By krisnelson on May 30, 2011 in business / education / intellectual property / law / patents / research / science / technology
Madey v. Duke exposed one conflict when industry and universities work in overlapping areas. The 2002 federal court decision highlighted a problem at the intersection of university and industry goals.
Posted in business, education, intellectual property, law, patents, research, science, technology | Tagged Bayh–Dole Act, business, law, License, open access, patents, research, science, technology, Technology transfer |
By krisnelson on May 30, 2011 in business / education / government / intellectual property / law / patents / science / technology
According to Dr. Domonic Montisano of the UCSD’s technology transfer office, their goal is to get university research out to the public through the avenue of commercialization.
Posted in business, education, government, intellectual property, law, patents, science, technology | Tagged Bayh–Dole Act, business, law, License, open source, patents, research, science, technology, Technology transfer |
By krisnelson on May 20, 2011 in constitution / government / history / law / privacy / search and seizure / technology
A slideshow presentation of my talk on the shifting views on privacy, from the nineteenth century’s focus on property and relationships to the twentieth’s focus on people as having an individual right to privacy.
Posted in constitution, government, history, law, privacy, search and seizure, technology | Tagged common law, constitution, Fourth Amendment, history, law, privacy, search and seizure, technology, telegraph |
By krisnelson on Apr 23, 2011 in history / law / privacy
I have already discussed how Fourth Amendment protections and related “right to privacy” have shifted from a focus on property in the 19th century to one focused on people in the 20th. Judge Noble Hand’s 1897 law review article, Schuyler against Curtis and the Right to Privacy, gives some interesting hints about how American jurists contributed to this shift.
Posted in history, law, privacy | Tagged common law, history, law, Louis Brandeis, privacy, Samuel Warren |
By krisnelson on Apr 22, 2011 in constitution / history / law / privacy / search and seizure
In the law, there is a difference between confidentiality and privacy, and it’s a difference that’s important for both legal history (highlighted by the 20th century focus on the right to privacy in American law, as opposed to a 19th century focus on confidentiality) and contemporary law.
Posted in constitution, history, law, privacy, search and seizure | Tagged constitution, Fourth Amendment, history, law, Louis Brandeis, privacy |
By krisnelson on Apr 17, 2011 in constitution / history / law / search and seizure / technology
With the introduction of the telegraph in the 1800s, some jurists, recognizing the growing importance of telegraphic communication, advocated for a kind of “telegraph operator-customer” privilege.
Posted in constitution, history, law, search and seizure, technology | Tagged constitution, Fourth Amendment, history, law, Michigan Supreme Court, Missouri Supreme Court, search and seizure, telegraph |
By krisnelson on Apr 12, 2011 in constitution / government / history / law / privacy / search and seizure
The “mere evidence” rule, forbidding searches for documents that were themselves not “instrumentalities” crimes (or contraband themselves) lasted well into the twentieth century before being abandoned. So why were telegrams never explicitly covered by the rule?
Posted in constitution, government, history, law, privacy, search and seizure | Tagged Boyd v. United States, constitution, Fourth Amendment, law, privacy, search and seizure, supreme court, telegraph |
By krisnelson on Mar 21, 2011 in business / copyright / law / technology
David Pogue writes about a new startup that’s trying to work around the limitations media companies have placed on movie providers like Netflix and Redbox.
Posted in business, copyright, law, technology | Tagged copyright, David Pogue, law, Netflix, Redbox, technology, Zediva |