We are thrilled to share the Georgetown Law Technology Review Volume 10 Masthead!
Congrats to our new Assistant Editors and Staff Editors — we're so excited to have you join the team. We look forward to another year of publishing scholarship at the intersection of law and tech!
Our biennial symposium, Artificial Lawyering -- Law in the Age of Artificial Intelligence, will take place on Tuesday, January 30, 2024. Join us for an interdisciplinary discussion on how AI will affect the law and the legal profession. RSVP at https://t.co/s2EQhVrwi8
Check out Lana Wynn's piece on why the Supreme Court should resolve the circuit split in recent First Amendment litigation to allow social media platforms to engage in content moderation:
https://t.co/lLtv8n03fF
Check out our latest legal impression by Bryce Bennett on an incredibly timely discussion about consumer harm caused by social media titled "Should Social Media Go the Way of Cigarettes? Addressing Evidence of Consumer Harm."
https://t.co/MRCMqNGOBq
The rapid adoption of Generative AI has caused quite a stir in the art world. In her piece, Alyssa Domino argues that Generative AI's recent developments will likely have a significant impact on copyright law and artist's rights. Read her insights below: https://t.co/93C89mzNSP
The @CFTC recently shut down @PredictIt, the only political prediction market (PPM) platform in the US, and is banning PPMs from regulated exchanges. Read Kevin Brett's take on why it is in the public interest to allow PPMs, and his call for reform: https://t.co/3IEllUsbHC
As the government continues to encourage the implementation of AI technologies by administrative agencies, the judiciary comes closer and closer to an AI collision course. When this happens, we need a developed judicial standard for courts to apply: https://t.co/jv49VOjp1b
The rise of telemedicine during Covid-19 has been accompanied by opportunities for fraud. Read my take in the @GLTReview on how we can reverse this trend.
Platform companies-like @DoorDash@resy & @OpenTable-have used "datification" and informational capitalism to transform the dining industry, making restaurants more dependent on their platforms and deepening asymmetries. Read @LyssaRoseDomino take: https://t.co/iGGnm7acDw
.@TheGarden has begun using facial recognition technology to identify and eject attorneys involved in adverse litigation from events--including an NJ attorney bringing her daughters’ Girl Scout troop to a Rockettes show. Read how NY should regulate FRT: https://t.co/H8punaHdOr
This week, SCOTUS heard Gonzalez v. Google, a case that could undermine one of the internet’s most sacrosanct laws: Section 230 of the CDA. In his piece, "How SCOTUS Could Silence the Internet," John Miles argues that 230 should be amended. Read more: https://t.co/G7Gr9Ip0Dj
In the wake of COVID, telemedicine has surged-but so have opportunities for telehealth fraud. Read Sanjay Reddy's take on how Congress can enact legislation that balances preventing fraud with maintaining access to care: https://t.co/fmn365uhZv
How is quantum computing changing the landscape of cryptography? Read @alyanna60's article discussing the latest developments in quantum-resistant encryption and the impact of its advancement here: https://t.co/JR9SE7SPR5
In light of the ADPPA (potential fed privacy law), I wrote a piece for @GLTReview about the UPDPA, an act that prioritizes businesses over consumers
https://t.co/MCQPXS4SDc
Check out these new articles and notes in @GLTReview! (And highly recommend their Legal Impressions and Tech Explainers while you��re over on their website if you haven’t stopped by lately!)
A recent GPT-4chan incident shows the growing use of social code platforms, which let users collaborate on datasets, models, and other coding projects. Read why Section 230 reformers should look beyond social media & pay attention to social code platforms: https://t.co/c3POYq9Epi
Last November, @mbutterick filed a class action suit alleging that @Microsoft violated the rights of developers whose code was used to train Copilot. Read more on how the @copilotcase shows the need to reconceptualize IP rights: https://t.co/6bd3tTUGBB