Search for: "Michael Ohm" Results 21 - 40 of 40
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7 Jul 2012, 10:16 am by Bridget Crawford
Johnson Eric_E_Johnson North Dakota Anil Kalhan kalhan Drexel Daniel Martin Katz computational Michigan State Ariel Katz relkatz Toronto Renee Knake reneeknake Michigan State Russell Korobkin russellkorobkin UCLA Kim Krawiec KimKrawiec Duke Greg Lastowka greglas Rutgers-Camden Richard Leiter rleiter Nebraska Mark Lemley marklemley Stanford Jack Lerner jacklerner USC Lawrence Lessig lessig Harvard Browne Lewis bayouwriter Cleveland-Marshall Michael Lewyn mlewyn… [read post]
30 May 2012, 5:32 am by Rob Robinson
 bit.ly/KQ7KLd (Gregory Joseph) Challenging Predictive Coding to Better Defend It - bit.ly/KLk7w3 (Michael Roach) Communicate, or It Could Mean Contempt – bit.ly/JyMQQZ (Kelli Clark) Could Cellphone Use Constitute Electronic Presence at Crime? [read post]
8 Apr 2012, 7:34 am by Adam Thierer
[3]     Paul Ohm, “The Myth of the Superuser: Fear, Risk, and Harm Online,” UC Davis Law Review 41, no. 4 (2008), 1401 [read post]
4 Mar 2012, 9:10 am by Danielle Citron
Allen Ann Bartow Kristin Eschenfelder Edward Felten Brett Frischmann  Ian Kerr Jaron Lanier Paul Ohm Hector Postigo Ted Striphas Valerie Steeves Michael Zimmer   [read post]
1 Feb 2012, 2:10 pm by Danielle Citron
Allen Ann Bartow Kristin Eschenfelder Edward Felten Ian Kerr Jaron Lanier Paul Ohm Hector Postigo Ted Striphas Valerie Steeves Michael Zimmer In the meanwhile, get your copy of the book and mark your calendars! [read post]
6 Sep 2011, 5:23 pm by Dan Farber
Contact: Michael Abramowicz abramowicz@law.gwu.edu Georgetown Law School. [read post]
25 Apr 2011, 7:37 pm by Frank Pasquale
In his work on the new “information sharing environment” in the anti-terror field, Jon Michaels has shown that private data collection can be almost effortlessly merged with public files to monitor (and ultimately deter) “suspect” advocacy. [read post]
25 Apr 2011, 7:37 pm by Frank Pasquale
In his work on the new "information sharing environment" in the anti-terror field, Jon Michaels has shown that private data collection can be almost effortlessly merged with public files to monitor (and ultimately deter) "suspect" advocacy. [read post]
21 Apr 2011, 7:00 am by legalinformatics
Filed under: Conference Announcements Tagged: Artificial intelligence and law, Carl Malamud, Computational linguistics and law, Daniel Martin Katz, Emile de Maat, Law.gov, Legal data mining, Legal informatics conferences, Legal text mining, Michael Bommarito, Michael James Bommarito, Network analysis in legal informatics, Paul Ohm, Program on Law and Computation, Statistical methods in legal informatics, Workshop on Law and Computation [read post]
31 Dec 2010, 1:12 pm by Danielle Citron
Peñalver), Deborah Hellman’s Money Talks But It Isn’t Speech, Orly Lobel’s The Incentives Matrix: The Comparative Effectiveness of Rewards, Liabilities, Duties and Protections for Reporting Illegality, Michael Madison, Brett Frischmann and Katharine Strandburg’s Constructing Commons in the Cultural Environment, Jon Michaels’s Privatization’s Pretensions, Helen Norton’s The Supreme Court’s Post-Racial Turn Towards a Zero-Sum… [read post]
1 Mar 2010, 5:41 am by Dan Markel
Representing the crop of rookie voices on Prawfs, we have Evan Criddle from Syracuse, Michael Waterstone from Loyola Law School in LA, and Paul Ohm from Colorado. [read post]
14 Aug 2009, 2:32 am
Sadly for him, people no longer measure things in oersteds, because nowadays we use an international metric system (SI) that honours people such as Ampere, Ohm, Hertz, James Prescott Joule, James Watt and Michael Faraday instead.Poor Ørsted. [read post]
12 Aug 2009, 3:18 am
"Computational Legal Studies" Grad students Daniel Katz and Michael Bommarito (researcher-programmers, as Paul Ohm would call them) created the Computational Legal Studies Blog in March, 2009. [read post]
12 Aug 2009, 3:18 am
"Computational Legal Studies" Grad students Daniel Katz and Michael Bommarito (researcher-programmers, as Paul Ohm would call them) created the Computational Legal Studies Blog in March, 2009. [read post]
12 Feb 2009, 1:49 am
Michael Kinsley, the former editor of Slate, responded to Isaacson in a piece headlined You Can't Sell News by the Slice. [read post]
22 Sep 2008, 10:21 am
  See, for example Orin Kerr and Paul Ohm. [read post]
1 Sep 2008, 4:03 pm
 And Paul Ohm writes about the possibility of lawsuits when free wi-fi terms of service are editable by the user. [read post]
14 Feb 2007, 7:45 am
" "Your ‘ohms' were not enough to get Michigan State [basketball team] to win, so the median just went down to 68. [read post]