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30 Jul 2017, 12:13 pm by Andrew Hamm
” In 2013, Jonathan Zittrain, Kendra Albert and Lawrence Lessig released results of a study indicating that half the links in Supreme Court opinions no longer work. [read post]
16 May 2017, 3:54 pm by Sabrina I. Pacifici
One of the greatest honors came in the form of this terrific video, narrated by one of our heroes, Lawrence Lessig Lessig said, “Creativity and innovation build on the past. [read post]
30 Apr 2017, 8:00 am
Lawrence Lessig suggests "no one knows" because Internet protocols do not force users to identify themselves; although local access points such as a user's university may, this information is privately held by the local access point and is not an intrinsic part of the Internet transaction..... [read post]
21 Apr 2017, 4:00 am by Xavier Beauchamp-Tremblay
In fact, “law as code” is an idea that was already floating around in Roman times and Lawrence Lessig made the more direct parallel between software and law in his classic “code is law” of the early 2000s. [read post]
7 Mar 2017, 11:08 am by June Casey
” — Lawrence Lessig, Harvard Law School Endorsements: “What went wrong with social media and also with democracy? [read post]
11 Jan 2017, 12:15 pm by Elliot Harmon
Aaron inspired Lawrence Lessig to fight corruption in politics, eventually fueling Lessig’s White House run. [read post]
21 Dec 2016, 2:41 pm by Steve Bainbridge
The Economist points out the damage done by Lawrence Lessig and Sanford Levinson's effort to throw the 2016 POTUS election by encouraging faithless electors: The campaign waged by Mr Lessig and... [[ This is a content summary only. [read post]
20 Dec 2016, 5:59 am by Staci Zaretsky
Lawrence Lessig having flipped at least 20 Republican electors: Only two "faithless electors" from Texas refused to cast their votes for President-elect Donald Trump, choosing John Kasich and Ron Paul instead. [read post]
16 Dec 2016, 10:41 am by David Post
Law professor Lawrence Lessig has famously called on electors to exercise their judgment and to cast their ballots in accordance with the popular-vote majority won by Hillary Clinton. [read post]
9 Dec 2016, 3:30 am by Michael Madison
The result was to be both order (of a sort) without law, to paraphrase and re-purpose Robert Ellickson’s work, and law (of a different sort), to distill Lawrence Lessig’s famous exchange with Judge Frank Easterbrook.1 For the last 20 years, more or less, legal scholars have intermittently pursued the resulting project of defining, exploring, and analyzing cyberlaw, but without really resolving this tension, that is, without really identifying the “there”… [read post]
5 Dec 2016, 7:28 am by Ruthann Robson
ConLawProf Lawrence Lessig has a terrific post sharing arguments that the present "winner take all" rule (in all but 2 states) for allocating electoral votes violates the Equal Protection Clause. [read post]
1 Dec 2016, 8:30 am by Orin Kerr
A few days ago, I critiqued an argument by Professor Lawrence Lessig that electors should name Hillary Clinton president of the United States because she won the popular vote. [read post]
29 Nov 2016, 12:25 pm by Steven D. Schwinn
Orin Kerr replies to Lawrence Lessig in this Volokh Conspiracy post. [read post]
28 Nov 2016, 5:08 pm by Steven D. Schwinn
Lawrence Lessig's much-talked-about piece in the Washington Post is here. [read post]
28 Nov 2016, 6:31 am by F. Tim Knight
” And this reminded me of Lawrence Lessig‘s “Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace” originally written in 1990 and updated using a “collaborative Wiki” in 2005. [read post]
25 Nov 2016, 11:55 am by Orin Kerr
Elsewhere in The Post, Harvard Law professor Lawrence Lessig argues that electors should vote for whichever candidate won the nationwide popular vote unless the people went “crazy” and voted for someone outside “the bounds of a reasonable judgment. [read post]
28 Oct 2016, 1:45 pm by Eugene Volokh
North Carolina, a case I’ve been following closely — my students Jeremy Page, Mike Romeo and Sydney Sherman, and I filed a friend-of-the-court brief supporting the petition for Supreme Court review, filed on behalf of professors Ashutosh Bhagwat, Richard Garnett, Andrew Koppelman, Seth Kreimer, Lawrence Lessig, Sanford Levinson, Robert O’Neil, David Post, Lawrence Sager, Seana Shiffrin, Steven Shiffrin, Geoffrey Stone, Nadine Strossen, William Van Alstyne… [read post]
19 Sep 2016, 4:00 am by John Gregory
Lawrence Lessig and Joel Reidenberg pointed out nearly 20 years ago that “code is law” – the choices about how computers will operate have consequences for the exercise of legal rights, making some easier and some harder to invoke. [read post]