Happening 📅TOMORROW📅
The 2023 First Amendment Law Review (@FirstAmendLRev) Symposium is tomorrow, November 17. This year's symposium will cover "Social Media and the First Amendment: The Regulation of Content Moderation Practices".
Livestream link ⬇️
Our symposium is this Friday, November 17! The event will be live streamed and open for the public. Please check out the link below to listen to our speakers.
Link: https://t.co/rubXycQ0ac (Passcode: 478266)
🔵First Amendment Law Review Symposium
📆Friday, November 17, 2023
⏰8:30am-3:30pm
📌Carolina Law, Room 5042
Join us next week for the 2023 First Amendment Law Review Symposium, featuring keynote speaker Congresswoman Deborah Ross!
@FirstAmendLRev
The First Amendment Law Review, along with the Media Law Society and Carolina Law's Committee on Inclusion and Community is excited to present a discussion on disability inclusion and the market place of ideas, this Wednesday in room 5046.
For a full list of #FirstAmendmentDay events like the banned book reading, a webinar on health warning labels, panels on topics like disability inclusion, student media, and elections, and more, click here: https://t.co/TTX2OWvEzz
@UNCHussman
The First Amendment Law Review is excited to host our annual symposium this November! This year, it will focus on First Amendment implications of government efforts to influence the content moderation practices of social media companies.
See link in bio for more details.
UNC Law’s six journals select talented and dedicated students as staff members to help bring legal scholarship to the community. The @firstamendlrev is proud to present the new staff of Vol. 22. Welcome, and congratulations to all UNC journal staffs!
The court's 7-2 ruling found that while true threats of violence aren’t protected by the First Amendment, other harassing online speech is. https://t.co/7VN9cV9pAK
The Supreme Court on Friday ruled in favor of a Christian web designer in Colorado who cited religious objections in refusing to create websites to celebrate same-sex weddings.
Read the court’s opinion. https://t.co/CWqDBW0iGd
For more information about the Ninth Circuit's opinion and reasoning, check out the #FALR blog post on Jack Daniels v. VIP here:
https://t.co/GbPqg1A9ui
#SCOTUS has reversed the Ninth Circuit in Jack Daniels v. VIP, holding:
The Rogers test doesn't apply where the alleged infringer uses the mark as a source identifier, and that parody can be diluting if the mark is used as a source identifier.
https://t.co/E1S2MiSsJh
The #SupremeCourt has spoken! #SCOTUS upheld the 2nd Circuit's ruling in #WarholvGoldsmith, stating that Andy Warhol's use of Lynn Goldsmiths photograph was not transformative. For more on this case, check out Staff Writer Justin Hayes' blog here: https://t.co/SjHFv7f0bJ
What can incarcerated people read while in federal and state prisons?
According to @MarshallProj, not the Redbook Legal Citation Guide, Star Wars RPG guides, or American Gods by @neilhimself.
Intrigued? Read Staff Writer Gloria Kim's blog on the #FALR site
https://t.co/hk3nxkgj83
First in our lineup of blogs about the Stop WOKE Act is Staff Writer Andrew Kragie's blog "Can Gov. DeSantis “Stop Woke” in Private Workplaces?"
https://t.co/az4h6q59qF
#FALR#FirstAmendment#StopWOKE
Join the UNC Center for Media Law & Policy (@uncmedialaw, @unc_law, @UNCHussman) for the 2023 Hargrove Media Law and Policy Colloquium featuring Floyd Abrams.
📅Mon. Apr. 10
⏰7:30pm
📍The Carolina Inn
🔗https://t.co/xdViAeKtUV