NY Appellate Court Protects Anonymous Speech Following Juelsgaard Clinic Brief – Mills Legal Clinic of Stanford Law School
Millions of people engage in anonymous speech online every day. Many internet speakers are only comfortable sharing their controversial, taboo, embarrassing, or intimate thoughts anonymously. And these thoughts often promote…
Read More »Juelsgaard Clinic Asks Eleventh Circuit to Reject Abuse of Copyright and Protect Legitimate Competition – Mills Legal Clinic of Stanford Law School
Bridget Amoako and Brendan Saunders Can one company abuse the copyright over its software to block another from offering a product that makes it easier to examine security vulnerabilities in…
Read More »Juelsgaard Clinic Urges Balance in Standards-Essential Patent Policy – Mills Legal Clinic of Stanford Law School
The Juelsgaard Intellectual Property and Innovation Clinic recently submitted comments endorsing a fair and balanced approach to standards-essential patents (SEP) policy and encouraging federal agencies to formalize a statement embodying…
Read More »Juelsgaard Clinic Students Urge Fairness and Transparency in Copyright “Small Claims” Proceedings – Mills Legal Clinic of Stanford Law School
Last month, Juelsgaard Intellectual Property and Innovation Clinic students Matt Krantz (JD ’22), and Peggy Xu (JD ’23) submitted a comment to the U.S. Copyright Office advocating for fair and…
Read More »Juelsgaard Clinic Asks Supreme Court to Protect Free Speech from Trademark Lawsuits – Mills Legal Clinic of Stanford Law School
Can a famous brand use trademark lawsuits to chill lawful speech protected by the First Amendment? Juelsgaard Intellectual Property and Innovation Clinic students Victoria Fang (JD ’24) and Julia Laurence (JD ’24)…
Read More »Juelsgaard Clinic Supports FTC Proposed Ban on Noncompete Agreements as Good for Labor Mobility, Competition, and Innovation – Mills Legal Clinic of Stanford Law School
Juelsgaard Intellectual Property and Innovation Clinic students Seraj Desai (JD ’24), Tanner Kuenneth (JD ’23), and Julia Laurence (JD ’24) recently submitted a comment to the Federal Trade Commission supporting…
Read More »