Deepfakes Unleashed: From Social Media to the Courtroom
While reading a New York Times article by Catharine A. MacKinnon for NYU Law’s Art Law Class with Professor Amy Adler, I was particularly struck by Mackinnon’s mention of Deepfakes…
While reading a New York Times article by Catharine A. MacKinnon for NYU Law’s Art Law Class with Professor Amy Adler, I was particularly struck by Mackinnon’s mention of Deepfakes…
The debate over what to do about controversial public art is not new. But a recent dispute over a pair of murals at Vermont Law School deemed racially offensive adds…
U.S. intellectual property has lost protection at the international level. Amidst a handful of controversial opinions handed down this summer, the Supreme Court addressed the Lanham Act’s applicability to foreign…
Baseball is the only major sport in the United States with a general exemption from antitrust law. The Supreme Court carved out the exemption in Federal Baseball Club v. National…
In the digital age, influencer marketing has emerged as a potent tool for brands to reach their target audiences. However, these partnerships bring forth a myriad of legal complexities, particularly…
Artificial intelligence may be all the rage in Silicon Valley, but it seems to be gaining admirers a bit further south in Hollywood. While many of Tinseltown’s finest are interested…
In September 2012, inter partes review (IPR) replaced inter partes reexamination, allowing any third party to petition the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) for review of any patent’s validity…