If we ever get "a personal rapid transit system of computer-controlled, three-passenger vehicles on slim guideways operating on-demand and nonstop direct to any station in the network," these are the people who'll bring it to us.
By James Grimmelmann
Professor of Law
New York Law School
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Appearances
June 7-8: Privacy Law Scholars, George Washington
May 23: We Are All Anonymous, Triple Canopy
May 16: Second Annual Conference on Competition, Search, and Social Media, George Mason
May 4: Anonymity and Identity in the Information Age, Cardozo Law School
April 21: Innovate/Activate, U.C. Berkeley
Media
May 15: Quoted in E-Reservations at Inside Higher Ed
May 14: Quoted in Schools can give students 10 percent of a book or one whole chapter at paidContent
May 14: Quoted in Judge Delivers Mixed Verdict in GSU E-reserves Case at Publishers Weekly
May 13: Quoted in Long-Awaited Ruling in Copyright Case Mostly Favors Georgia State U. at Chronicle of Higher Education
May 10: Mentioned in Google, Author’s Guild Clash Over Class Action and Standing at Library Journal
Papers
Death of a Data Haven, Ars Technica
Sealand, HavenCo, and the Rule of Law, Illinois Law Review
The Orphan Wars, Educause Review
Undiplomatic Immunity, Jotwell
Owning the Stack, Ars Technica