureka High School teacher has been suspended until Nov. 28 for showing three segments of "The Daily Show" in his government and law class and warning students against an Internet search that yields results deemed to be pornographic.
School Superintendent Randy Crump suspended first-year teacher Rhett Felix on Tuesday morning following a two-hour executive session of the Eureka-based District 140 school board Monday night. During the public portion of the meeting, parents complained about bleeped obscenities and some sexual content of the segments and about a perception that Felix appears to have a liberal political bias.
-
STANFORD, Calif. -- Lauren Gelman has been appointed executive director of Stanford Law School's Center for Internet and Society (CIS), a public inter...