Search for: "Lee A. Hollaar" Results 1 - 12 of 12
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18 Feb 2008, 12:33 pm
Sydnor, Progress & Freedom Foundation, and Lee Hollaar, University of Utah, have published "Inadvertent Filesharing Revisited: Assessing LimeWire's Responses to the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform," as Progress & Freedom Foundation Progress on Point Paper No. 14.22.... [read post]
22 Apr 2008, 10:31 pm
"H.R. 1201 should not be the mechanism for putting the United States in violation of its trade agreements," said Hollaar. [read post]
15 Jun 2011, 8:25 am by pmiller
Lee Hollaar, Wagner’s longtime friend and University of Utah professor of computer science wanted to do something more. [read post]
24 Feb 2013, 12:07 pm by Florian Mueller
Computer science and engineering professors explain choice in API design and warn against security and stability issues resulting from lack of protection of APIsIn a previous post on the fact that various amici curiae made subsmissions I also talked about the background of computer science and engineering professors Gene Spafford, Zhi Ding and Lee Hollaar. [read post]
20 Feb 2013, 12:16 am by Florian Mueller
According to this profile, "[h]is research contributions cover a broad range of signal processing and communication problems including wireless transceiver optimization, blind channel estimation and equalization, multi-input-multi-output communications, multiuser detection, source separation, adaptive signal processing, parameter estimation, radar target discrimination, multimedia wireless communications, and cross-layer wireless communications".Professor Lee Hollaar currently… [read post]
20 Nov 2006, 10:58 am
In Support of Neither Party IBM in Support of Neither Party; Ford & DaimlerChrysler in Support of Neither Party; DC Bar Assn (Eccelston); Professor Hollaar. [read post]
17 Apr 2011, 3:45 pm by Lisa Larrimore Ouellette
Microsoft is also supported by a brief from the William Mitchell Intellectual Property Institute, arguing that the clear and convincing evidence standard is "historically anomalous" and "conflicts with general legal principles," and a brief from digital IP scholar Lee Hollaar, arguing that the heightened standard raises particular problems for software patents. [read post]