‘Steer your way through the ruins / of the altar and the mall’; Law firm’s use of potential target’s name and logo in ad isn’t ‘trademark dilution’; More on lawsuits against seemingly fake defendants, aimed at hiding online criticism; The Emoluments Clause — is Donald Trump violating its letter or spirit?; Final papers posted from the George Washington Law Review’s CFAA symposium;
 
The Volokh Conspiracy
 
 
‘Steer your way through the ruins / of the altar and the mall’
Leonard Cohen's death reminded me that I hadn't listened to his last few albums; here's the opening of one song, "Steer Your Way," that I much liked.
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Law firm’s use of potential target’s name and logo in ad isn’t ‘trademark dilution’
So the Georgia Supreme Court held Monday in McHugn Fuller Law Group, PLLC v. PruitHealth, Inc., I think quite correctly.
 
More on lawsuits against seemingly fake defendants, aimed at hiding online criticism
Paul Alan Levy, who cowrote our post on dozens of suspicious court cases, with missing defendants, aim at getting web pages taken down or deindexed, has been investigating the matter further, by intervening in a federal district court case that fit this pattern.
The Emoluments Clause — is Donald Trump violating its letter or spirit?
Professor Erik Jensen's thoughts on whether President-elect Trump's business dealings are constitutionally problematic.
 
Final papers posted from the George Washington Law Review’s CFAA symposium
Here are the final papers from the symposium I helped host on the computer hacking laws.
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Recommended for you
 
Fact Checker
Count the pinocchios. A weekly review of what's true, false or in-between.
Sign Up »
 
     
 
©2016 The Washington Post, 1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071