Previous Volumes
  1. Current Volume
  2. Volume IX
  3. Volume VIII
  4. Volume VII
  5. Volume VI
  6. Volume V
  7. Volume IV
  8. Volume III
  9. Volume II
  10. Volume I

Volume VII, No. 3 (Spring 2003)

ARTICLES

  1. Gene Patenting: Do the Ends Justify the Means? | Mark A. Chavez
  2. Striking a Balance Between Employer Business Interests and Employee Privacy: Using Respondeat Superior to Justify the Monitoring of Web-Based, Personal Electronic Mail Accounts of Employees in the Work Place | Micah Echols
  3. What Online Activity Does the Wiretap Act Protect? The Ninth Circuit Holds that Unauthorized Access of a Secure Website Does Not Violate the Federal Wire Tap Act: Konop v. Hawaiian Airlines, Inc. | Thomas P. Ludwig
  4. Game When They Win; Investment When They Lose: SEC v. SG, Ltd. | Todd M. Tippett
  5. Patent Pending . . . Pending . . . Pending  The Evolution of Equivalents: Festo Corp. v. Shoketsu Kinzoku Kabushiki Co. | Karly Stoehr
  6. Ashcroft v. ACLU: The Fate of the Child Online Protection Act | Marybeth Eyrich

Volume VII, No. 2 (Winter 2003)

ARTICLES

  1. E Wars -- Episode One: The Patent Menace | Raymond Van Dyke
  2. Proposed Patent Local Rules for Adoption by Texas' Federal District Courts | Alfonso Garcia Chan
  3. Temptations to Take: Misappropriation of Trade Secrets, Damages and Remedies | Eric S. Tautfest
  4. Should Patent Protection Be Considered for Computer Software-Related Innovations? | Eloise Gratton

Volume VII, No. 1 (Fall 2002)

ARTICLES

  1. Packet Sniffers and Privacy:  Why the No-Suspicion-Required Standard in the USA Patriot Act is Unconstitutional | Robert Berkowitz
  2. Adequacy of the 1995 Antitrust Guidelines for the Licensing of Intellectual Property in Complex High-Tech Markets | Clovia Hamilton
  3. Drafting Licenses to Guide Whether Potential Disputes Lie in Contract or Infringement | Edwin E. Richards
  4. HyperLinks to and from Commercial Websites | Christopher J. Volkmer
  5. Copyright Act of 1976 - Copyright Infringement - Supreme Court Holds That the Selling of Freelance Authors Articles by Print Publishers to Electronic Publishers Constitutes Copyright Infringement.  New York Times Co. v. Tasini, 533 U.S. 483 (2001) | S. Brock Benson
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