January 2025 Media and Communications Law Top Blawgs
Discusses issues of media law and responsibility with a special focus on libel and privacy law and the balance between the two.
By Eugene Volokh, Dale Carpenter, David Kopel, David Bernstein, David Post, Erik Jaffe, Ilya Somin, Jim Lindgren, Jonathan Adler, Kevan Choset, Orin Kerr, Randy Barnett, Russell Korobkin, Sasha Volokh, Stuart Benjamin, Todd Zywicki & Tyler Cowen.
Covers the RIAA's lawsuits of against ordinary working people.
Features art and cultural heritage law resources and reviews.
Covers Internet, technology and online marketing legal issues. Published by Santa Clara University School of Law Professor Eric Goldman and Venkat Balasubramani.
Provides breaking news and analysis of communications law and business. By Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP.
A blawg from Albany Law School's Diversity Office to engage all students, faculty and staff to create a community of inclusion and to have an open forum to address issues facing all of us.
Tracking new and intriguing Web sites for the legal profession.
Focuses on issues related to legal regulation of technology, and especially on legal attempts to restrict the right of technologists and citizens to tinker with technological devices. From Princeton's Center for Information Technology Policy.
Covers criminal law, information technology and news for law librarians. By David Badertscher.
Features observations on technology, law and lawlessness. By University of Dayton Susan Brenner.
Harvard Law School Berkman Center for Internet & Society Podcast.
Covers developments in the entire range of issues addressed by the Federal Communications Commission in its regulation of spectrum-related activities, as well as copyright, trademark, First Amendment and Internet issues. By Fletcher, Heald & Hildreth.
Denise Howell and guests discuss technology law. From the TWiT netcast network.
By Christine A. Corcos.
Copyright, defamation, publishing and unfair competition law practice tips and developments. By Lloyd J. Jassin.
Covers issues concerning libraries and the law. By Peter Hirtle, Raizel Liebler, Mary Minow and Susan Nevelow Mart.
Covers freedom of the press. By Robert J. Ambrogi.
Covers current law and technology developments affecting business and society. By Nanyang Business School Professor Harry SK Tan.
By University of Miami law professor Michael Froomkin. Covers civil liberties, the Internet, Guantanamo, Iraq attrocities, politics and more.