technology

Page 3 of 11

The intersection of universities and industry: tech transfer

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.

May 2011 / 3 min.


Presenting “Privacy & The Telegraph”

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.

May 2011 / 1 min.


How I use a blog in my research and writing

As someone who does not blog to earn money (I like to pay my hosting fees, but that’s only because I’m a poor grad student), I thought I’d run through how and why I blog, and why I find it a critical part of my “real” work of academic research and writing.

May 2011 / 5 min.


The slow pace of Fourth Amendment change

In Protections for Electronic Communications: the Stored Communications Act and the Fourth Amendment, Alexander Scolnik wrote: As technology evolves, giving individuals new forms of communicating and government agents increasingly sophisticated tools for surveillance, courts have had to continually interpret the Fourth Amendment and define the extent of its reach in light of these new advances.

April 2011 / 2 min.


Working around the rules to give you movies on demand

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.

March 2011 / 3 min.


The telegraph and business invasions of privacy

In the late 19th century, many began to see the rise of monopolistic telegraph operators as more of a threat than the government. Against this potential eavesdropper, the Bill of Rights provided no protection.

February 2011 / 3 min.


Stepping stone to Internet privacy: the telegraph

There have been four pivotal technologies that have forced modern American law and society to re-examine its notions of privacy and confidentiality.

January 2011 / 2 min.


Changing technology, changing expectations of privacy

My goal here is to compare and contrast the legal changes that occurred as new technologies-state-run postal services, the telegraph, the telephone, and email, for example-emerged, and through this to seek insight into these larger questions.

November 2010 / 4 min.


Technology and the archive

One of the primary interests of mine is the connection between technology and law. The development of archives is one place where this connection plays out in practice. This I am deeply interested in the question presented by Schwartz and Cook present as to what the impact of new technologies-like “postal services, the telegraph, the telephone, radio, photography”-was on “on the production, preservation, and use of records and archives since the mid-nineteenth century.”

October 2010 / 3 min.


Measuring the impact of technology on the law

It’s difficult to come up with more quantitative measurements to look at how technology has impacted law. One could look at the development of new technologies (via patent applications, perhaps?) and then look to see how soon afterwards the invention began to show up in legal cases. Another interesting idea would be to see if changes in technology-the development of new citation systems, more rapid dissemination of decisions and publications, and later the creation of electronic repositories such as Lexis and Westlaw-had any impact on the way lawyers and judges developed law.

August 2010 / 3 min.