Skip to content

Virginia Journal of Law & Technology

At the University of Virginia School of Law
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Old Editorial Boards
  • New Articles
  • Archives
    • Volume Twenty-One
    • Volume Twenty
    • Volume Nineteen
    • Older Volumes
  • Submit an Article or Student Note
  • Law Blog
  • Contact Us

Volume Nineteen

Volume Nineteen (2014-2015)

Issue One

Lost in the Cloud: Information Flows and the Implications of Cloud Computing for Trade Secret Protection

  • By Sharon K. Sandeen

...And Bring Your Playbook: Who Owns the Intellectual Property Created by College Coaches?

  • By Tanyon Boston

Prohibiting the Assignment of a License Contract - Who is Keeping the Faith?

  • By Alan Tracey

Transparency

  • By Robin Feldman
Issue Two

Why More User Control Does Not Mean More User Privacy: An Empirical (and Counter-Intuitive) Assessment of European E-Privacy Laws

  • By Eoin Carolan and M. Rosario Castillo-Mayen

An Emergency Room in Your Living Room: Privacy Concerns as Health Information Moves Outside of the Traditional Medical Provider Context

  • By Adam Steele

21st Century New Use Technology in the Book Publishing Industry and How Authors Can Better Protect their New Use Technology Rights

  • By Joseph Perry
Issue Three

Roberts Was Wrong: Increased Antitrust Scrutiny after FTC v. Actavis Has Accelerated Generic Competition

  • By Lauren Krickl and Matthew Avery

"Step Into the Game": Assessing the Interactive Nature of Virtual Reality Video Games Through the Context of "Terroristic Speech"

  • By Robert Hupf

The Case for the Regulation of Bitcoin Mining as a Security

  • By Benjamin Akins, Jennifer L. Chapman and Jason Gordon

How Could They Know That? Behind the Data that Facilitates Scams Against Vulnerable Americans

  • By Alex Schneider
Copyright © 2017 Virginia Journal of Law & Technology... Although this organization has members who are University of Virginia students and may have University employees associated or engaged in its activities and affairs, the organization is not a part of or an agency of the University. It is a separate and independent organization, which is responsible for and manages its own activities and affairs. The University does not direct, supervise or control the organization and is not responsible for the organization’s contracts, acts or omissions.